I am looking for a way to get all of the letters in a string before a : but I have no idea on where to start. Would I use regex? If so how?
string = "Username: How are you today?"
Can someone show me a example on what I could do?
Just use the split
function. It returns a list, so you can keep the first element:
>>> s1.split(':')
['Username', ' How are you today?']
>>> s1.split(':')[0]
'Username'
s1.partition(':')[0]
Dec 9, 2014 at 19:44
:
:) At least because it does have overhead of creating lists and it always process complete string .. I think index
with try/catch
more efficient
Jul 18, 2022 at 17:45
Using index
:
>>> string = "Username: How are you today?"
>>> string[:string.index(":")]
'Username'
The index will give you the position of :
in string, then you can slice it.
If you want to use regex:
>>> import re
>>> re.match("(.*?):",string).group()
'Username'
match
matches from the start of the string.
you can also use itertools.takewhile
>>> import itertools
>>> "".join(itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x!=":", string))
'Username'
re.match("(.*?):",string).group(1)
(probably needs some check if there is no colon)? re.match("(.*?):",string).group()
seems to still include the colon.
Jan 25, 2021 at 12:32
You don't need regex
for this
>>> s = "Username: How are you today?"
You can use the split
method to split the string on the ':'
character
>>> s.split(':')
['Username', ' How are you today?']
And slice out element [0]
to get the first part of the string
>>> s.split(':')[0]
'Username'
I have benchmarked these various technics under Python 3.9.13 (Jupyter Notebook).
c
is in s
, I would use partition for small strings and index for long strings.import string, random, re
SYMBOLS = string.ascii_uppercase + string.digits
SIZE = 10
def create_test_set(string_length):
for _ in range(SIZE):
random_string = ''.join(random.choices(SYMBOLS, k=string_length))
yield (random.choice(random_string), random_string)
for string_length in (2**4, 2**8, 2**16, 2**20):
print("\nString length:", string_length)
test_set = list(create_test_set(string_length))
test_set_for_regex = [(re.compile(fr"(.*?){c}").match, s) for (c, s) in test_set]
print(" regex (compiled):", end=" ")
%timeit [re_match(s)[1] for (re_match, s) in test_set_for_regex]
print(" partition: ", end=" ")
%timeit [s.partition(c)[0] for (c, s) in test_set]
print(" index: ", end=" ")
%timeit [s[:s.index(c)] for (c, s) in test_set]
print(" split (limited): ", end=" ")
%timeit [s.split(c, 1)[0] for (c, s) in test_set]
print(" split: ", end=" ")
%timeit [s.split(c)[0] for (c, s) in test_set]
print(" regex: ", end=" ")
%timeit [re.match(fr"(.*?){c}", s)[1] for (c, s) in test_set]
String length: 16
partition: 1.86 µs
split: 2.08 µs
split (limited): 2.08 µs
index: 2.37 µs
regex (compiled): 3.52 µs
regex: 8.77 µs
String length: 256
partition: 1.92 µs
index: 2.27 µs
split (limited): 2.32 µs
split: 5.37 µs
regex (compiled): 7.59 µs
regex: 12.90 µs
String length: 65536
index: 2.20 µs
regex (compiled): 7.15 µs
regex: 12.10 µs
partition: 25.70 µs
split (limited): 25.90 µs
split: 1110.00 µs
String length: 1048576
index: 2.34 µs
regex (compiled): 9.13 µs
regex: 14.30 µs
partition: 543.00 µs
split (limited): 587.00 µs
split: (interrupted before completion)
s.index(c)
raises a ValueError when c
is not in s
. So, I consider it as safe when I am sure that the string to be partitioned contains the separator, unsafe otherwise.
c
from the result of the regex approach, you can use re_match(s).group(1)
rather than re_match(s).group()
. Alternatively, you can change the regex to use a lookahead like re.compile(rf".*?(?={c})")
.
Oct 21, 2023 at 6:10
test_set_for_regex
is a generator, it gets emptied after the first iteration of timeit
, and the following iterations don't do anything. If you make it a list
, you should see the regex approach is ~1000 times slower than previously thought.
Oct 23, 2023 at 18:37
partition() may be better then split() for this purpose as it has the better predicable results for situations you have no delimiter or more delimiters.
partition
and split
will work transparently with an empty string or no delimiters. It is worth noting that word[:word.index(':')]
will pop in both of these cases.
To solve this using RegEx, you can use the Negative Lookahead/Negative Lookbehind approach.
For example, the code below for Python:
import re
string = "Username: How are you today?"
regex='(\S*)[:]'
data=re.findall(regex, string)
print(data)