Title, for example I want to make 'A3G3A' into 'AAAGGGA'. I have this so far:
if any(i.isdigit() for i in string):
for i in range(0, len(string)):
if string[i].isdigit():
(i am lost after this)
Here's a simplistic approach:
string = 'A3G3A'
expanded = ''
for character in string:
if character.isdigit():
expanded += expanded[-1] * (int(character) - 1)
else:
expanded += character
print(expanded)
OUTPUT: AAAGGGA
It assumes valid input. It's limitation is that the repetition factor has to be a single digit, e.g. 2 - 9. If we want repetition factors greater than 9, we have to do slightly more parsing of the string:
from itertools import groupby
groups = groupby('DA10G3ABC', str.isdigit)
expanded = []
for is_numeric, characters in groups:
if is_numeric:
expanded.append(expanded[-1] * (int(''.join(characters)) - 1))
else:
expanded.extend(characters)
print(''.join(expanded))
OUTPUT: DAAAAAAAAAAGGGABC
isdigit()
along with the iterators so you also know what you're looking at! Conceptually, something like: [(False, ['A']), (True, ['1', '0']), (False, ['G']), (True, ['3']), (False, ['A', 'B', 'C'])]
Assuming that the format is always a letter followed by an integer, with the last integer possibly missing:
>>> from itertools import izip_longest
>>> s = 'A3G3A'
>>> ''.join(c*int(i) for c, i in izip_longest(*[iter(s)]*2, fillvalue=1))
'AAAGGGA'
Assuming that the format can be any substring followed by an integer, with the integer possibly longer than one digit and the last integer possibly missing:
>>> from itertools import izip_longest
>>> import re
>>> s = 'AB10GY3ABC'
>>> sp = re.split('(\d+)', s)
>>> ''.join(c*int(i) for c, i in izip_longest(*[iter(sp)]*2, fillvalue=1))
'ABABABABABABABABABABGYGYGYABC'
A minimal pure python code which manage all cases.
output = ''
n = ''
c = ''
for x in input + 'a':
if x.isdigit():
n += x
else:
if n == '':
n = '1'
output = output + c*int(n)
n = ''
c = x
with input="WA5OUH2!10"
, output
is WAAAAAOUHH!!!!!!!!!!
.
+'a'
is to enforce the good behaviour at the end, because output is delayed.
Another approach could be -
import re
input_string = 'A3G3A'
alphabets = re.findall('[A-Z]', input_string) # List of all alphabets - ['A', 'G', 'A']
digits = re.findall('[0-9]+', input_string) # List of all numbers - ['3', '3']
final_output = "".join([alphabets[i]*int(digits[i]) for i in range(0, len(alphabets)-1)]) + alphabets[-1]
# This expression repeats each letter by the number next to it ( Except for the last letter ), joins the list of strings into a single string, and appends the last character
# final_output - 'AAAGGGA'
Explanation -
In [31]: alphabets # List of alphabets in the string
Out[31]: ['A', 'G', 'A']
In [32]: digits # List of numbers in the string ( Including numbers more than one digit)
Out[32]: ['3', '3']
In [33]: list_of_strings = [alphabets[i]*int(digits[i]) for i in range(0, len(alphabets)-1)] # List of strings after repetition
In [34]: list_of_strings
Out[34]: ['AAA', 'GGG']
In [35]: joined_string = "".join(list_of_strings) # Joined list of strings
In [36]: joined_string
Out[36]: 'AAAGGG'
In [38]: final_output = joined_string + input_string[-1] # Append last character of the string
In [39]: final_output
Out[39]: 'AAAGGGA'
using the * to repeat the characters:
assumption repeater range between [1,9]q = 'A3G3A'
try:
int(q[-1]) # check if it ends with digit
except:
q = q+'1' # repeat only once
"".join([list(q)[i]*int(list(q)[i+1]) for i in range(0,len(q),2)])
One line solution. Assuming numbers in the range [0, 9].
>>> s = 'A3G3A'
>>> s = ''.join(s[i] if not s[i].isdigit() else s[i-1]*(int(s[i])-1) for i in range(0, len(s)))
>>> print(s)
AAAGGGA
Embrace regex! This finds all occurrences of the pattern non-digit character followed by non-negative integer (any number of digits)
and replaces that substring with that many of the character.
import re
re.sub(r'(\D)(\d+)', lambda m: m.group(1) * int(m.group(2)), 'A3G3A')
This can be solved by numpy:
import numpy as np
x = 'A3G3A'
if not x[-1].isdigit():
x += '1'
letters = list(x[::2])
times = list(map(int,x[1::2]))
lst = ''.join(np.repeat(letters, times))
#output
'AAAGGGA'