0

I am new to python. I want to remove duplicate word

and except English word i want to delete all other word and blank line.

purely English word only i want to extract.

i have some text file which contain such like following

aaa
bbb
aaa223

aaa
ccc
ddd

kei60:
sj@6999


jack02
jparkj

so after process duplicate i want to get result following

aaa
bbb
ccc
ddd
jparkj

following is what i tried script source.

if anyone help me much appreciate! thanks!

# read a text file, replace multiple words specified in a dictionary
# write the modified text back to a file

import re

def replace_words(text, word_dic):
    """
    take a text and replace words that match a key in a dictionary with
    the associated value, return the changed text
    """
    rc = re.compile('|'.join(map(re.escape, word_dic)))
    def translate(match):
        return word_dic[match.group(0)]
    return rc.sub(translate, text)



def main():
    test_file = "prxtest.txt"
    # read the file
    fin = open(test_file, "r")
    str2 = fin.read()
    fin.close()

    # the dictionary has target_word:replacement_word pairs
    word_dic = {
    '.': '\n',
    '"': '\n',
    '<': '\n',
    '>': '\n',
    '!': '\n',
    "'": '\n',
    '(': '\n',
    ')': '\n',
    '[': '\n',
    ']': '\n',
    '@': '\n',
    '#': '\n',
    '$': '\n',
    '%': '\n',
    '^': '\n',
    "&": '\n',
    '*': '\n',
    '_': '\n',
    '+': '\n',
    '-': '\n',
    '=': '\n',
    '}': '\n',
    '{': '\n',
    '"': '\n',
    ";": '\n',
    ':': '\n',
    '?': '\n',
    ',': '\n',
    '`': '\n',
    '~': '\n',
    '1': '\n',
    '2': '\n',
    '3': '\n',
    '4': '\n',
    "5": '\n',
    '6': '\n',
    '7': '\n',
    '8': '\n',
    '9': '\n',
    '0': '\n',
    ' ': '\n'}

    # call the function and get the changed text
    str3 = replace_words(str2, word_dic)

    # write changed text back out
    fout = open("clean.txt", "w")
    fout.write(str3)
    fout.close()

if __name__ == "__main__":

    main()
1
  • 1
    aaa is an english word? Do you mean alphanumeric (\w)?
    – jordanm
    Jun 2, 2012 at 6:15

5 Answers 5

2

This will capture lines containing only letters:

fin = open(test_file, 'r')
fout = open('clean.txt', 'w')

s = set()
for line in fin:
    if line.rstrip().isalpha():
        if not line in s:
            s.add(line)
            fout.write(line)

fin.close()
fout.close()
4
  • isalpha() is better than the regex check in my answer, but this does not remove duplicates.
    – jordanm
    Jun 2, 2012 at 6:54
  • Yes, did not notice that detail, apologies. Regex is also a good approach IMO. Jun 2, 2012 at 7:01
  • 1
    it works, but it is more "expensive" than the isalpha() method.
    – jordanm
    Jun 2, 2012 at 7:23
  • thanks much! this is working exactly what i want thanks again!
    – elca
    Jun 2, 2012 at 7:53
1

Something like this should work:

import re
found = []
with open(test_file) as fd:
   for line in fd:
      word = line.strip()
      if word:
         if word not in found and re.search(r'^[[:alpha:]]+$', word):
            print word
            found.append(word)
2
  • i was just tested but result was aaa bbb aaa223 aaa ccc ddd jack02 jparkj not what i want this one..
    – elca
    Jun 2, 2012 at 6:31
  • make found a set. Lists have O(N) lookup time whereas sets are O(1).
    – jamylak
    Jun 19, 2012 at 7:10
1

Can be done in two lines:

import re

data ="""aaa
bbb
aaa223

aaa
ccc
ddd

kei60:
sj@6999


jack02
jparkj"""

lines = data.splitlines()   # use f.readlines() instead if reading from file

# split the words and only take ones that are all alpha
words = filter(lambda x: re.match('^[^\W\d]+$', x), lines)
# remove duplicates and print out
print '\n'.join(set(words))
0

I know this is a python question, but what you're asking seems simpler as a *nix script with grep:

cat infile | grep '^[a-zA-Z]+$' > outfile

If you only want unique lines containing only alpha chars:

cat infile | grep '^[a-zA-Z]+$' | sort -u > outfile

I guess in python you could do:

import re
inf = open('infile', 'r')
for line in inf:
   if (re.match('\A[a-zA-A]+\Z', line):
      print line
1
  • '+' is not part of BRE and [a-zA-Z] is locale dependent. Also, UUOC
    – jordanm
    Jun 2, 2012 at 6:52
0

Some of the strings in the wanted output may serve as interjections, but the others do not seem to be English words. If pure English words are wanted, a slightly more sophisticated approach is suggested:

import nltk
from nltk.corpus import words


tokens = nltk.word_tokenize(open('prxtest.txt').read())
en_words = [x for x in tokens if x.lower() in words.words()]

# en_words now contains purely English words

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.