How do I check if a string matches this pattern?
Uppercase letter, number(s), uppercase letter, number(s)...
Example, These would match:
A1B2
B10L1
C1N200J1
These wouldn't ('^' points to problem)
a1B2
^
A10B
^
AB400
^
import re
pattern = re.compile("^([A-Z][0-9]+)+$")
pattern.match(string)
re.match
: If zero or more characters at the beginning of string match the regular expression pattern
. I just spent like 30 minutes trying to understand why I couldn't match something at the end of a string. Seems like it's not possible with match
, is it? For that, re.search(pattern, my_string)
works though.
Nov 11, 2016 at 15:52
^
at the beginning when you use match
. I think it's a bit more complicated then that very simple explanation, but I'm not clear. You are correct that it does start from the beginning of the string though.
Nov 11, 2016 at 20:10
search()
in this context.
Feb 21, 2021 at 12:16
search()
". It works perfectly fine with match.
Sep 5, 2021 at 21:03
One-liner: re.match(r"pattern", string) # No need to compile
import re
>>> if re.match(r"hello[0-9]+", 'hello1'):
... print('Yes')
...
Yes
You can evalute it as bool
if needed
>>> bool(re.match(r"hello[0-9]+", 'hello1'))
True
re.match
in the context of an if
, but you have to use bool
if you're using it elsewhere?
Mar 13, 2018 at 13:59
re.match
. It only matches at the start of a string. Have a look at re.search
instead.
Mar 13, 2018 at 14:02
re
is used in more than one places to improve efficiency. In terms of error .match
would throw the same error what .compile
does. It's perfectly safe to use.
re
module compile and cache the patterns. Therefore there is absolutely no efficiency gain using compile and then match than just directly calling re.match
. All of these functions call the internal function _compile
(including re.compile
) which does the caching to a python dictionary.
Please try the following:
import re
name = ["A1B1", "djdd", "B2C4", "C2H2", "jdoi","1A4V"]
# Match names.
for element in name:
m = re.match("(^[A-Z]\d[A-Z]\d)", element)
if m:
print(m.groups())
import re
import sys
prog = re.compile('([A-Z]\d+)+')
while True:
line = sys.stdin.readline()
if not line: break
if prog.match(line):
print 'matched'
else:
print 'not matched'
As stated in the comments, all these answers using re.match
implicitly matches on the start of the string. re.search
is needed if you want to generalize to the whole string.
import re
pattern = re.compile("([A-Z][0-9]+)+")
# finds match anywhere in string
bool(re.search(pattern, 'aA1A1')) # True
# matches on start of string, even though pattern does not have ^ constraint
bool(re.match(pattern, 'aA1A1')) # False
If you need the full string to exactly match the regex, see @Ali Sajjad's answer using re.fullmatch
Credit: @LondonRob and @conradkleinespel in the comments.
regular expressions make this easy ...
[A-Z]
will match exactly one character between A and Z
\d+
will match one or more digits
()
group things (and also return things... but for now just think of them grouping)
+
selects 1 or more
import re
ab = re.compile("^([A-Z]{1}[0-9]{1})+$")
ab.match(string)
I believe that should work for an uppercase, number pattern.
The re.match(...)
will not work if you want to match the full string.
For example;
re.match("[a-z]+", "abcdef")
✅ will give a matchre.match("[a-z]+", "abcdef 12345")
✅ will also give a match because there is a part in string which matches (maybe you don't want that when you're checking if the entire string is valid or not)Use re.fullmatch(...)
. This will only match if the
if re.fullmatch("[a-z]+", my_string):
print("Yes")
re.fullmatch("[a-z]+", "abcdef")
✅ Yesre.fullmatch("[a-z]+", "abcdef 12345")
❌ NoOne liner: bool(re.fullmatch("[a-z]+", my_string))
Ali Sajjad's answer should be the default, i.e. fullmatch
to avoid false positives.
However, it's also important to know that you're always checking not None
for "yes, it's a match":
The two possibilities are therefore:
if re.fullmatch("[a-z]+", my_string)!=None:
or, as in Ali's answer:
if bool(re.fullmatch("[a-z]+", my_string)):
To my way of thinking both of these are really quite horribly unreadable. So a simple utility function is needed for readability:
def is_match(pattern, string, flags=re.IGNORECASE | re.DOTALL): # or "is_full_match", as desired
return re.fullmatch(pattern, string, flags)!=None
Those 2 flags are (usually) the most helpful default flags
settings in my experience, rather than "0".
In practice, of course, you may need to examine the Match
object delivered by re.fullmatch
. But for cases where you just need to find whether there's a match...
^([A-Z]\d+){1,}$
like this?B
and not withA
.A
andB
are small letters right?A10b
andaB400
?