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I want to find out if some part of a string is contained in a list of strings I allow, using regex. For example, I would like to check if

"12_SUMMER_3456"

matches:

"\d*_(SUMMER|FALL|WINTER|SPRING)_\d*"

The thing is, I want to replace "(SUMMER|FALL|WINTER|SPRING)" with a list:

lst = ["SUMMER", "FALL", "WINTER", "SPRING"]

and then, use lst instead of explicitly give it's elements inside the regex. Is there something like that in Python?

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1 Answer 1

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You can join and interpolate the list.

regex = r"\d*_(" + '|'.join(lst) + r")_\d*"

As an aside, that's equivalent to

regex = r"_(" + '|'.join(lst) + r")_"

If something may or may not be there at the boundary of the match, you can simplify by taking it out; the regex will still match whether or not it's there. (If you are capturing or anchoring the match, then of course these are necessary for other reasons.)

The third-party regex library lets you say

regex = r"\d*_L<lst>_\d*"

where again of course the \d* are redundant. You need to pip install regex and then obvisously import regex instead of import re.

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