10

I am using a re.sub callback to replace substrings with random values, but I would like the random values to be the same across different strings. Since the re.sub callback does not allow arguments, I am not sure how to do this.

Here is a simplified version of what I'm doing:

def evaluate(match):
    mappings = {'A': 1, 'B': 2}
    return str(eval(match.group(0)[2:-1], mappings))

# variables = {'A':[1,2,3,4,5], 'B':[1,2,3,4,5]}    
# mappings2 = {k:v[random.randint(0,len(v)-1)] for k, v in variables.items()}
string_one: "#{A} + #{B}"
string_two: "#{A+B}"
newstring_one = sub(r'\#\{([^#]+)\}', evaluate, string_one)
newstring_two = sub(r'\#\{([^#]+)\}', evaluate, string_two)

Now, as it stands, the strings will be properly evaluated: newstring_one is "1 + 2" and newstring_two is "3". But I want to be able to pick the values randomly, and still have them replaced in both strings. This would involve deleting the 'mappings' line in 'evaluate', and using something like the two commented lines. How, though, can I get my randomly chosen mappings2 to be used when eval-ing both strings, if I cannot pass it as an argument in the re.sub callback function?

Many thanks.

4 Answers 4

16

The easiest way I guess is to make use of functools.partial, which allows you create a "partially evaluated" function:

from functools import partial

def evaluate(match, mappings):
    return str(eval(match.group(0)[2:-1], mappings))

mappings = {'A': 1, 'B': 2}  # Or whatever ...

newstring = sub(r'\#\{([^#]+)\}', partial(evaluate, mappings=mappings), string)
2
  • Just a note: if you reverse the order of the evaluate arguments, you can just say partial(evaluate, mappings).
    – tzot
    Jul 11, 2010 at 9:02
  • 1
    Yes, but I used the argument order on purpose since to me it feels more natural to define evaluate() this way and I wanted to demonstrate the flexibility of partial(). Jul 11, 2010 at 13:30
2

You could create a closure.

def evaluator(mappings):
  def f(match):
    return str(eval(match.group(0)[2:-1], mappings))
  return f

evaluate = evaluator({'A': 1, 'B': 2})

Since f is just a single statement, you could simply use lambda:

def evaluator(mappings):
  return lambda match: str(eval(match.group(0)[2:-1], mappings))
1

You could use a function object.

 class A(object):
  def __init__(self, mappings):
    self.mappings = mappings
  def __call__(self, match):
    return str(eval(match.group(0)[2:-1], self.mappings))

 evaluate = A({'A': 1, 'B': 2})
0

The variant I would recommend:

mappings = {'A': 1, 'B': 2}  # Or whatever ...
def evaluate(match):
    return str(eval(match.group(0)[2:-1], mappings))
newstring = sub(r'\#\{([^#]+)\}', evaluate, string)

i.e. simply put the def evaluate(..) just before the sub(), as a local function.

1
  • 1
    You can read from a pre-defined variable, but can't change the variable.
    – dolgom
    Jul 14, 2020 at 2:43

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.