I do not understand the regex --> r'(\w*)(\w)\2(\w*)' and r'\1\2\3' It would be helpful if the above regex's are interpreted in an understandable way.
OK, let’s go:
(\w*)
is any kind of word character (letters, digits, underscore – varies depending on locale settings, can f.e. include french letters with accents), zero or multiple times (by using the quantifier *
).
Next it tries to match just one single word character (\w)
– and then that same character again, using \2
, which is a back reference to the second match in the expression, which was the \w
character matched before.
And after that, again zero or multiple word characters, same as at the beginning.
If that expression matches, then self.repl = r'\1\2\3'
replaces it – again, using back references – with the matches that were made capturing subpatterns using parentheses in the search pattern.
So every matched part gets replaced by itself – except for the repeated character match \2
, which does not have grouping parentheses.
So, if you want to have the repeated char occur at least three times, you modify that part of the expression to (\w)(\2{2,})'
– {2,}
is another quantifier saying “match only if the preceding pattern occurs at least two times”. (Only at least two times, since the first character is matched by the preceding (\w)
already.)
I did not get it to work using the leading and trailing (\w*)
though – but since these also match zero word characters, I think they can be ditched altogether.
So this should do what you want to achieve:
self.repeat_regexp = re.compile(r'(\w)(\1{2,})')
self.repl = r'\1'
(Since I removed the leading capturing subpattern here, \2
was replaced by \1
, referencing the now first capturing subpattern.)