-1

I have a regex which is used to print the lines of file within a specified range.

Eg:

my _car_(10)
skoda
audi

my home
good

my _car_(11)
benz

outputs as:

(10)
skoda
audi
(11)
benz

EXPECTED:(I need to print the line my _car_ lines also)

my _car_(10)
skoda
audi
my _car_(11)
benz

cODING:

import re
with open("in1.txt") as f:
   lines = f.read()
   m = re.findall(r'(?s)my _car_\s*(.*?)my', lines)
   for i in m:
       print i

Please help me to fix it,answers will be appreciated!

0

5 Answers 5

1

To include my _car_, simply move the opening parenthesis of the capture group.

But that raises a second problem. You are including the subsequent "my" in the result. Use lookahead (?=...) to avoid capturing it.

But that raises yet another problem. The final car doesn't have a trailing my. So we search for end-of-string also.

Final result:

m = re.findall(r'(?s)(my _car_\s*.*?)(?=my|$)', lines)

Unrelated to the regular expression search, the use of print introduces an extra line between items. We can replace print with os.write(), or we can use a trailing , to avoid the extra lines.

Program:

import re
with open("in1.txt") as f:
   lines = f.read()
   m = re.findall(r'(?s)(my _car_\s*.*?)(?=my|$)', lines)
   for i in m:
       print i,

Result:

$ python in1.py 
my _car_(10)
skoda
audi

my _car_(11)
benz
8
  • That would output my _car_(10)\nskoda\naudi (with actual newlines). Aug 28, 2014 at 16:38
  • Right. That is what was asked for.
    – Robᵩ
    Aug 28, 2014 at 16:39
  • Umm, shouldn't it also include my _car_(11)\nbenz? Aug 28, 2014 at 16:41
  • It does include the "benz" lines. Are you seeing something different?
    – Robᵩ
    Aug 28, 2014 at 16:43
  • @Robᵩ Why there is some blank lines exists? Aug 28, 2014 at 16:47
1

You just have to extend your capture group:

from this

m = re.findall(r'(?s)my _car_\s*(.*?)my', lines)

to this

m = re.findall(r'(?s)(my _car_\s*.*?)my', lines)

should do.

But according to your regex you must have a my after the last value to capture untill it.

1

You can use a positive lookahead to achieve this:

(?s)(my _car_\s*.*?)(?=(?:\n{2}|\Z))

(?=(?:\n{2}|\Z)) asserts that the part after _car_ is followed by either 2 newline characters or the end of the string (\Z).

Test:

>>> import re
>>> with open('in1.txt') as f:
...     lines = f.read()
...     m = re.findall(r'(?s)(my _car_\s*.*?)(?=(?:\n{2}|\Z))', lines)
...     for i in m:
...             print i
... 
my _car_(10)
skoda
audi
my _car_(11)
benz
1

The regular expression seems unnecessary, try:

cars = False
with open("in1.txt") as f:
    for line in map(str.strip, f):
        if line.startswith('my _car_'):
            print line
            cars = True
        elif line.startswith('my'):
            cars = False
        elif cars and line:
            print line

Which will output:

my _car_(10)
skoda
audi
my _car_(11)
benz
1

Just try the below code which uses a negative lookahead and a positive lookahead.

>>> import re
>>> s = """my _car_(10)
... skoda
... audi
... 
... my home
... good
... 
... my _car_(11)
... benz"""
>>> m = re.findall(r'my\s*_car_(?:(?!\n\n).)*(?=\n\n|$)', s, re.DOTALL)
>>> for i in m:
...     print i
... 
my _car_(10)
skoda
audi
my _car_(11)
benz

DEMO

Explanation:

  • my\s*_car_ Matches the string my followed by zero or more spaces and again followed by the string _car_.
  • (?:(?!\n\n).)* Matches any character but not of \n\n zero or more times.
  • (?=\n\n|$) Lookahead asserts that what follows must be \n\n(ie, a blank line) or the line end $
5
  • That negative lookahead is superfluous. You're already looking ahead for two consecutive newlines. Aug 28, 2014 at 16:40
  • no, try without the negative lookahead in the demo site. Aug 28, 2014 at 16:43
  • could u help me on how to delete the regex matching part and write to a file? Aug 28, 2014 at 17:20
  • @Chaeltrims sorry i don't know , maybe you could ask it as an another question or seek some others for help. I think Rob should know that. Aug 28, 2014 at 17:36
  • @AvinashRaj this is my question, stackoverflow.com/questions/25555155/… ,hope u could answer it! Aug 28, 2014 at 18:04

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