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
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', ',', ')')]
matches
already has all matches - simply do print(matches) instead of enumerating over the elements of the list that matches is