vote up 4 vote down star

I have data naively collected from package dependency lists.

Depends: foo bar baz >= 5.2

I end up with

 d = set(['foo','bar','baz','>=','5.2'])

I don't want the numerics and the operands.

In Perl I would

@new = grep {/^[a-z]+$/} @old

but I can't find a way to e.g. pass remove() a lambda, or something.

The closest I've come is ugly:

[ item != None for item in [ re.search("^[a-zA-Z]+$",atom)   for atom in d] ]

which gets me a map of which values out of the set I want...if the order of the set is repeatable? I know that's not the case in Perl hashes.

I know how to iterate. :) I'm trying to do it the pythonesque Right Way

flag
Take a look at this post (which is kind of your question in reverse): stackoverflow.com/questions/1112444/… – Telemachus Aug 21 at 21:33
OT remark: The idiomatic way to test for None in Python is "is". Use "item is not None" instead of "item != None" – Virgil Dupras Aug 22 at 17:13

2 Answers

vote up 14 vote down check

No need for regular expressions here. Use str.isalpha. With and without list comprehensions:

my_list = ['foo','bar','baz','>=','5.2']

# With
only_words = [token for token in my_list if token.isalpha()]

# Without
only_words = filter(str.isalpha, my_list)

Personally I don't think you have to use a list comprehension for everything in Python, but I always get frowny-faced when I suggest map or filter answers.

link|flag
+1 for liking filter() – RichieHindle Aug 21 at 21:49
1  
Filter without lambda is A-OK – kaizer.se Aug 21 at 22:35
2  
Filter without lambda in this (surprisingly common) case is A-OK as long as you're not mixing str and unicode objects, all hell breaks loose otherwise. – Sufian Aug 21 at 23:57
vote up 1 vote down

How about

d = set([item for item in d if re.match("^[a-zA-Z]+$",item)])

that gives you just the values you want, back in d (the order may be different, but that's the price you pay for using sets.

link|flag
match() makes the "^" useless: re.match("[a..."). – EOL Aug 22 at 18:27

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.