3

Let's assume, I have a string:

string="""<p>It is common for content in Arabic, Hebrew, and other languages that use right-to-left scripts to include numerals or include text from  other scripts. Both of these typically flow  left-to-right within the overall right-to-left  context. </p> <p>This article tells you how to write HTML where text with different writing directions is mixed <em>within a paragraph or other HTML block</em> (ie. <dfn id="term_inline">inline or phrasal</dfn> content). (A companion article <a href="/International/questions/qa-html-dir"><cite>Structural markup and right-to-left text in HTML</cite></a> tells you how to use HTML markup for  elements such as <code class="kw">html</code>, and structural markup such as <code class="kw">p</code> or <code class="kw">div</code> and forms.)</p>"""

and I have a position of word in this string, for example:

>>> pos = [m.start() for m in re.finditer("tells you", string)]
>>> pos
[263, 588]

I need to extract several words behind and several words after from each position. How to implement it using Python and regular expressions?

E.g.:

def look_through(d, s):
    r = []
    content = readFile(d["path"])
    content = BeautifulSoup(content)
    content = content.getText()
    pos = [m.start() for m in re.finditer(s, content)]
    if pos:
        if "phrase" not in d:
            d["phrase"] = [s]
        else:
            d["phrase"].append(s)
        for p in pos:
            r.append({"content": content, "phrase": d["phrase"], "name": d["name"]})
    for b in d["decendent"] or []:
            r += look_through(b, s)
    return r

>>> dict = {
    "content": """<p>It is common for content in Arabic, Hebrew, and other languages that use right-to-left scripts to include numerals or include text from  other scripts. Both of these typically flow  left-to-right within the overall right-to-left  context. </p>""", 
    "name": "directory", 
    "decendent": [
         {
            "content": """<p>This article tells you how to write HTML where text with different writing directions is mixed <em>within a paragraph or other HTML block</em> (ie. <dfn id="term_inline">inline or phrasal</dfn> content). (A companion article <a href="/International/questions/qa-html-dir"><cite>Structural markup and right-to-left text in HTML</cite></a> tells you how to use HTML markup for  elements such as <code class="kw">html</code>, and structural markup such as <code class="kw">p</code> or <code class="kw">div</code> and forms.)</p>""", 
            "name": "subdirectory", 
            "decendent": None
        }, 
        {
            "content": """It tells you how to use HTML markup for  elements such as <code class="kw">html</code>, and structural markup such as <code class="kw">p</code> or <code class="kw">div</code> and forms.)""", 
            "name": "subdirectory_two", 
            "decendent": [
                {
                    "content": "Name 4", 
                    "name": "subsubdirectory", 
                    "decendent": None
                }
            ]
        }
    ]
}

So:

>>> look_through(dict, "tells you")
[
    { "content": "This article tells you how to", "phrase": "tells you", "name": "subdirectory" },
    { "content": "It tells you how to use", "phrase": "tells you", "name": "subdirectory_two" }
]

Thank you!

6
  • Can you add a small example to your question?
    – Mazdak
    May 7, 2015 at 16:02
  • Have you tried writing this code? You're likely to get a better response when we can see what you have already tried or how you are thinking about solving the problem.
    – amccormack
    May 7, 2015 at 16:11
  • Still its unclear that how you get "This article tells you how to"
    – Mazdak
    May 7, 2015 at 16:11
  • 1
    I think @Kasra and I are both curious what you have tried for the implementation of look_through.
    – amccormack
    May 7, 2015 at 16:12
  • @amccormack, I added an example how I get the position of a text. Now I'd like to extract the part of a text from content where exatcly it was found. And I see two solutions here: using position or using the regular expression. May 7, 2015 at 16:18

2 Answers 2

1

You want a "concordance" of your regexp hits, let's say two words before and after the place where your regexps matched. The easiest way to do it is to break your string there and anchor your search to the endpoints of the pieces. For example, to get two words before and after index 263 (your first m.start()), you'd do:

m_left = re.search(r"(?:\s+\S+){,2}\s+\S*$", text[:263])
m_right = re.search(r"^\S*\s+(?:\S+\s+){2,}", text[263:])
print(text[m_left.start():m_right.end()])

The first expression should be read from the end of the string backwards: It anchors at the end $, possibly skips a partial word if the match ended mid-word, (\S*), skips some spaces (\s+), and then matches up to two {2,} word-space sequences, \s+\S+. It's not exactly two because if we reach the beginning of the string, we want to return a short match.

The second regexp does the same but in reverse direction.

For a concordance you'd probably want to start reading right after the end of the regexp match, not the beginning. In that case, use m.end() as the beginning of the second string.

It's pretty obvious how to use this with a list of regexp matches, I think.

0

I first proposed using word boundary meta characters, but that's not quite right, because they don't consume any of the string, and \B doesn't really match what I wanted it to anyway.

Instead, I propose using the underlying definition of a word boundary -- that is, the boundary between \W and \w. Look for one or more word character (\w) along with one or more non-word character (\W) in the right order, repeated as many times as you want, on either side of the search substring.

For example: (?:\w+\W+){,3}some string(?:\W+\w+){,3}

This finds up to three words before and up to three words after "some string".

5
  • See this for how to deal with words that contain apostrophes like "Don't" or "Haven't".
    – amccormack
    May 7, 2015 at 16:25
  • Boundaries don't take up space. \b\B matches a point that is a word boundary and is not a word boundary, so it will never match anywhere.
    – alexis
    May 7, 2015 at 16:39
  • @alexis, yes, that's why I continued on in my answer.
    – jwilner
    May 7, 2015 at 16:45
  • And take into acount the case, when symbols are not english (in my case they are Cyrillic). May 7, 2015 at 21:13
  • @paus, you can use the UNICODE or LOCALE flags to modify the definition of \w and \W. Check the docs:docs.python.org/2/library/re.html
    – jwilner
    May 7, 2015 at 21:34

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