6

I am trying to replace all matching occurrences with title cases using the following script. When there is a newline character between filter words (in this case 'ABC' and 'DEF') that line doesn't get replaced as intended.

How can I ignore the newline character in this case?

Edit: I don't want to strip all newline characters entirely from the string, but only strip those between the filter words.

Edit2: I edited the text and script to better reflect on the issue I am experiencing. If I include flags=re.DOTALL argument, it will give me:

  mmm    = "Hello Hello Hello Hello Hello Hello
              Hello Hello Hello Hello",
  Bbb   = "Bbb",

whereas the output I want is (notice that bbb is not capitalized):

  mmm    = "Hello Hello Hello Hello Hello Hello
              Hello Hello Hello Hello",
  bbb   = "bbb",

The following is the script I am using.

test_string = '''
  mmm    = "hello hello hello hello hello hello
              hello hello hello hello",
  bbb   = "bbb",
'''

rex = r'(?<= mmm)(.*)(?=\")'

def maketitle(match_obj):
    return match_obj.group(0).title()

formatted = re.sub(rex, maketitle, test_string, flags=re.DOTALL)

print(formatted)
4
  • 5
    Please create a minimal reproducible example working on several examples.
    – Yunnosch
    Sep 6, 2018 at 6:01
  • re.sub typically will replace everything if it can. So we need to see your code, to understand what might be going wrong. Sep 6, 2018 at 6:01
  • Found out that the newline character is causing the problem, so updated the question accordingly
    – Layray
    Sep 6, 2018 at 6:19
  • 1
    I thought if DOTALL is not set, then newlines are ignored by default? Sep 6, 2018 at 6:25

2 Answers 2

19

Use the re.DOTALL flag:

formatted = re.sub(rex, maketitle, string, flags=re.DOTALL)
print(formatted)

According to the docs:

re.DOTALL
Make the '.' special character match any character at all, including a newline; without this flag, '.' will match anything except a newline.

1
  • thanks for your comment, but including the arg will capitalize following words as well. Please refer to the updated example.
    – Layray
    Sep 6, 2018 at 6:41
2

The following code gives the result you expect:

test_string = '''
  mmm    = "hello hello hello hello hello hello
              hello hello hello hello",
  bbb   = "bbb",
'''

rex = r'(?<= mmm)\s*=\s*"[^"]*'

def maketitle(match_obj):
    return match_obj.group(0).title()

formatted = re.sub(rex, maketitle, test_string)

print(formatted)

I'm assuming that the value you want to "title-case" is always between double quotes, and that it can not contain a double-quote (escaped in some way). Handling escaping would be possible with a slightly more complex regex, though.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

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