82

I have a list of regexes in python, and a string. Is there an elegant way to check if the at least one regex in the list matches the string? By elegant, I mean something better than simply looping through all of the regexes and checking them against the string and stopping if a match is found.

Basically, I had this code:

list = ['something','another','thing','hello']
string = 'hi'
if string in list:
  pass # do something
else:
  pass # do something else

Now I would like to have some regular expressions in the list, rather than just strings, and I am wondering if there is an elegant solution to check for a match to replace if string in list:.

5
  • python has nothing that does emacs lisp's regexp-opt gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/…
    – ggg
    Mar 14, 2014 at 9:10
  • Why don't you like loops? Sep 6, 2017 at 12:38
  • 2
    @MartinThoma because it's O(n)
    – ospider
    Dec 15, 2018 at 1:49
  • 3
    Then the question should not be for "elegant", but for "less than O(n)". Dec 15, 2018 at 8:45
  • a) You mean 'performant' not 'elegant' b) You want to know which individual regex matched (but that doesn't mean you need to iterate over each one individually, which will not be scaleable).
    – smci
    Apr 28, 2021 at 3:01

6 Answers 6

111
import re

regexes = [
    "foo.*",
    "bar.*",
    "qu*x"
    ]

# Make a regex that matches if any of our regexes match.
combined = "(" + ")|(".join(regexes) + ")"

if re.match(combined, mystring):
    print "Some regex matched!"
6
  • 4
    If you don't need to know which one matched, it's better to bracket them with (?:regex) instead of (regex) Jun 15, 2010 at 0:22
  • 4
    This method doesn't work if there are more than 100 regexes in the array (Python 2.6). Try nosklo's answer below.
    – Amjith
    Aug 18, 2011 at 15:13
  • 8
    regexes = '(?:%s)' % '|'.join(regexes)
    – alxndr
    Feb 1, 2013 at 21:08
  • 4
    Because "qu*x" means, q, zero or more u's, and an x. Mar 12, 2019 at 14:25
  • 1
    in the above answer how can i come to know which regex matched? Jul 14, 2020 at 10:35
105
import re

regexes = [
    # your regexes here
    re.compile('hi'),
#    re.compile(...),
#    re.compile(...),
#    re.compile(...),
]

mystring = 'hi'

if any(regex.match(mystring) for regex in regexes):
    print 'Some regex matched!'
2
  • If working in python 2.4, you won't have any - see stackoverflow.com/questions/3785433/…
    – Sam Heuck
    Sep 12, 2013 at 19:42
  • 4
    How is this "something better than simply looping through all of the regexes and checking them against the string and stopping if a match is found"? I guess the combination of Ned's and this answer could be a winner though...
    – johndodo
    Jan 21, 2014 at 15:26
15

Here's what I went for based on the other answers:

raw_list = ["some_regex","some_regex","some_regex","some_regex"]
reg_list = map(re.compile, raw_list)

mystring = "some_string"

if any(regex.match(mystring) for regex in reg_list):
    print("matched")
0
7

A mix of both Ned's and Nosklo's answers. Works guaranteed for any length of list... hope you enjoy

import re   
raw_lst = ["foo.*",
          "bar.*",
          "(Spam.{0,3}){1,3}"]

reg_lst = []
for raw_regex in raw_lst:
    reg_lst.append(re.compile(raw_regex))

mystring = "Spam, Spam, Spam!"
if any(compiled_reg.match(mystring) for compiled_reg in reg_lst):
    print("something matched")
2

If you loop over the strings, the time complexity would be O(n). A better approach would be combine those regexes as a regex-trie.

0
import re

def is_matching_any_regex(text, regex_list):
    return text in [re.match(regex, text)[0] for regex in regex_list if re.match(regex, text) is not None]


if __name__ == '__main__':
    regex_list = ['hi', '.*hi.*', '.*me.*', 'me']
    text = "som3th1ng"
    print(is_matching_any_regex(text, regex_list))
    text = "something"
    print(is_matching_any_regex(text, regex_list))

output:

False
True

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