1

Simple one here but I'm fairly new to Python.

I have a string like this:

this is page one of an article 
<!--pagebreak page two --> this is page two 
<!--pagebreak--> this is the third page 
<!--pagebreak page four --> last page
// newlines added for readability

I need to split the string using this regex: <!--pagebreak(*.?)--> - the idea is that sometimes the <!--pagebreak--> comments have a 'title' (which I use in my templates), other times they don't.

I tried this:

re.split("<!--pagebreak*.?-->", str)

which returned only the items with 'titles' in the pagebreak (and didn't split them correctly either). What am I doing wrong here?

3 Answers 3

2

Change *.? into .*?:

re.split("<!--pagebreak.*?-->", str)

Your current regex accepts any number of literal k's, optionally followed by (any character).

Also, I would recommend using raw strings (r"...") for your regular expressions. It's not necessary in this case, but it's an easy way to spare yourself a few headaches.

4
  • .*? doesn't make sense in regex.
    – jpm
    Oct 4, 2012 at 8:41
  • 1
    @jpm Yes it does. It's a . with a lazy * quantifier.
    – skunkfrukt
    Oct 4, 2012 at 8:42
  • 2
    How can you forget about laziness? It is the greatest of all programming virtues.
    – Hans Then
    Oct 4, 2012 at 8:50
  • @MattAndrews Not at all. We all make typos from time to time.
    – skunkfrukt
    Oct 4, 2012 at 9:25
2

You swapped the . with the *. The correct regex is:

<!--pagebreak.*?-->
2

Definitely an issue of swapping the . and *. "." matches all and the asterisk indicates that you'll take as many characters as you can get (limited of course by the non-greedy qualifier "?")

import re

s = """this is page one of an article 
<!--pagebreak page two --> this is page two 
<!--pagebreak--> this is the third page 
<!--pagebreak page four --> last page"""

print re.split(r'<!--pagebreak.*?-->', s)

Outputs:

['this is page one of an article \n', ' this is page two \n', ' this is the third page \n', ' last page']

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