2

This seems like a common task, alter some elements of an array, but my solution didn't feel very pythonic. Is there a better way to build urls with list comprehension?

links = re.findall(r"(?:https?://|www\.|https?://www\.)[\S]+", text)
if len(links) == 0:
    return text
urls = []
for link in links:
    if link[0:4] == "www.":
        link = "http://" + link
    urls.append(link)

Maybe something like

links = re.findall(r"(?:https?://|www\.|https?://www\.)[\S]+", text)
if len(links) == 0:
    return text
urls = map(lambda x : something(x), links)
4
  • That seems fine to me (not sure the urlparse module will help here, but here's a link for anyone else looking for it: docs.python.org/library/urlparse.html Dec 2, 2009 at 7:08
  • 2
    Remember being Pythonic also means being succict, concise and readable. Personally I find it very easy to understand, and I don't believe a list comprehension would help that aspect. Of course it can also mean adhering to distinctly Python-oriented constructs, but it's not strictly neccessary. Dec 2, 2009 at 7:10
  • What when there is no www. say google.com or stackoverflow.com
    – lprsd
    Dec 2, 2009 at 7:18
  • then I have no way of figuring out it is a URL. I guess I could check for all the TLDs but even then I'm a little scared of that. Dec 2, 2009 at 8:32

4 Answers 4

4

If you want to go with list comprehensions, use:

urls = ['http://' + link if link.startswith('www.') else link for link in links]

But I actually think that the more verbose way of looping through the links that you used is easier to read. "Shorter" does not always equal "better" or "more readable".

1
  • 1
    +1: people are confused about what is pythonic - it means "easy to write, read and understand in python" or "idiomatic python"
    – nosklo
    Dec 2, 2009 at 10:24
1
["http://"+link if link[0:4]=='www.' else link for link in links]

or

[link[0:4]=='www.' and "http://"+link or link for link in links]

Notes: ("http://"+link if link[0:4]=='www.' else link) - this is ternary operator like ?: in C

(link[0:4]=='www.' and "http://"+link or link) - this has the same meaning.


On another subject: I would test for http://, not for www. Domains don't have to start with www. For instance, http://stackoverflow.com.

3
  • In Python2.5+ you can use a more pythonic ternary operator x = a if True else b
    – lprsd
    Dec 2, 2009 at 7:56
  • My regex will not grab stackoverflow.com but will grab stackoverflow.com perfectly fine (and won't do the prefix). Dec 2, 2009 at 8:34
  • 1
    ==In Python2.5+ you can use a more pythonic ternary operator x = a if True else b== See my first line. That's what it does
    – yu_sha
    Dec 2, 2009 at 10:17
1

You'll probably be better off using built-in Python functionality for dealing with urls. Assuming you stay with your current regex, I think you could rewrite this as:

from urlparse import urlsplit, urlunsplit

links = re.findall("(?:https?://|www\.|https?://www\.)[\S]+", text)
urls = [urlunsplit(urlsplit(link, 'http')) for link links]

This should come out to the same thing as what you're currently doing. Also keep in mind that finding URLs using a regex is somewhat risky, ie this will return www.google.com! with the exclamation mark.

2
  • 1
    This won't quite work, unfortunately. urlunsplit(urlsplit('www.google.com')) will return 'http:///www.google.com' with three slashes after http:. Dec 2, 2009 at 8:21
  • Right you are; I had used urlparse to automatically add in the protocol string, but considering it doesn't work to do this then just doing string matching is the way to go. Thanks for pointing out my error! Dec 2, 2009 at 11:07
0

Alternatively:

def addHttp(url):
    if url[0:4] == "www.":
        url = "http://" + url
    return url

urls = map(addHttp, links)

this is longer than using list comprehensions and the ternary operator, but IMHO it is more readable since the function name describes what it is doing, so the code is self-documenting. It is also easier to refactor e.g. if you decide to follow yu_sha's advice and not test explicitly for "www".

1
  • 2
    if url[0:4] == "www." is considered harmful, you should check if url.startswith("www.") instead
    – Kimvais
    Dec 2, 2009 at 8:04

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