22

I recently started getting into Python and I am having a hard time searching through directories and matching files based on a regex that I have created.

Basically I want it to scan through all the directories in another directory and find all the files that ends with .zip or .rar or .r01 and then run various commands based on what file it is.

import os, re

rootdir = "/mnt/externa/Torrents/completed"

for subdir, dirs, files in os.walk(rootdir):
    if re.search('(w?.zip)|(w?.rar)|(w?.r01)', files):
        print "match: " . files
2
  • paste your traceback please
    – Daniel Lee
    Sep 2, 2016 at 13:48
  • 1
    w? optionally matches a literal w. . matches any character, including a dot. And without anchors, you match "a.rar.txt". To match zip or rar at the end, try: r'(\.zip|\.rar)$'
    – Andomar
    Sep 2, 2016 at 13:52

4 Answers 4

33
import os
import re

rootdir = "/mnt/externa/Torrents/completed"
regex = re.compile('(.*zip$)|(.*rar$)|(.*r01$)')

for root, dirs, files in os.walk(rootdir):
  for file in files:
    if regex.match(file):
       print(file)

CODE BELLOW ANSWERS QUESTION IN FOLLOWING COMMENT

That worked really well, is there a way to do this if match is found on regex group 1 and do this if match is found on regex group 2 etc ? – nillenilsson

import os
import re

regex = re.compile('(.*zip$)|(.*rar$)|(.*r01$)')
rx = '(.*zip$)|(.*rar$)|(.*r01$)'

for root, dirs, files in os.walk("../Documents"):
  for file in files:
    res = re.match(rx, file)
    if res:
      if res.group(1):
        print("ZIP",file)
      if res.group(2):
        print("RAR",file)
      if res.group(3):
        print("R01",file)

It might be possible to do this in a nicer way, but this works.

4
  • That worked really well, is there a way to do this if match is found on regex group 1 and do this if match is found on regex group 2 etc ? Sep 2, 2016 at 14:00
  • Yes, I have updated the code. Be aware that there might be nicer way to achieve this.
    – Jonas
    Sep 12, 2016 at 2:25
  • Thanks a lot. I tried this pattern egex = re.compile('(w.*rar)|(s.*txt)|(\.py$)', flags=re.IGNORECASE). It works for the first two groups but doesn't return the py files. Sep 27, 2021 at 7:54
  • Be aware that (\.py$) will only match the extension, hence re.match() will not see it as a match.
    – Jonas
    Sep 27, 2021 at 11:08
10

Given that you are a beginner, I would recommend using glob in place of a quickly written file-walking-regex matcher.

Snippets of functions using glob and a file-walking-regex matcher

The below snippet contains two file-regex searching functions (one using glob and the other using a custom file-walking-regex matcher). The snippet also contains a "stopwatch" function to time the two functions.

import os
import sys
from datetime import timedelta
from timeit import time
import os
import re
import glob

def stopwatch(method):
    def timed(*args, **kw):
        ts = time.perf_counter()
        result = method(*args, **kw)
        te = time.perf_counter()
        duration = timedelta(seconds=te - ts)
        print(f"{method.__name__}: {duration}")
        return result
    return timed

@stopwatch
def get_filepaths_with_oswalk(root_path: str, file_regex: str):
    files_paths = []
    pattern = re.compile(file_regex)
    for root, directories, files in os.walk(root_path):
        for file in files:
            if pattern.match(file):
                files_paths.append(os.path.join(root, file))
    return files_paths


@stopwatch
def get_filepaths_with_glob(root_path: str, file_regex: str):
    return glob.glob(os.path.join(root_path, file_regex))

Comparing runtimes of the above functions

On using the above two functions to find 5076 files matching the regex filename_*.csv in a dir called root_path (containing 66,948 files):

>>> glob_files = get_filepaths_with_glob(root_path, 'filename_*.csv')
get_filepaths_with_glob: 0:00:00.176400

>>> oswalk_files = get_filepaths_with_oswalk(root_path,'filename_(.*).csv')
get_filepaths_with_oswalk: 0:03:29.385379

The glob method is much faster and the code for it is shorter.

For your case

For your case, you can probably use something like the following to get your *.zip,*.rar and *.r01 files:

files = []
for ext in ['*.zip', '*.rar', '*.r01']:
    files += get_filepaths_with_glob(root_path, ext) 
6

Here's an alternative using glob.

from pathlib import Path

rootdir = "/mnt/externa/Torrents/completed"
for extension in 'zip rar r01'.split():
    for path in Path(rootdir).glob('*.' + extension):
        print("match: " + path)
1
  • 1
    not truly an answer, since it doesn't do regex matching
    – woodz
    Dec 20, 2022 at 14:18
2

I would do it this way:

import re
from pathlib import Path

def glob_re(path, regex="", glob_mask="**/*", inverse=False):
    p = Path(path)
    if inverse:
        res = [str(f) for f in p.glob(glob_mask) if not re.search(regex, str(f))]
    else:
        res = [str(f) for f in p.glob(glob_mask) if re.search(regex, str(f))]
    return res

NOTE: per default it will recursively scan all subdirectories. If you want to scan only the current directory then you should explicitly specify glob_mask="*"

8
  • Thanks a lot. I am a newbie, can you put an example of how to use the function? Sep 27, 2021 at 6:43
  • I tried print(glob_re('.', '(s?.txt)|(w?.rar)', '*', False)) but I got unmatching file names in the list of output Sep 27, 2021 at 7:40
  • @YasserKhalil, what kind of file names are you looking for? Are you looking in the current directory only (without subdirectories)? Sep 27, 2021 at 9:10
  • Yes in the current directory only and the files I need are the text files that start with s and the rar files that start with w and also I need any python file with the extension .py Sep 27, 2021 at 9:20
  • 1
    @YasserKhalil, try this RegEx: r"^(?:s.*\.txt|w.*\.rar|.*\.py)$" Sep 27, 2021 at 12:34

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