How can I parse filenames with spaces, parentheses etc. into a variable? Ex.
'Album Artist - Song name (feat Musician) [Year]'
to
'Album\ Artist\ \- Song\ name\ \(feat\ Musician\)\ \[Year\]'
I get the right format with re.escape(filename)
. However if I store the print from re.escape
into a variable it gets reversed to the initial naming. I know that I could use the "string".replace('x', 'y')
method. But it does not appeal safe to me.
Does anybody know how I can fix this or work around this problem? Using Python 3.5.3 btw.
EDIT example code:
>>> import re
>>> # this is an example array in the format how my filenames are named stored in files >>> files = ['AA - BB (CC) [DD]', 'EE - FF (GG) [HH]', 'II - JJ (KK) [LL]']
>>> for f in files:
... print(f)
...
AA - BB (CC) [DD]
EE - FF (GG) [HH]
II - JJ (KK) [LL]
>>> for f in files:
... print(re.escape(f))
...
AA\ \-\ BB\ \(CC\)\ \[DD\] # desired format
EE\ \-\ FF\ \(GG\)\ \[HH\]
II\ \-\ JJ\ \(KK\)\ \[LL\]
>>> escaped = re.escape(files[0])
>>> escaped
'AA\\ \\-\\ BB\\ \\(CC\\)\\ \\[DD\\]' # actual result
>>>
subprocess
. For example:subprocess.call([r'rm', r'some name with spaces'])
From the documentation: "args
is required for all calls and should be a string, or a sequence of program arguments. Providing a sequence of arguments is generally preferred, as it allows the module to take care of any required escaping and quoting of arguments (e.g. to permit spaces in file names)." – Galen Dec 22 '17 at 23:19