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I want to make my code easier to maintain, so I have met this problem

Would

re.compile(r'foo' # some comments
            '|bar'
)

Be the same as:

re.compile(r'foo|bar')#blabla

And this one:

re.compile(r"""foo #some comments
               bar""")

IdeaJ suggests something like this:

re.compile(r'foo'
           r'bar')

I've got thousands like this 'foobar' here.

I know that the third one may generate some unwanted \w but what about the others?

What I wanted is just a regex matches foo OR bar

4
  • If you put a plus after the first substring to join the strings your first one should work.
    – beroe
    Nov 13, 2013 at 7:14
  • 1
    Perhaps use string.join? '|'.join(r'foo', r'bar'...)
    – erlc
    Nov 13, 2013 at 7:15
  • Thanks, but what if I got even more? do i have to add a '+' in each line like this? r'foo'(LineBreak)+'bar'(LineBreak)+'foobar'
    – Quan Zhou
    Nov 13, 2013 at 7:20
  • @erlc that's a very beautiful way of using objects! Thanks!
    – Quan Zhou
    Nov 13, 2013 at 7:20

2 Answers 2

4

You can put your comments IN the regex by specifying the re.VERBOSE flag.

re.compile(r'''foo  # some comments
               |bar # some more comments
            ''', re.VERBOSE)

Shorthand for the flag is re.X. docs

1
  • 3
    I always found it amusing that there's a shorthand for a verbose flag.
    – Nick T
    Nov 13, 2013 at 7:26
1

found this in Python docs http://docs.python.org/2/reference/lexical_analysis.html#string-literal-concatenation

 re.compile("[A-Za-z_]"       # letter or underscore
            "[A-Za-z0-9_]*"   # letter, digit or underscore
            )

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