1
>>> import re
>>> p=re.compile('(a(.)c)d')

Why does the following only return 'abcd' but not also 'aecd'? If I want to return both, how shall I do? If I only like to return aecd, what shall I do?

>>> m=p.match('abcdeaecd')
>>> m.group() 
'abcd'
>>> m.groups()
('abc', 'b')

Thanks!

2 Answers 2

3

You can simplify your RegEx, like this

import re
p=re.compile(r'a.cd')

And use re.findall to get all the matches, like this

print p.findall('abcdeaecd')
# ['abcd', 'aecd']

Otherwise you can use your RegEx itself and iterate over the matches like this

print [item.group() for item in p.finditer('abcdeaecd')]
# ['abcd', 'aecd']
3
  • thanks. (1)does p.match only return the first match? (2) What if I want to return the last match?
    – Tim
    May 25, 2014 at 5:29
  • @Tim match tries to match the pattern from the beginning of the string and returns only the match found from the beginning. If your string has started with anything other than a, it wouldn't have matched anything May 25, 2014 at 5:30
  • @Tim p.match only returns the first match. However, this answer will only return the matched strings, and will not return Match objects; in particular, you won't be able to access the capturing groups.
    – lily
    May 25, 2014 at 5:31
2

You will want to use finditer instead of match:

ms = p.finditer('abcdeaecd')
    for m in ms:
        # do something with m.group or m.groups

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