Given the following text as an example:
text = (
"Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. "
"Vestibulum faucibus pulvinar congue. Donec malesuada "
"scelerisque ex, at cursus ipsum. Sed eros ex, molestie "
"eget vulputate in, cursus vitae odio. Duis eu nisi dolor. "
"Suspendisse elit quam, tincidunt in odio in, rutrum dictum ipsum."
)
We write this function to extract all the words that start with a given character:
def starts_with(text, char):
import re
pattern = re.compile(r"\b[.{}]\w+".format(char))
return pattern.findall(text)
Here is how the output will look like:
>>> print(starts_with(text, 'i'))
['ipsum', 'ipsum', 'in', 'in', 'in', 'ipsum']
And here is the same thing from a list of words:
>>> words_list = text.split()
>>> print(starts_with(str.join(' ', words_list), 'i'))
['ipsum', 'ipsum', 'in', 'in', 'in', 'ipsum']
If you want to write these in a file, you can do so as follows:
selected_word = starts_with(text, 'i')
with open('my_file.txt', 'w') as file:
for word in selected words:
print(word, file=file, end='\n')
This puts every word found in a new line. You can substitute end='\n'
with anything you like, e.g. space, tab, etc.
You may also consider writing your words in a CSV. It would be easier to manage in the future.
Without the print
function:
To write without the print
function, you may do as follows:
found = starts_with(text, 'i')
file = open("foo.txt", "w")
file.seek(0, 0)
file.write(str.join('\n', found))
Now let's test it:
file = open("foo.txt", "r")
file.seek(0, 0)
for index, __ in enumerate(found):
line = file.readline()
print ("Line No %d - %s" % (index+1, line))
file.close()
Displays:
Line No 1 - ipsum
Line No 2 - ipsum
Line No 3 - in
Line No 4 - in
Line No 5 - in
Line No 6 - ipsum
With no extra lines.
Note that the key here is to use str.join('\n', found)
to prepare your contents to be saved into a file.
for word in ifile
reads a single line into theword
variable not a word; and the line has a new line at the end of it