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I'm helping someone with some file renaming at work using an application that supports python regular expression syntax. I tried a few expressions found on forums like ^[^_]+(?=_) for a) below but it didn't work properly, and some others that didn't work. so, I figured I should reach out to someone who actually knows what they're doing. thanks for your help.

a) in the first expression I have to find all characters before the first underscore in patterns like this:

cannon_mac_23567_prsln_333
jones_james_343342_prsln_333
smith_john_223462_prsln_333

so, I have to get cannon, jones, and smith

b) in a separate expression I have to find all characters between the first and second underscore. so, I need to find mac, james, and john in the examples above.

c) in the last expression I have to find the first underscore

the way the renaming app works I have to do these regular expressions in three parts, like the above. thanks.

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  • You should show what you've tried for each part. How didn't your attempts work?
    – askewchan
    Mar 6, 2013 at 20:59
  • Updated my answer, should do what you want now.
    – msvalkon
    Mar 6, 2013 at 22:02

3 Answers 3

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Well, you could do it without regular expressions entirely, as you know your delimiter is the underscore.

Use the str.split, and index methods.

'smith_john_223462_prsln_333'.split('_')[0] //(to extract smith)
'smith_john_223462_prsln_333'.split('_')[1] //(to extract john)
'smith_john_223462_prsln_333'.index('_') //(to get position of first underscore)
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  • thanks but has to be regex. i'm using a desktop application for file renaming that supports python regular expression syntax. not actually using python
    – chris
    Mar 6, 2013 at 21:16
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I'd use:

1.  ^([^_]+)_
2.  _([^_]+)_ 
3.  ^[^_]_

Using re.match, as it matches at the beginning of the string.

[Edit: As Cthulhu pointed out, you might be better of not using regular expressions for this, as it's faster and easier to use string methods]

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  • that is perfect. thank you! i made one mistake in my request. for step 2, can you include the trailing underscore? for example, it would find "james_" rather than "james"
    – chris
    Mar 6, 2013 at 22:26
  • For that you'd need to put the underscore inside the parentheses instead of outside.
    – mariano
    Mar 6, 2013 at 23:16
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Right, I misunderstood your question at first. While the str.split would definitely be a more elegant way to solve this, here are three regular expressions to suit your needs. I have no idea whether or not this application of yours will work with them. So take this with a grain of salt.

Please take a look at the re library and the MatchObject.span() for further information.

As a single regex:

import re
line = "cannon_mac_23567_prsln_333"
In [1812]: match = re.match(r"(.+?)(\_)(.+?)\_", line)

In [1813]: match.groups()
Out[1813]: ('cannon', '_', 'mac')

In [1814]: match.span(2)[0] <-- second group, start. The first occurence of _
Out[1814]: 6

In [1815]: line[6]
Out[1815]: '_'

Seprated in a, b, c:

a:

import re
line = "cannon_mac_23567_prsln_333"
In [1707]: match = re.match(r"(.+?)\_", line)

In [1708]: match.groups()
Out[1708]: ('cannon',)

b:

In [1712]: match = re.match(r".+\_(.+?)\_", line)

In [1713]: match.groups()
Out[1713]: ('prsln',)

c: Last one uses re.search for simplicity. MatchObject.span() returns a tuple of position (start, end)

In [1763]: match = re.search("\_", line)

In [1764]: match.span()[0]
Out[1764]: 6

In [1765]: line[6]
Out[1765]: '_'

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