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I would like to use a numeric variable regular expression part.

What should I do if I want to use a variable in this part (?P<hh>\d)

I want to output lines that contain the input number.

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  • 1
    Can you explain what you mean? What variable would you like to use, and what would be your expected input and output?
    – pyrospade
    Feb 20, 2013 at 5:18

3 Answers 3

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Using string interpolation:

m = re.compile(r'\d{%d}:\d{%d}' % (var1, var2))

If the vars aren't already integers you may need to convert types like so:

m = re.compile(r'\d{%d}:\d{%d}' % (int(var1), int(var2)))
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  • Would that be '\d{%i}:\d{%i}' for the integer value (even though %d works)?
    – Kenosis
    Feb 20, 2013 at 5:48
  • Doesn't matter, %i and %d are exactly the same. I've always used and seen %d.
    – Ben Reser
    Feb 20, 2013 at 5:58
  • I'm sorry, I want to put a variable in place of (?P<hh>\d) sys.argv[1]:sys.argv[2] to find and correct the output line going to Feb 20, 2013 at 7:36
  • @ParkKwansik Without changing your code too much... LOG_FILE = '/home/text' hh = sys.argv[1] m = '%s:%s' % (hh, sys.argv[2]) f = open(LOG_FILE) lines = f.readlines(10000) for line in lines: r1 = line.find(m) if r1: print line f.close() I'm assuming you want to take sys.argv[1] and sys.argv[2] and turn them into a string separated by : then search for lines with that string and print them. There's no reason in that case to use a regular expression, so I switched to using the find string function. I removed some unnecessary code as well.
    – Ben Reser
    Feb 20, 2013 at 7:50
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Your question isn't clear.

If you want to capture some specific part of the regex, you have to create groups (using pharentesis):

hh = sys.argv[1]
m = re.compile(r'(?P<hh>\d):(\d{2})')
match = m.match(hh)

print match.group(1)
print match.group(2)

for example, if hh = '1:23', the above code will print:

1
23


Now, if what you need is replace \d{2} by some variable, you can do:

variable = r'\d{2}'
m = re.compile(r'(?P<hh>\d):%s' % variable)

or if you just want to replace the 2, you can do:

variable = '2'
m = re.compile(r'(?P<hh>\d):\d{%s}' % variable)

Another option could be using:

r'(?P<hh>\d):{0}'.format(variable)
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You can pass it in as a string (I'd escape it first):

m = re.compile(re.escape(hh) + r':\d{2}')

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