4

I have a string like:

Today, 3:30pm - Group Meeting to discuss "big idea"

How do you construct a regex such that after parsing it would return:

Today 3:30pm Group Meeting to discuss big idea

I would like it to remove all non-alphanumeric characters except for those that appear in a 12 or 24 hour time stamp.

4
  • I am using python. Sorry, should have mentioned it.
    – rfadams
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:18
  • IronPython (with .NET) or "normal" Python?
    – Abel
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:33
  • To be more clear (hopefully) If string is Today, 3:30pm - Group Meeting: to discuss "big idea" I would like Today 3:30pm Group Meeting to discuss big idea The only non-alphanumeric character I would like left behind after the replace is the colon in a timestamp.
    – rfadams
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:34
  • Normal python found in Ubuntu
    – rfadams
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:35

6 Answers 6

8
# this: D:DD, DD:DDam/pm 12/24 hr
re = r':(?=..(?<!\d:\d\d))|[^a-zA-Z0-9 ](?<!:)'

A colon must be preceded by at least one digit and followed by at least two digits: then it's a time. All other colons will be considered textual colons.

How it works

:              // match a colon
(?=..          // match but not capture two chars
  (?<!         // start a negative look-behind group (if it matches, the whole fails)
    \d:\d\d    // time stamp
  )            // end neg. look behind
)              // end non-capture two chars
|              // or
[^a-zA-Z0-9 ]  // match anything not digits or letters
(?<!:)         // that isn't a colon

Then when applied to this silly text:

Today, 3:30pm - Group 1,2,3 Meeting to di4sc::uss3: 2:3:4 "big idea" on 03:33pm or 16:47 is also good

...changes it into:

Today, 3:30pm  Group 123 Meeting to di4scuss3 234 big idea on 03:33pm or 16:47 is also good
10
  • @Cadwag, you said you got an error about neg look forward/behind must be fixed width only. That's a restriction of many regex flavors (not .NET though). I'll update my answer with that in mind.
    – Abel
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:43
  • Thanks alot for your help. I am trying your solution in Unix normal python using the python example given by 'Bryan McLemore'. So using your solution, it the 3rd line looks like re.sub(r'(<![012]?\d):(>!\d\d(?:[ap]m)?)|[^A-Za-z\d: ]', '', x) But it doesn't seem to do anything when I run it. I'm sorry for all the hassle. I'm just starting out with python and have never been very good with regex. Thanks again
    – rfadams
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:45
  • Nice work Abel, just testing it though, it doesn't seem to match the colon in "3:3".
    – James
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:48
  • @J-P: is that testing in Python or in .NET? And did you use my original design, because then: indeed, it would consider 3:3 as a time.
    – Abel
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:51
  • @Cadwag: if you've trouble with regexes, check this list of online regex testers: undermyhat.org/blog/2009/09/…. PCRE is what I believe Python uses internally.
    – Abel
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:54
2

Python.

import string
punct=string.punctuation
s='Today, 3:30pm - Group Meeting:am to discuss "big idea" by our madam'
for item in s.split():
    try:
        t=time.strptime(item,"%H:%M%p")
    except:
        item=''.join([ i for i in item if i not in punct])
    else:
        item=item
    print item,

output

$ ./python.py
Today 3:30pm  Group Meetingam to discuss big idea by our madam

# change to s='Today, 15:30pm - Group 1,2,3 Meeting to di4sc::uss3: 2:3:4 "big idea" on 03:33pm or 16:47 is also good'

$ ./python.py
Today 15:30pm  Group 123 Meeting to di4scuss3 234 big idea on 03:33pm or 1647 is also good

NB: Method should be improved to check for valid time only when necessary(by imposing conditions) , but i will leave it as that for now.

6
  • Nice approach, but you need a few more tweaks to handle the 24-hour time stamp requirement ("15:30" instead of "3:30pm")
    – Ned Deily
    Nov 17, 2009 at 3:32
  • what do you mean? it doesn't matter right? %H is from 00 to 24 inclusive.
    – ghostdog74
    Nov 17, 2009 at 3:38
  • 16:47 becomes 1647 in your example, I think that's what Ned means.
    – Abel
    Nov 17, 2009 at 3:44
  • Btw, though it isn't specified in the q., my solution allows time in text, yours splits on word boundaries prior to that: "This12:40 is late" is silly of course, not sure how the OP would want to deal with that (my solution leaves the colon, yours will delete it).
    – Abel
    Nov 17, 2009 at 3:47
  • @abel, i see. anyway, there are much to take care of since we are only working on limited data in this case. I will just leave it as that.
    – ghostdog74
    Nov 17, 2009 at 3:53
1

I assume you'd like to keep spaces as well, and this implementation is in python, but it's PCRE so it should be portable.

import re
x = u'Today, 3:30pm - Group Meeting to discuss "big idea"'
re.sub(r'[^a-zA-Z0-9: ]', '', x)

Output: 'Today 3:30pm  Group Meeting to discuss big idea'

for a slightly cleaner answer (no double spaces)

import re
x = u'Today, 3:30pm - Group Meeting to discuss "big idea"'
tmp = re.sub(r'[^a-zA-Z0-9: ]', '', x)
re.sub(r'[ ]+', ' ', tmp)

Output: 'Today 3:30pm Group Meeting to discuss big idea'

4
  • 2
    What about "Today, 3:30pm - Group meeting: discuss big idea" - the colon after "meeting" won't be removed. Nov 17, 2009 at 2:19
  • @Cadwag, this solution removes colons even when they are outside of timestamps. Surely you don't want this?
    – James
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:26
  • Yea, in my excitement I seem to have acted prematurely. But it seems to act as Greg Hewgill says - leaving colons that are outside of timestamps
    – rfadams
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:30
  • Not sure about Python, but my C# solution below might solve this problem with neg. look forward / backward. Also check Rubens Farias solution, that should work with Python too.
    – Abel
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:35
1

You can try, in Javascript:

var re = /(\W+(?!\d{2}[ap]m))/gi;
var input = 'Today, 3:30pm - Group Meeting to discuss "big idea"';
alert(input.replace(re, " "))
3
  • 1
    Interesting how many solutions are given. You replace any non-word character with a space, that means discuss "big idea" becomes discuss big idea (i.e., extra spaces). Use something like /(( )|\W)(?!\d{2})/g; and .replace(re, "$2") (or was it \1 in JS?). This will leave the spaces and remove the rest. I call this "conditional replacement".
    – Abel
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:23
  • hmm, yet another Markdown in comments bug: the extra space in discuss big got lost...
    – Abel
    Nov 17, 2009 at 2:25
  • interesting approach, Abel, ty Nov 17, 2009 at 2:28
0

Correct regexp to do that would be:

'(?<!\d):|:(?!\d\d)|[^a-zA-Z0-9 :]'
-1

s="Call me, my dear, at 3:30"

re.sub(r'[^\w :]','',s)

'Call me my dear at 3:30'

1
  • This doesn't answer the question. Colons that are not part of a timestamp should be removed. And the formatting needs a lot of work, too.
    – Alan Moore
    Apr 3, 2016 at 12:55

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