To go along with Jan Goyvaert's answer:
The main benefit of non-capturing groups is that you can add them to a regex without upsetting the numbering of the capturing groups in the regex.
Why add a group that doesn't upset the numbering of the groups?
OP's example, r"(?:aaa)(_bbb)"
, draws my eye (and brain) to "aaa" but there's nothing special about it... to me, it merely seems adjacent to what really matters, "_bbb".
I think it should actually be one of either:
r"aaa(_bbb)"
: if "aaa" isn't important to how you/we read the regex, "aaa" has no meaning to us
r"(?:aaa(_bbb))"
: if "aaa_bbb" is a single thing we should (mentally) consider as a whole, but in the end we only use "_bbb"
All three are equivalent from the perspective of the regex engine:
s = "aaa_bbb"
for pattern in [r"(?:aaa)(_bbb)", r"aaa(_bbb)", r"(?:aaa(_bbb))"]:
m = re.match(pattern, s)
print(pattern)
print("=" * len(pattern))
print(f"groups(): {m.groups()}")
for i in range(1, len(m.groups()) + 1):
print(f" group({i}): {m.group(i)}")
print()
(?:aaa)(_bbb)
=============
groups(): ('_bbb',)
group(1): _bbb
aaa(_bbb)
=========
groups(): ('_bbb',)
group(1): _bbb
(?:aaa(_bbb))
=============
groups(): ('_bbb',)
group(1): _bbb
For a real world example, I want to parse the output from a Unix-like time command:
% /usr/bin/time -l foo
...
9.87 real 6.54 user 3.21 sys
...
My original Python regex was:
import re
line = " 9.87 real 6.54 user 3.21 sys"
pattern = r"\s+(\d+\.\d+) real\s+(\d+\.\d+) user\s+(\d+\.\d+) sys"
which gives me the correct groupings:
m = re.match(pattern, line)
print(m.groups()) # ('9.87', '6.54', '3.21')
print(m.group(1)) # 9.87
print(m.group(2)) # 6.54
print(m.group(3)) # 3.21
But the labels at the end of the value kept throwing my eyes off, and I kept seeing "real\s+(\d+.\d+)" instead of "(\d+.\d+) real".
I could try to add parens to visually distinguish the "meta groups", which is a little better, visually, for me:
pattern = r"\s+((\d+\.\d+) real)\s+((\d+\.\d+) user)\s+((\d+\.\d+) sys)"
but that breaks the logic of the groupings I want:
m = re.match(pattern, line)
print(m.groups()) # ('9.87 real', '9.87', '6.54 user', '6.54', '3.21 sys', '3.21')
print(m.group(1)) # 9.87 real
print(m.group(2)) # 9.87
print(m.group(3)) # 6.54 user
print(m.group(4)) # 6.54
print(m.group(5)) # 3.21 sys
print(m.group(6)) # 3.21
Making those meta groups non grouping gives me a better visual (my eyes still do some back-and-forth, but at least there are clear boundaries) for my meta groups:
pattern = r"\s+(?:(\d+\.\d+) real)\s+(?:(\d+\.\d+) user)\s+(?:(\d+\.\d+) sys)"
and it leaves logic of the grouping alone:
m = re.match(pattern, line)
print(m.groups()) # ('9.87', '6.54', '3.21')
print(m.group(1)) # 9.87
print(m.group(2)) # 6.54
print(m.group(3)) # 3.21