2

when I try to extract this video ID (AIiMa2Fe-ZQ) with a regex expression, I can't get the dash an all the letters after.

>>> id = re.search('(?<=\?v\=)\w+', 'http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIiMa2Fe-ZQ')
>>> print id.group(0)
>>> AIiMa2Fe
3

6 Answers 6

2

Intead of \w+ use below. Word character (\w) doesn't include a dash. It only includes [a-zA-Z_0-9].

[\w-]+
0
1

I don't know the pattern for youtube hashes, but just include the "-" in the possibilities as it is not considered an alpha:

import re
id = re.search('(?<=\?v\=)[\w-]+', 'http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIiMa2Fe-ZQ')
print id.group(0)

I have edited the above because as it turns out:

>>> re.search("[\w|-]", "|").group(0)
'|'

The "|" in the character definition does not act as a special character but does indeed match the "|" pipe. My apologies.

4
  • is pipe allowed in a youtube ID? I don't think so. Apr 14, 2010 at 17:57
  • From the docs: "Some characters, like '|' or '(', are special." "A|B, where A and B can be arbitrary REs, creates a regular expression that will match either A or B." "To match a literal '|', use \|, or enclose it inside a character class, as in [|]."
    – manifest
    Apr 14, 2010 at 18:22
  • youtube video id doesn't contain | (pipe). Apr 14, 2010 at 18:30
  • @SilentGhost Thanks, I had mistakenly believed the "|" (pipe) would act as a special character. I've corrected the answer.
    – manifest
    Apr 14, 2010 at 18:46
1
>>> re.search('(?<=v=)[\w-]+', 'http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIiMa2Fe-ZQ').group()
'AIiMa2Fe-ZQ'

\w is a short-hand for [a-zA-Z0-9_] in python2.x, you'll have to use re.A flag in py3k. You quite clearly have additional character in that videoid, i.e., hyphen. I've also removed redundant escape backslashes from the lookbehind.

0
1

Use the urlparse module instead of regex for such kind of things.

import urlparse

parsed_url = urlparse.urlparse(url)
if parsed_url.netloc.find('youtube.com') != -1 and parsed_url.path == '/watch':
    video = urlparse.parse_qs(parsed_url.query).get('v', None)

    if video is None:
        video = urlparse.parse_qs(parsed_url.fragment.strip('!')).get('v', None)

    if video is not None:
        print video[0]

EDIT: Updated for the upcoming new youtube url format.

1
/(?:/v/|/watch\?v=|/watch#!v=)([A-Za-z0-9_-]+)/

Explain the RE

There are three alternate YouTube formats: /v/[ID] and watch?v= and the new AJAX watch#!v= This RE captures all three. There is also new YouTube URL for user pages that is of the form /user/[user]?content={complex URI} This is not captured here by any regex...

0
0

I'd try this:

>>> import re
>>> a = re.compile(r'.*(\-\w+)$')
>>> a.search('http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AIiMa2Fe-ZQ').group(1)
'-ZQ'

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.