1

Here is an example of the type of text file I am trying to search (named usefile):

DOCK onomatopoeia DOCK blah blah
blah DOCK blah
DOCK
blah blah blah
onomatopoeia
blah blah blah
blah blah DOCK
DOCK blah blah
DOCK blah
onomatopoeia

I am using a finditer statement to find everything between DOCK and onomatopoeia as follows:

re.finditer(r'((dock)(.+?)(onomatopoeia))', usefile, re.I|re.DOTALL)

Obviously Dock is a much more common word than onomatopoeia and I only want to grab text between the first instance of Dock before onomatopoeia. The regex I am using above grabs text between the first instance of Dock and stops when it hits onomatopoeia, so I might get Dock Dock Dock Dock onomatopoeia when I really only wanted Dock onomatopoeia.

To be clear what I want from above is:
1. DOCK onomatopoeia
2. DOCK blah blah blah onomatopoeia
3. DOCK blah onomatopoeia

Is there a way to search for onomatopoeia and go UP to the first instance of Dock, or a better way to solve my problem?

Thanks!

2
  • 1
    Does it have a to be a regex based solution or can it use string functions?
    – Mark Byers
    Jul 12, 2010 at 22:07
  • It wouldn't have to be I suppose, but that is what I have been working with thus far. Daniel's solution below seems to work great.
    – dandyjuan
    Jul 12, 2010 at 23:50

2 Answers 2

3

A negative lookahead assertion will do the trick.

DOCK((?!DOCK).)+?onomatopoeia
1
  • Depending on specific use-case, may want to wrap DOCK in a pair of \b to ensure that, for example, "haddock" doesn't cause incorrect behaviour. Jul 12, 2010 at 23:00
0

Here's an algorithmic approach:

  • set pushing==false.
  • Break your text apart into words (e.g. spans of letters) and loop over those.
  • upon hitting a DOCK and pushing==false, push it onto a stack and set pushing = true
  • if you hit ono... and pushing==true, print out whatever's on the stack plus ono..., then clear the stack and set pushing = false.
  • any other word, if pushing==true, push it.
  • DOCK, if pushing==true, clear the stack, then push your new DOCK.
1
  • Thanks, but this seems quite complicated.
    – dandyjuan
    Jul 12, 2010 at 23:51

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