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)
w?
optionally matches a literalw
..
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)$'