1

I'm a newbie to regular expressions and I have the following string:

sequence = '["{\"First\":\"Belyuen,NT,0801\",\"Second\":\"Belyuen,NT,0801\"}","{\"First\":\"Larrakeyah,NT,0801\",\"Second\":\"Larrakeyah,NT,0801\"}"]'

I am trying to extract the text Belyuen,NT,0801 and Larrakeyah,NT,0801 in python. I have the following code which is not working:

re.search('\:\\"...\\', ''.join(sequence))

I.e. I want to get the string between characters :\ and \.

0

3 Answers 3

3

Don't use regex for this. It appears to be a rather strangely split set of JSON strings. Join them back together and use the json module to decode it.

import json
sequence = '[%s]' % ','.join(sequence)
data = json.loads(sequence)
print data[0]['First'], data[0]['Second']

(Note the json module is new in Python2.6 - if you have a lower version, download and install simplejson).

4
  • the sequence is actually of string type (I updated question). the interpreter keeps throwing an error for the line data = json.loads(sequence) and the error is raise ValueError(errmsg("Expecting object", s, end))
    – Seth
    Apr 5, 2010 at 2:25
  • if I scrap the second line of your code and print data[0] I get: {"First":"Belyuen,NT,0801","Second":"Belyuen,NT,0801"}
    – Seth
    Apr 5, 2010 at 2:43
  • and if I print data[0]['First'] it comes up with the following error: ` print data[0]['First'] TypeError: string indices must be integers`
    – Seth
    Apr 5, 2010 at 2:46
  • I ended up being able to extract what I wanted by doing the following: ` data = json.loads(sequence) /n location = json.loads(data[0]) /n print location['First']`
    – Seth
    Apr 5, 2010 at 2:51
3

it seems like a proper serialization of the Python dict, you could just do:

>>> sequence = ["{\"First\":\"Belyuen,NT,0801\",\"Second\":\"Belyuen,NT,0801\"}","{\"First\":\"Larrakeyah,NT,0801\",\"Second\":\"Larrakeyah,NT,0801\"}"]
>>> import json
>>> for i in sequence:
    d = json.loads(i)
    print(d['First'])


Belyuen,NT,0801
Larrakeyah,NT,0801
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  • the sequence is actually a string not list ( I updated the question ). so how do I load it into the json module as a string?
    – Seth
    Apr 5, 2010 at 2:26
  • @seth: unfortunately, it seems that the quotes in your input string are misused. it doesn't work either with json or eval. If you fix them, using alternate single and double quote, escaped where needed, then it works just fine with the method I showed. Again, quotes within string should be alternating, quotes that were used for original Python string, should be, of course, escaped. Apr 5, 2010 at 9:24
  • thanks for your response, check out my comments in Daniel Roseman's answer. I ended up extracting what I needed in a convoluted way, but got it nevertheless. +1 for your help and useful answer.
    – Seth
    Apr 5, 2010 at 14:02
2

you don't need regex

>>> sequence = ["{\"First\":\"Belyuen,NT,0801\",\"Second\":\"Belyuen,NT,0801\"}","{\"First\":\"Larrakeyah,NT,0801\",\"Second\":\"Larrakeyah,NT,0801\"}"]
>>> for item in sequence:
...  print eval(item).values()
...
['Belyuen,NT,0801', 'Belyuen,NT,0801']
['Larrakeyah,NT,0801', 'Larrakeyah,NT,0801']
1
  • solution works in version <2.6. And i don't want to download any other modules.
    – ghostdog74
    Apr 3, 2010 at 14:27

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