35

I've got a file whose format I'm altering via a python script. I have several camel cased strings in this file where I just want to insert a single space before the capital letter - so "WordWordWord" becomes "Word Word Word".

My limited regex experience just stalled out on me - can someone think of a decent regex to do this, or (better yet) is there a more pythonic way to do this that I'm missing?

10 Answers 10

61

You could try:

>>> re.sub(r"(\w)([A-Z])", r"\1 \2", "WordWordWord")
'Word Word Word'
4
  • 4
    re.sub(r"(\w)([A-Z])", r"\1 \2", "SorryIThinkYouMissedASpot")
    – tzot
    Oct 13, 2008 at 22:12
  • As a small improvement, [[:upper:]] should be used instead of [A-Z].
    – Tomalak
    Oct 14, 2008 at 21:54
  • 6
    @Tomalak, [[:upper:]] is not supported by Python. It is a POSIX bracket expression. Nov 1, 2011 at 8:39
  • 3
    For those like me, make sure you - import re
    – blobbymatt
    Mar 18, 2019 at 9:39
38

If there are consecutive capitals, then Gregs result could not be what you look for, since the \w consumes the caracter in front of the captial letter to be replaced.

>>> re.sub(r"(\w)([A-Z])", r"\1 \2", "WordWordWWWWWWWord")
'Word Word WW WW WW Word'

A look-behind would solve this:

>>> re.sub(r"(?<=\w)([A-Z])", r" \1", "WordWordWWWWWWWord")
'Word Word W W W W W W Word'
2
  • Dan's answer is better and simpler :)
    – hayalci
    Oct 13, 2008 at 22:00
  • 1
    @hayalci: re.sub('([A-Z])', r' \1', 'Really?')
    – tzot
    Oct 13, 2008 at 22:08
16

Have a look at my answer on .NET - How can you split a “caps” delimited string into an array?

Edit: Maybe better to include it here.

re.sub(r'([a-z](?=[A-Z])|[A-Z](?=[A-Z][a-z]))', r'\1 ', text)

For example:

"SimpleHTTPServer" => ["Simple", "HTTP", "Server"]
3
  • 1
    Your answer is probably what Electrons_Ahoy really wants; however, based on the phrasing of their question, it's not.
    – tzot
    Oct 13, 2008 at 22:53
  • but thank you for sharing this one, this is an awesome answer! Mar 20, 2015 at 22:04
  • Beautiful! Exactly what I was looking for. Aug 29, 2022 at 16:50
14

Perhaps shorter:

>>> re.sub(r"\B([A-Z])", r" \1", "DoIThinkThisIsABetterAnswer?")
1
  • 2
    For anyone wondering, \B is "Not word boundary". So it's not inserting spaces where there's already a space. Dec 23, 2017 at 2:46
14

Maybe you would be interested in one-liner implementation without using regexp:

''.join(' ' + char if char.isupper() else char.strip() for char in text).strip()
1
  • 1
    Elegant answer... Thanks a lot Oct 29, 2019 at 7:06
5

With regexes you can do this:

re.sub('([A-Z])', r' \1', str)

Of course, that will only work for ASCII characters, if you want to do Unicode it's a whole new can of worms :-)

2
  • 2
    re.sub('([A-Z])', r' \1', "Do we want a space before the D's of this phrase?")
    – tzot
    Oct 13, 2008 at 22:09
  • Ah, yes, good point. Looks like your's and Leonhard's solutions handle this correctly.
    – Dan Lenski
    Oct 13, 2008 at 23:10
3

If you have acronyms, you probably do not want spaces between them. This two-stage regex will keep acronyms intact (and also treat punctuation and other non-uppercase letters as something to add a space on):

re_outer = re.compile(r'([^A-Z ])([A-Z])')
re_inner = re.compile(r'(?<!^)([A-Z])([^A-Z])')
re_outer.sub(r'\1 \2', re_inner.sub(r' \1\2', 'DaveIsAFKRightNow!Cool'))

The output will be: 'Dave Is AFK Right Now! Cool'

1

I agree that the regex solution is the easiest, but I wouldn't say it's the most pythonic.

How about:

text = 'WordWordWord'
new_text = ''

for i, letter in enumerate(text):
    if i and letter.isupper():
        new_text += ' '

    new_text += letter
2
  • This has the same problem as Dan's - you'll get extra spaces before capitals even if they aren't needed.
    – Brian
    Oct 14, 2008 at 8:34
  • True, i've edited it to add a flag... I admit it's a little cumbersome, but may be easier to remember than regex.
    – monkut
    Oct 15, 2008 at 1:01
1

To the old thread - wanted to try an option for one of my requirements. Of course the re.sub() is the cool solution, but also got a 1 liner if re module isn't (or shouldn't be) imported.

st = 'ThisIsTextStringToSplitWithSpace'
print(''.join([' '+ s if s.isupper()  else s for s in st]).lstrip())
0

I think regexes are the way to go here, but just to give a pure python version without (hopefully) any of the problems ΤΖΩΤΖΙΟΥ has pointed out:

def splitCaps(s):
    result = []
    for ch, next in window(s+" ", 2):
        result.append(ch)
        if next.isupper() and not ch.isspace():
            result.append(' ')
    return ''.join(result)

window() is a utility function I use to operate on a sliding window of items, defined as:

import collections, itertools

def window(it, winsize, step=1):
    it=iter(it)  # Ensure we have an iterator
    l=collections.deque(itertools.islice(it, winsize))
    while 1:  # Continue till StopIteration gets raised.
        yield tuple(l)
        for i in range(step):
            l.append(it.next())
            l.popleft()

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