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Any time I want to replace a piece of text that is part of a larger piece of text, I always have to do something like:

"(?P<start>some_pattern)(?P<replace>foo)(?P<end>end)"

And then concatenate the start group with the new data for replace and then the end group.

Is there a better method for this?

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3 Answers

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Look in the Python re documentation for lookaheads (?=...) and lookbehinds (?<=...) -- I'm pretty sure they're what you want. They match strings, but do not "consume" the bits of the strings they match.

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The problem with that is that it must be a fixed-width. I need something that allows for more complex patterns. – Evan Fosmark Jan 29 at 6:28
@Evan: In most regex engines, it must be fixed width for look-behind only. – Tomalak Jan 29 at 7:05
Tomalak, what I need is to be able to have a non-fixed width prefix pattern. – Evan Fosmark Jan 29 at 7:14
I got it figured out. Thanks for the information, zenazn. It has been rather helpful. – Evan Fosmark Jan 30 at 7:27
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>>> import re
>>> s = "start foo end"
>>> s = re.sub("foo", "replaced", s)
>>> s
'start replaced end'
>>> s = re.sub("(?<= )(.+)(?= )", lambda m: "can use a callable for the %s text too" % m.group(1), s)
>>> s
'start can use a callable for the replaced text too end'
>>> help(re.sub)
Help on function sub in module re:

sub(pattern, repl, string, count=0)
    Return the string obtained by replacing the leftmost
    non-overlapping occurrences of the pattern in string by the
    replacement repl.  repl can be either a string or a callable;
    if a callable, it's passed the match object and must return
    a replacement string to be used.
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vote up 1 vote down

The short version is that you cannot use variable-width patterns in lookbehinds using Python's re module. There is no way to change this:

>>> import re
>>> re.sub("(?<=foo)bar(?=baz)", "quux", "foobarbaz")
'fooquuxbaz'
>>> re.sub("(?<=fo+)bar(?=baz)", "quux", "foobarbaz")

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<pyshell#2>", line 1, in <module>
    re.sub("(?<=fo+)bar(?=baz)", "quux", string)
  File "C:\Development\Python25\lib\re.py", line 150, in sub
    return _compile(pattern, 0).sub(repl, string, count)
  File "C:\Development\Python25\lib\re.py", line 241, in _compile
    raise error, v # invalid expression
error: look-behind requires fixed-width pattern

This means that you'll need to work around it, the simplest solution being very similar to what you're doing now:

>>> re.sub("(fo+)bar(?=baz)", "\\1quux", "foobarbaz")
'fooquuxbaz'
>>>
>>> # If you need to turn this into a callable function:
>>> def replace(start, replace, end, replacement, search):
        return re.sub("(" + re.escape(start) + ")" + re.escape(replace) + "(?=" + re.escape + ")", "\\1" + re.escape(replacement), search)

This doesn't have the elegance of the lookbehind solution, but it's still a very clear, straightforward one-liner. And if you look at what an expert has to say on the matter (he's talking about JavaScript, which lacks lookbehinds entirely, but many of the principles are the same), you'll see that his simplest solution looks a lot like this one.

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