What is the difference between:

foo = TOKEN1 + TOKEN2

and

foo = Combine(TOKEN1 + TOKEN2)

Thanks.

UPDATE: Based on my experimentation, it seems like Combine() is for terminals, where you're trying to build an expression to match on, whereas plain + is for non-terminals. But I'm not sure.

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1 Answer

up vote 6 down vote accepted

Combine has 2 effects:

  • it concatenates all the tokens into a single string

  • it requires the matching tokens to all be adjacent with no intervening whitespace

If you create an expression like

realnum = Word(nums) + "." + Word(nums)

Then realnum.parseString("3.14") will return a list of 3 tokens: the leading '3', the '.', and the trailing '14'. But if you wrap this in Combine, as in:

realnum = Combine(Word(nums) + "." + Word(nums))

then realnum.parseString("3.14") will return '3.14' (which you could then convert to a float using a parse action). And since Combine suppresses pyparsing's default whitespace skipping between tokens, you won't accidentally find "3.14" in "The answer is 3. 14 is the next answer."

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+1, a pretty authoritative answer (not all may realize Paul is the author of pyparsing, so I'm mostly pointing that out!-). – Alex Martelli May 31 '10 at 0:36
Thanks, Alex. And @Rosarch, welcome to pyparsing! These questions you are posting are very common for first-time pyparsing users, so keep plugging away. I've tried to cover some of these points in the online wiki and docs, but I can see there is still a ways to go! – Paul McGuire May 31 '10 at 0:44
Yeah, I am fully aware that Paul is the author of pyparsing. It's great that you're on SO to provide noobs like me with guidance. – Rosarch May 31 '10 at 1:05
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