1

Anybody know a way of dealing with apostrophes when extracting words from text using a regular expression?

>>> import re
>>> s = re.compile(r"\b[A-Za-z0-9_\-]+\b")
>>> s.findall("I don't know Sally's 'special' friend.")
['I', 'don', 't', 'know', 'Sally', 's', 'special', 'friend']

Desired result:

['I', "don't", 'know', 'Sally', 'special', 'friend']

This discussion covers how to find whole words but doesn't deal with apostrophes.

1

1 Answer 1

3
s = re.compile(r"(?:^|(?<=\s))[A-Za-z0-9_'\-]+(?=\s|$|\b)")

Use this instead of \b.lookarounds will work for you.See demo.

https://regex101.com/r/sS2dM8/25

3
  • 1
    Thanks. That produces a result that is pretty close: ['I', "don't", 'know', "Sally's", "'special'"]
    – Bill
    Sep 1, 2015 at 5:56
  • Although it loses the last word ('friend')!
    – Bill
    Sep 1, 2015 at 5:59
  • @Bill regex101.com/r/sS2dM8/26 now it wont lose
    – vks
    Sep 1, 2015 at 6:00

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.