18

I have a string - Python :

string = "/foo13546897/bar/Atlantis-GPS-coordinates/bar457822368/foo/"

Expected output is :

"Atlantis-GPS-coordinates"

I know that the expected output is ALWAYS surrounded by "/bar/" on the left and "/" on the right :

"/bar/Atlantis-GPS-coordinates/"

Proposed solution would look like :

a = string.find("/bar/")
b = string.find("/",a+5)
output=string[a+5,b]

This works, but I don't like it. Does someone know a beautiful function or tip ?

1
  • 1
    string.split("/bar/")[1].split("/")[0]
    – dawg
    Jan 17, 2016 at 1:58

4 Answers 4

26

You can use split:

>>> string.split("/bar/")[1].split("/")[0]
'Atlantis-GPS-coordinates'

Some efficiency from adding a max split of 1 I suppose:

>>> string.split("/bar/", 1)[1].split("/", 1)[0]
'Atlantis-GPS-coordinates'

Or use partition:

>>> string.partition("/bar/")[2].partition("/")[0]
'Atlantis-GPS-coordinates'

Or a regex:

>>> re.search(r'/bar/([^/]+)', string).group(1)
'Atlantis-GPS-coordinates'

Depends on what speaks to you and your data.

2
  • Love your answer. I will validate it. What are the advantages / drawbacks of split and partition ?
    – Vincent
    Jan 17, 2016 at 11:29
  • The main difference is how each handles the split if /bar/ is not present. partition always produces a three element tuple with empty strings of the partition element is not found. split changes the number of elements in the list produced. It is easier to test whether partition did what it was supposed to do. I would use split if I knew the string would successfully split; partition or a regex if I needed to test.
    – dawg
    Jan 17, 2016 at 16:14
4

What you haven't isn't all that bad. I'd write it as:

start = string.find('/bar/') + 5
end = string.find('/', start)
output = string[start:end]

as long as you know that /bar/WHAT-YOU-WANT/ is always going to be present. Otherwise, I would reach for the regular expression knife:

>>> import re
>>> PATTERN = re.compile('^.*/bar/([^/]*)/.*$')
>>> s = '/foo13546897/bar/Atlantis-GPS-coordinates/bar457822368/foo/'
>>> match = PATTERN.match(s)
>>> match.group(1)
'Atlantis-GPS-coordinates'
2
  • Your regex group is missing a closing parentheses Jan 17, 2016 at 2:07
  • @MartinKonecny indeed. thx
    – D.Shawley
    Jan 17, 2016 at 2:08
1
import re

pattern = '(?<=/bar/).+?/'
string = "/foo13546897/bar/Atlantis-GPS-coordinates/bar457822368/foo/"

result = re.search(pattern, string)
print string[result.start():result.end() - 1]
# "Atlantis-GPS-coordinates" 

That is a Python 2.x example. What it does first is: 1. (?<=/bar/) means only process the following regex if this precedes it (so that /bar/ must be before it) 2. '.+?/' means any amount of characters up until the next '/' char

Hope that helps some.

If you need to do this kind of search a bunch it is better to 'compile' this search for performance, but if you only need to do it once don't bother.

0

Using re (slower than other solutions):

>>> import re
>>> string = "/foo13546897/bar/Atlantis-GPS-coordinates/bar457822368/foo/"
>>> re.search(r'(?<=/bar/)[^/]+(?=/)', string).group()
'Atlantis-GPS-coordinates'

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