1

I use regex to match certain expressions within a text.

assume I want to match a number, or numbers separated by commas -including or not spaces-, all within parenthesis in a text. (in reality the matches are more complex including spaces etc)

I do the following:

import re
pattern =re.compile(r"(\()([0-9]+(,)?( )?)+(\))")
matches = pattern.findall(content)

matches is a list with the matches,

for i,match in enumerate(matches):
    print(i,match)

Example text:

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet (12,16) , consectetur 23 adipiscing elit. Curabitur (45) euismod scelerisque consectetur. Vivamus aliquam velit (46,48,49) at augue faucibus, id eleifend purus egestas. Aliquam vitae mauris cursus, facilisis enim condimentum, vestibulum enim. Praesent

enter image description here

QUESTION 1 How do I get the list of FULL matches like:

matches=[ "(12,16)", "(45)", "(46,48,49)"]

QUESTION 2: how do I get a list with the n-preceeding words of the Full match? I am trying to split the text in words. A problem here is that the hit (12,16) might be several times in the text. A second problem when using:

mywordlist=text.split(' ') 

might split as well the match in case I want to catch punctuation separate from the words, and in case there are spaces within the (). In the example the words I want to get back are the ones underlined manually in the picture. 4-words before the match:

"ipsum dolor sit amet"         (12,16) 
"adipiscing elit. Curabitur"   (45)
". Vivamus aliquam velit"      (46,48,49)

AFTER SOME COMMENTS: print(matches) gives me:

matches = pattern.findall(content)
print('the matches are:')
print('type of variable matches',type(matches))
print(matches)

[('(', '16', ',', ')'), ('(', '45', '', ')'), ('(', '49', ',', ')')]
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  • to catch the words before the phrases you need to add then to the capture pattern. matches already has all matches - simply do print(matches) instead of enumerating over the elements of the list that matches is Jan 5, 2019 at 18:54
  • 1
    done. edited. Sorry.
    – JFerro
    Jan 5, 2019 at 19:04
  • @Berlines Is it guaranteed that parenthesis does not occur anywhere else apart from (45) or (12,16) etc.
    – Bitto
    Jan 5, 2019 at 19:10
  • No, there might be other parenthesis. this one should not be matched: "(i.e. 45 feet long)" it includes a number inside, but is not to be matched.
    – JFerro
    Jan 5, 2019 at 19:20

1 Answer 1

1

Sample code with changed regex - test here: https://regex101.com/r/mV1l3E/3

import re

regex = r"(\w+ (?=\(\d))(\([\d,]+\))"

test_str = """bla kra tu (34) blaka trutra (33,45) afda
bla kra tu (34) blaka trutra (33,45) afdabla kra tu (34) blaka trutra (33,45) afda 
bla kra tu (34) blaka trutra (33,45) afda""" 

matches = re.findall(regex, test_str, re.MULTILINE)

print(matches) 

for first_matching_group, number_group in matches: 
    print(first_matching_group, "===>", number_group)

Output:

# matches (each a tuple of both matches
[('kra tu ', '(34)'), ('blaka trutra ', '(33,45)'), ('kra tu ', '(34)'), 
 ('blaka trutra ', '(33,45)'), ('kra tu ', '(34)'), ('blaka trutra ', '(33,45)'), 
 ('kra tu ', '(34)'), ('blaka trutra ', '(33,45)')]


# for loop output
('kra tu ', '===>', '(34)')
('blaka trutra ', '===>', '(33,45)')
('kra tu ', '===>', '(34)')
('blaka trutra ', '===>', '(33,45)')
('kra tu ', '===>', '(34)')
('blaka trutra ', '===>', '(33,45)')
('kra tu ', '===>', '(34)')
('blaka trutra ', '===>', '(33,45)')

Pattern explanation:

(\w+ (?=\(\d))(\([\d,]+\))
--------------============

Two groups in the pattern, the ------ group looks for 2 words seperated by spaces unsing multiple word characters (\w+) with a lookahead for opening opening parenthesis and one digit (you may want to include the full second pattern here to avoid mis-matches). The second pattern ======== looks for parenthesis +multiple digits and commas followed by closing parenthesis.

The link to regexr101 https://regex101.com/r/mV1l3E/3/ explains it much better and in color if you copy the pattern in its regex field.

The pattern will not find any (42) with not 2 words before it - you will have to play around a bit if that is a use case as well.


Edit:

Maybe slightly better regex: r'((?:\w+ ?){1,5}(?=\(\d))(\([\d,]+\))' - needs only 1 word before (https://regex101.com/r/mV1l3E/5/)

6
  • the only thing I don't know know is why i got a minus in the question. @patrick thanks. works
    – JFerro
    Jan 5, 2019 at 20:58
  • 1
    Ohhh nice. thanks. I learnt double. I will take care of figures and screenshots pasting also the code. thanks mate.
    – JFerro
    Jan 5, 2019 at 21:06
  • in your solution the lookbehind part is ((?:\w+ ?){1,5}(?=(\d)) could you please explain why in the first look behind there is ?: (interrogation followed by semicolon) and in the second one the interrogation is followed by =
    – JFerro
    Jan 6, 2019 at 20:25
  • Thx. indeed non capturing and positive look ahead. I am trying to add the same non capturing group at the right side to get also the 5 words after the regex in the middle. When adding the non capturing group afterwards it does not work. i.e. simply copying (?:\w+ ?){1,5} on the most right side does not work, why?
    – JFerro
    Jan 6, 2019 at 20:50
  • right. got it: ((?:\w+ ?){1,5}(?=(\d))(([\d][\d\w ,]+))(?: )(?:\w+ ?){1,5}
    – JFerro
    Jan 6, 2019 at 20:56

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