Working with pieces of text in python - python

Data.txt includes words that are upper and lower-cased.
I need to lower case them all except for the upper-cased characters that appear in braces which are located immediately following a word that can end in either lower or upper case, but there is no space before the first brace.
e.g.
CAT{TT} Dog{DD} Horse{AA}
Snail{LL} RAT{TT}
ANT{AA}
These should be transformed into:
cat{TT} dog{DD} horse{AA}
snail{LL} rat{TT}
ant{AA}
As a first start, I lower-cased everything in the list and placed them in lcChar(code as below). I was then trying to find the lower-cased characters within braces so that I could upper case them again.
Being a python newbie, I got stuck in my code below. This gives only the very first item in braces. Also I am assuming I need another loop in order to upper case all the items that appear in the braces. Any help please so I can understand the best methodology for handling these type of issues?
import re
f = open(r'C:\Python27\MyScripts\Data.txt')
for line in f:
lcChar = (line.lower())
patFinder1 = re.compile('{[a-z]+}')
findPat1=re.findall(patFinder1, lcChar)

re.sub and re.subn allow the second parameter to be a function. A Match Object is passed into that function and whatever the function returns is used for the substitution.
This is my take on it:
import re
def manip(m):
return m.groups()[0].lower()
data = ['CAT{TT} Dog{DD} Horse{AA}',
'Snail{LL} RAT{TT}',
'ANT{AA}']
for line in data:
new_line = re.sub(r'((?:[^{]|^)[A-Z]+(?:[^}]|$))', manip, line)
print new_line
Produces:
cat{TT} dog{DD} horse{AA}
snail{LL} rat{TT}
ant{AA}
I could have used a lambda instead, but that's arguably less clear.

A straight forward way of doing it:
import re
regex = re.compile('([^}]*?{)')
str_ = '''CAT{TT} Dog{DD} Horse{AA}
Snail{LL} RAT{TT}
ANT{AA}'''
new_str = re.sub(regex, lambda match: match.groups()[0].lower(), str_)
assert new_str == '''cat{TT} dog{DD} horse{AA}
snail{LL} rat{TT}
ant{AA}'''
print new_str
Explaination:
I use the regex to only match what need to be lowercased:
Then I loop over the results and replace to lowercase version.
Edit: more optimize version using sub to replace.

Related

How can I implement isalnum() into this Python web scraper to remove special characters? [duplicate]

I'm trying to remove specific characters from a string using Python. This is the code I'm using right now. Unfortunately it appears to do nothing to the string.
for char in line:
if char in " ?.!/;:":
line.replace(char,'')
How do I do this properly?
Strings in Python are immutable (can't be changed). Because of this, the effect of line.replace(...) is just to create a new string, rather than changing the old one. You need to rebind (assign) it to line in order to have that variable take the new value, with those characters removed.
Also, the way you are doing it is going to be kind of slow, relatively. It's also likely to be a bit confusing to experienced pythonators, who will see a doubly-nested structure and think for a moment that something more complicated is going on.
Starting in Python 2.6 and newer Python 2.x versions *, you can instead use str.translate, (see Python 3 answer below):
line = line.translate(None, '!##$')
or regular expression replacement with re.sub
import re
line = re.sub('[!##$]', '', line)
The characters enclosed in brackets constitute a character class. Any characters in line which are in that class are replaced with the second parameter to sub: an empty string.
Python 3 answer
In Python 3, strings are Unicode. You'll have to translate a little differently. kevpie mentions this in a comment on one of the answers, and it's noted in the documentation for str.translate.
When calling the translate method of a Unicode string, you cannot pass the second parameter that we used above. You also can't pass None as the first parameter. Instead, you pass a translation table (usually a dictionary) as the only parameter. This table maps the ordinal values of characters (i.e. the result of calling ord on them) to the ordinal values of the characters which should replace them, or—usefully to us—None to indicate that they should be deleted.
So to do the above dance with a Unicode string you would call something like
translation_table = dict.fromkeys(map(ord, '!##$'), None)
unicode_line = unicode_line.translate(translation_table)
Here dict.fromkeys and map are used to succinctly generate a dictionary containing
{ord('!'): None, ord('#'): None, ...}
Even simpler, as another answer puts it, create the translation table in place:
unicode_line = unicode_line.translate({ord(c): None for c in '!##$'})
Or, as brought up by Joseph Lee, create the same translation table with str.maketrans:
unicode_line = unicode_line.translate(str.maketrans('', '', '!##$'))
* for compatibility with earlier Pythons, you can create a "null" translation table to pass in place of None:
import string
line = line.translate(string.maketrans('', ''), '!##$')
Here string.maketrans is used to create a translation table, which is just a string containing the characters with ordinal values 0 to 255.
Am I missing the point here, or is it just the following:
string = "ab1cd1ef"
string = string.replace("1", "")
print(string)
# result: "abcdef"
Put it in a loop:
a = "a!b#c#d$"
b = "!##$"
for char in b:
a = a.replace(char, "")
print(a)
# result: "abcd"
>>> line = "abc##!?efg12;:?"
>>> ''.join( c for c in line if c not in '?:!/;' )
'abc##efg12'
With re.sub regular expression
Since Python 3.5, substitution using regular expressions re.sub became available:
import re
re.sub('\ |\?|\.|\!|\/|\;|\:', '', line)
Example
import re
line = 'Q: Do I write ;/.??? No!!!'
re.sub('\ |\?|\.|\!|\/|\;|\:', '', line)
'QDoIwriteNo'
Explanation
In regular expressions (regex), | is a logical OR and \ escapes spaces and special characters that might be actual regex commands. Whereas sub stands for substitution, in this case with the empty string ''.
The asker almost had it. Like most things in Python, the answer is simpler than you think.
>>> line = "H E?.LL!/;O:: "
>>> for char in ' ?.!/;:':
... line = line.replace(char,'')
...
>>> print line
HELLO
You don't have to do the nested if/for loop thing, but you DO need to check each character individually.
For the inverse requirement of only allowing certain characters in a string, you can use regular expressions with a set complement operator [^ABCabc]. For example, to remove everything except ascii letters, digits, and the hyphen:
>>> import string
>>> import re
>>>
>>> phrase = ' There were "nine" (9) chick-peas in my pocket!!! '
>>> allow = string.letters + string.digits + '-'
>>> re.sub('[^%s]' % allow, '', phrase)
'Therewerenine9chick-peasinmypocket'
From the python regular expression documentation:
Characters that are not within a range can be matched by complementing
the set. If the first character of the set is '^', all the characters
that are not in the set will be matched. For example, [^5] will match
any character except '5', and [^^] will match any character except
'^'. ^ has no special meaning if it’s not the first character in the
set.
line = line.translate(None, " ?.!/;:")
>>> s = 'a1b2c3'
>>> ''.join(c for c in s if c not in '123')
'abc'
Strings are immutable in Python. The replace method returns a new string after the replacement. Try:
for char in line:
if char in " ?.!/;:":
line = line.replace(char,'')
This is identical to your original code, with the addition of an assignment to line inside the loop.
Note that the string replace() method replaces all of the occurrences of the character in the string, so you can do better by using replace() for each character you want to remove, instead of looping over each character in your string.
I was surprised that no one had yet recommended using the builtin filter function.
import operator
import string # only for the example you could use a custom string
s = "1212edjaq"
Say we want to filter out everything that isn't a number. Using the filter builtin method "...is equivalent to the generator expression (item for item in iterable if function(item))" [Python 3 Builtins: Filter]
sList = list(s)
intsList = list(string.digits)
obj = filter(lambda x: operator.contains(intsList, x), sList)))
In Python 3 this returns
>> <filter object # hex>
To get a printed string,
nums = "".join(list(obj))
print(nums)
>> "1212"
I am not sure how filter ranks in terms of efficiency but it is a good thing to know how to use when doing list comprehensions and such.
UPDATE
Logically, since filter works you could also use list comprehension and from what I have read it is supposed to be more efficient because lambdas are the wall street hedge fund managers of the programming function world. Another plus is that it is a one-liner that doesnt require any imports. For example, using the same string 's' defined above,
num = "".join([i for i in s if i.isdigit()])
That's it. The return will be a string of all the characters that are digits in the original string.
If you have a specific list of acceptable/unacceptable characters you need only adjust the 'if' part of the list comprehension.
target_chars = "".join([i for i in s if i in some_list])
or alternatively,
target_chars = "".join([i for i in s if i not in some_list])
Using filter, you'd just need one line
line = filter(lambda char: char not in " ?.!/;:", line)
This treats the string as an iterable and checks every character if the lambda returns True:
>>> help(filter)
Help on built-in function filter in module __builtin__:
filter(...)
filter(function or None, sequence) -> list, tuple, or string
Return those items of sequence for which function(item) is true. If
function is None, return the items that are true. If sequence is a tuple
or string, return the same type, else return a list.
Try this one:
def rm_char(original_str, need2rm):
''' Remove charecters in "need2rm" from "original_str" '''
return original_str.translate(str.maketrans('','',need2rm))
This method works well in Python 3
Here's some possible ways to achieve this task:
def attempt1(string):
return "".join([v for v in string if v not in ("a", "e", "i", "o", "u")])
def attempt2(string):
for v in ("a", "e", "i", "o", "u"):
string = string.replace(v, "")
return string
def attempt3(string):
import re
for v in ("a", "e", "i", "o", "u"):
string = re.sub(v, "", string)
return string
def attempt4(string):
return string.replace("a", "").replace("e", "").replace("i", "").replace("o", "").replace("u", "")
for attempt in [attempt1, attempt2, attempt3, attempt4]:
print(attempt("murcielago"))
PS: Instead using " ?.!/;:" the examples use the vowels... and yeah, "murcielago" is the Spanish word to say bat... funny word as it contains all the vowels :)
PS2: If you're interested on performance you could measure these attempts with a simple code like:
import timeit
K = 1000000
for i in range(1,5):
t = timeit.Timer(
f"attempt{i}('murcielago')",
setup=f"from __main__ import attempt{i}"
).repeat(1, K)
print(f"attempt{i}",min(t))
In my box you'd get:
attempt1 2.2334518376057244
attempt2 1.8806643818474513
attempt3 7.214925774955572
attempt4 1.7271184513757465
So it seems attempt4 is the fastest one for this particular input.
Here's my Python 2/3 compatible version. Since the translate api has changed.
def remove(str_, chars):
"""Removes each char in `chars` from `str_`.
Args:
str_: String to remove characters from
chars: String of to-be removed characters
Returns:
A copy of str_ with `chars` removed
Example:
remove("What?!?: darn;", " ?.!:;") => 'Whatdarn'
"""
try:
# Python2.x
return str_.translate(None, chars)
except TypeError:
# Python 3.x
table = {ord(char): None for char in chars}
return str_.translate(table)
#!/usr/bin/python
import re
strs = "how^ much for{} the maple syrup? $20.99? That's[] ricidulous!!!"
print strs
nstr = re.sub(r'[?|$|.|!|a|b]',r' ',strs)#i have taken special character to remove but any #character can be added here
print nstr
nestr = re.sub(r'[^a-zA-Z0-9 ]',r'',nstr)#for removing special character
print nestr
You can also use a function in order to substitute different kind of regular expression or other pattern with the use of a list. With that, you can mixed regular expression, character class, and really basic text pattern. It's really useful when you need to substitute a lot of elements like HTML ones.
*NB: works with Python 3.x
import re # Regular expression library
def string_cleanup(x, notwanted):
for item in notwanted:
x = re.sub(item, '', x)
return x
line = "<title>My example: <strong>A text %very% $clean!!</strong></title>"
print("Uncleaned: ", line)
# Get rid of html elements
html_elements = ["<title>", "</title>", "<strong>", "</strong>"]
line = string_cleanup(line, html_elements)
print("1st clean: ", line)
# Get rid of special characters
special_chars = ["[!##$]", "%"]
line = string_cleanup(line, special_chars)
print("2nd clean: ", line)
In the function string_cleanup, it takes your string x and your list notwanted as arguments. For each item in that list of elements or pattern, if a substitute is needed it will be done.
The output:
Uncleaned: <title>My example: <strong>A text %very% $clean!!</strong></title>
1st clean: My example: A text %very% $clean!!
2nd clean: My example: A text very clean
My method I'd use probably wouldn't work as efficiently, but it is massively simple. I can remove multiple characters at different positions all at once, using slicing and formatting.
Here's an example:
words = "things"
removed = "%s%s" % (words[:3], words[-1:])
This will result in 'removed' holding the word 'this'.
Formatting can be very helpful for printing variables midway through a print string. It can insert any data type using a % followed by the variable's data type; all data types can use %s, and floats (aka decimals) and integers can use %d.
Slicing can be used for intricate control over strings. When I put words[:3], it allows me to select all the characters in the string from the beginning (the colon is before the number, this will mean 'from the beginning to') to the 4th character (it includes the 4th character). The reason 3 equals till the 4th position is because Python starts at 0. Then, when I put word[-1:], it means the 2nd last character to the end (the colon is behind the number). Putting -1 will make Python count from the last character, rather than the first. Again, Python will start at 0. So, word[-1:] basically means 'from the second last character to the end of the string.
So, by cutting off the characters before the character I want to remove and the characters after and sandwiching them together, I can remove the unwanted character. Think of it like a sausage. In the middle it's dirty, so I want to get rid of it. I simply cut off the two ends I want then put them together without the unwanted part in the middle.
If I want to remove multiple consecutive characters, I simply shift the numbers around in the [] (slicing part). Or if I want to remove multiple characters from different positions, I can simply sandwich together multiple slices at once.
Examples:
words = "control"
removed = "%s%s" % (words[:2], words[-2:])
removed equals 'cool'.
words = "impacts"
removed = "%s%s%s" % (words[1], words[3:5], words[-1])
removed equals 'macs'.
In this case, [3:5] means character at position 3 through character at position 5 (excluding the character at the final position).
Remember, Python starts counting at 0, so you will need to as well.
In Python 3.5
e.g.,
os.rename(file_name, file_name.translate({ord(c): None for c in '0123456789'}))
To remove all the number from the string
How about this:
def text_cleanup(text):
new = ""
for i in text:
if i not in " ?.!/;:":
new += i
return new
Below one.. with out using regular expression concept..
ipstring ="text with symbols!##$^&*( ends here"
opstring=''
for i in ipstring:
if i.isalnum()==1 or i==' ':
opstring+=i
pass
print opstring
Recursive split:
s=string ; chars=chars to remove
def strip(s,chars):
if len(s)==1:
return "" if s in chars else s
return strip(s[0:int(len(s)/2)],chars) + strip(s[int(len(s)/2):len(s)],chars)
example:
print(strip("Hello!","lo")) #He!
You could use the re module's regular expression replacement. Using the ^ expression allows you to pick exactly what you want from your string.
import re
text = "This is absurd!"
text = re.sub("[^a-zA-Z]","",text) # Keeps only Alphabets
print(text)
Output to this would be "Thisisabsurd". Only things specified after the ^ symbol will appear.
# for each file on a directory, rename filename
file_list = os.listdir (r"D:\Dev\Python")
for file_name in file_list:
os.rename(file_name, re.sub(r'\d+','',file_name))
Even the below approach works
line = "a,b,c,d,e"
alpha = list(line)
while ',' in alpha:
alpha.remove(',')
finalString = ''.join(alpha)
print(finalString)
output: abcde
The string method replace does not modify the original string. It leaves the original alone and returns a modified copy.
What you want is something like: line = line.replace(char,'')
def replace_all(line, )for char in line:
if char in " ?.!/;:":
line = line.replace(char,'')
return line
However, creating a new string each and every time that a character is removed is very inefficient. I recommend the following instead:
def replace_all(line, baddies, *):
"""
The following is documentation on how to use the class,
without reference to the implementation details:
For implementation notes, please see comments begining with `#`
in the source file.
[*crickets chirp*]
"""
is_bad = lambda ch, baddies=baddies: return ch in baddies
filter_baddies = lambda ch, *, is_bad=is_bad: "" if is_bad(ch) else ch
mahp = replace_all.map(filter_baddies, line)
return replace_all.join('', join(mahp))
# -------------------------------------------------
# WHY `baddies=baddies`?!?
# `is_bad=is_bad`
# -------------------------------------------------
# Default arguments to a lambda function are evaluated
# at the same time as when a lambda function is
# **defined**.
#
# global variables of a lambda function
# are evaluated when the lambda function is
# **called**
#
# The following prints "as yellow as snow"
#
# fleece_color = "white"
# little_lamb = lambda end: return "as " + fleece_color + end
#
# # sometime later...
#
# fleece_color = "yellow"
# print(little_lamb(" as snow"))
# --------------------------------------------------
replace_all.map = map
replace_all.join = str.join
If you want your string to be just allowed characters by using ASCII codes, you can use this piece of code:
for char in s:
if ord(char) < 96 or ord(char) > 123:
s = s.replace(char, "")
It will remove all the characters beyond a....z even upper cases.

How to split strings with special characters without removing those characters?

I'm writing this function which needs to return an abbreviated version of a str. The return str must contain the first letter, number of characters removed and the, last letter;it must be abbreviated per word and not by sentence, then after that I need to join every word again with the same format including the special-characters. I tried using the re.findall() method but it automatically removes the special-characters so I can't use " ".join() because it will leave out the special-characters.
Here's my code:
import re
def abbreviate(wrd):
return " ".join([i if len(i) < 4 else i[0] + str(len(i[1:-1])) + i[-1] for i in re.findall(r"[\w']+", wrd)])
print(abbreviate("elephant-rides are really fun!"))
The output would be:
e6t r3s are r4y fun
But the output should be:
e6t-r3s are r4y fun!
No need for str.join. Might as well take full advantage of what the re module has to offer.
re.sub accepts a string or a callable object (like a function or lambda), which takes the current match as an input and must return a string with which to replace the current match.
import re
pattern = "\\b[a-z]([a-z]{2,})[a-z]\\b"
string = "elephant-rides are really fun!"
def replace(match):
return f"{match.group(0)[0]}{len(match.group(1))}{match.group(0)[-1]}"
abbreviated = re.sub(pattern, replace, string)
print(abbreviated)
Output:
e6t-r3s are r4y fun!
>>>
Maybe someone else can improve upon this answer with a cuter pattern, or any other suggestions. The way the pattern is written now, it assumes that you're only dealing with lowercase letters, so that's something to keep in mind - but it should be pretty straightforward to modify it to suit your needs. I'm not really a fan of the repetition of [a-z], but that's just the quickest way I could think of for capturing the "inner" characters of a word in a separate capturing group. You may also want to consider what should happen with words/contractions like "don't" or "shouldn't".
Thank you for viewing my question. After a few more searches, trial, and error I finally found a way to execute my code properly without changing it too much. I simply substituted re.findall(r"[\w']+", wrd) with re.split(r'([\W\d\_])', wrd) and also removed the whitespace in "".join() for they were simply not needed anymore.
import re
def abbreviate(wrd):
return "".join([i if len(i) < 4 else i[0] + str(len(i[1:-1])) + i[-1] for i in re.split(r'([\W\d\_])', wrd)])
print(abbreviate("elephant-rides are not fun!"))
Output:
e6t-r3s are not fun!

I want to split a string by a character on its first occurence, which belongs to a list of characters. How to do this in python?

Basically, I have a list of special characters. I need to split a string by a character if it belongs to this list and exists in the string. Something on the lines of:
def find_char(string):
if string.find("some_char"):
#do xyz with some_char
elif string.find("another_char"):
#do xyz with another_char
else:
return False
and so on. The way I think of doing it is:
def find_char_split(string):
char_list = [",","*",";","/"]
for my_char in char_list:
if string.find(my_char) != -1:
my_strings = string.split(my_char)
break
else:
my_strings = False
return my_strings
Is there a more pythonic way of doing this? Or the above procedure would be fine? Please help, I'm not very proficient in python.
(EDIT): I want it to split on the first occurrence of the character, which is encountered first. That is to say, if the string contains multiple commas, and multiple stars, then I want it to split by the first occurrence of the comma. Please note, if the star comes first, then it will be broken by the star.
I would favor using the re module for this because the expression for splitting on multiple arbitrary characters is very simple:
r'[,*;/]'
The brackets create a character class that matches anything inside of them. The code is like this:
import re
results = re.split(r'[,*;/]', my_string, maxsplit=1)
The maxsplit argument makes it so that the split only occurs once.
If you are doing the same split many times, you can compile the regex and search on that same expression a little bit faster (but see Jon Clements' comment below):
c = re.compile(r'[,*;/]')
results = c.split(my_string)
If this speed up is important (it probably isn't) you can use the compiled version in a function instead of having it re compile every time. Then make a separate function that stores the actual compiled expression:
def split_chars(chars, maxsplit=0, flags=0, string=None):
# see note about the + symbol below
c = re.compile('[{}]+'.format(''.join(chars)), flags=flags)
def f(string, maxsplit=maxsplit):
return c.split(string, maxsplit=maxsplit)
return f if string is None else f(string)
Then:
special_split = split_chars(',*;/', maxsplit=1)
result = special_split(my_string)
But also:
result = split_chars(',*;/', my_string, maxsplit=1)
The purpose of the + character is to treat multiple delimiters as one if that is desired (thank you Jon Clements). If this is not desired, you can just use re.compile('[{}]'.format(''.join(chars))) above. Note that with maxsplit=1, this will not have any effect.
Finally: have a look at this talk for a quick introduction to regular expressions in Python, and this one for a much more information packed journey.

Split a string using a list of strings as a pattern

Consider an input string :
mystr = "just some stupid string to illustrate my question"
and a list of strings indicating where to split the input string:
splitters = ["some", "illustrate"]
The output should look like
result = ["just ", "some stupid string to ", "illustrate my question"]
I wrote some code which implements the following approach. For each of the strings in splitters, I find its occurrences in the input string, and insert something which I know for sure would not be a part of my input string (for example, this '!!'). Then I split the string using the substring that I just inserted.
for s in splitters:
mystr = re.sub(r'(%s)'%s,r'!!\1', mystr)
result = re.split('!!', mystr)
This solution seems ugly, is there a nicer way of doing it?
Splitting with re.split will always remove the matched string from the output (NB, this is not quite true, see the edit below). Therefore, you must use positive lookahead expressions ((?=...)) to match without removing the match. However, re.split ignores empty matches, so simply using a lookahead expression doesn't work. Instead, you will lose one character at each split at minimum (even trying to trick re with "boundary" matches (\b) does not work). If you don't care about losing one whitespace / non-word character at the end of each item (assuming you only split at non-word characters), you can use something like
re.split(r"\W(?=some|illustrate)")
which would give
["just", "some stupid string to", "illustrate my question"]
(note that the spaces after just and to are missing). You could then programmatically generate these regexes using str.join. Note that each of the split markers is escaped with re.escape so that special characters in the items of splitters do not affect the meaning of the regular expression in any undesired ways (imagine, e.g., a ) in one of the strings, which would otherwise lead to a regex syntax error).
the_regex = r"\W(?={})".format("|".join(re.escape(s) for s in splitters))
Edit (HT to #Arkadiy): Grouping the actual match, i.e. using (\W) instead of \W, returns the non-word characters inserted into the list as seperate items. Joining every two subsequent items would then produce the list as desired as well. Then, you can also drop the requirement of having a non-word character by using (.) instead of \W:
the_new_regex = r"(.)(?={})".format("|".join(re.escape(s) for s in splitters))
the_split = re.split(the_new_regex, mystr)
the_actual_split = ["".join(x) for x in itertools.izip_longest(the_split[::2], the_split[1::2], fillvalue='')]
Because normal text and auxiliary character alternate, the_split[::2] contains the normal split text and the_split[1::2] the auxiliary characters. Then, itertools.izip_longest is used to combine each text item with the corresponding removed character and the last item (which is unmatched in the removed characters)) with fillvalue, i.e. ''. Then, each of these tuples is joined using "".join(x). Note that this requires itertools to be imported (you could of course do this in a simple loop, but itertools provides very clean solutions to these things). Also note that itertools.izip_longest is called itertools.zip_longest in Python 3.
This leads to further simplification of the regular expression, because instead of using auxiliary characters, the lookahead can be replaced with a simple matching group ((some|interesting) instead of (.)(?=some|interesting)):
the_newest_regex = "({})".format("|".join(re.escape(s) for s in splitters))
the_raw_split = re.split(the_newest_regex, mystr)
the_actual_split = ["".join(x) for x in itertools.izip_longest([""] + the_raw_split[1::2], the_raw_split[::2], fillvalue='')]
Here, the slice indices on the_raw_split have swapped, because now the even-numbered items must be added to item afterwards instead of in front. Also note the [""] + part, which is necessary to pair the first item with "" to fix the order.
(end of edit)
Alternatively, you can (if you want) use string.replace instead of re.sub for each splitter (I think that is a matter of preference in your case, but in general it is probably more efficient)
for s in splitters:
mystr = mystr.replace(s, "!!" + s)
Also, if you use a fixed token to indicate where to split, you do not need re.split, but can use string.split instead:
result = mystr.split("!!")
What you could also do (instead of relying on the replacement token not to be in the string anywhere else or relying on every split position being preceded by a non-word character) is finding the split strings in the input using string.find and using string slicing to extract the pieces:
def split(string, splitters):
while True:
# Get the positions to split at for all splitters still in the string
# that are not at the very front of the string
split_positions = [i for i in (string.find(s) for s in splitters) if i > 0]
if len(split_positions) > 0:
# There is still somewhere to split
next_split = min(split_positions)
yield string[:next_split] # Yield everything before that position
string = string[next_split:] # Retain the rest of the string
else:
yield string # Yield the rest of the string
break # Done.
Here, [i for i in (string.find(s) for s in splitters) if i > 0] generates a list of positions where the splitters can be found, for all splitters that are in the string (for this, i < 0 is excluded) and not right at the beginning (where we (possibly) just split, so i == 0 is excluded as well). If there are any left in the string, we yield (this is a generator function) everything up to (excluding) the first splitter (at min(split_positions)) and replace the string with the remaining part. If there are none left, we yield the last part of the string and exit the function. Because this uses yield, it is a generator function, so you need to use list to turn it into an actual list.
Note that you could also replace yield whatever with a call to some_list.append (provided you defined some_list earlier) and return some_list at the very end, I do not consider that to be very good code style, though.
TL;DR
If you are OK with using regular expressions, use
the_newest_regex = "({})".format("|".join(re.escape(s) for s in splitters))
the_raw_split = re.split(the_newest_regex, mystr)
the_actual_split = ["".join(x) for x in itertools.izip_longest([""] + the_raw_split[1::2], the_raw_split[::2], fillvalue='')]
else, the same can also be achieved using string.find with the following split function:
def split(string, splitters):
while True:
# Get the positions to split at for all splitters still in the string
# that are not at the very front of the string
split_positions = [i for i in (string.find(s) for s in splitters) if i > 0]
if len(split_positions) > 0:
# There is still somewhere to split
next_split = min(split_positions)
yield string[:next_split] # Yield everything before that position
string = string[next_split:] # Retain the rest of the string
else:
yield string # Yield the rest of the string
break # Done.
Not especially elegant but avoiding regex:
mystr = "just some stupid string to illustrate my question"
splitters = ["some", "illustrate"]
indexes = [0] + [mystr.index(s) for s in splitters] + [len(mystr)]
indexes = sorted(list(set(indexes)))
print [mystr[i:j] for i, j in zip(indexes[:-1], indexes[1:])]
# ['just ', 'some stupid string to ', 'illustrate my question']
I should acknowledge here that a little more work is needed if a word in splitters occurs more than once because str.index finds only the location of the first occurrence of the word...

How do you filter a string to only contain letters?

How do I make a function where it will filter out all the non-letters from the string? For example, letters("jajk24me") will return back "jajkme". (It needs to be a for loop) and will string.isalpha() function help me with this?
My attempt:
def letters(input):
valids = []
for character in input:
if character in letters:
valids.append( character)
return (valids)
If it needs to be in that for loop, and a regular expression won't do, then this small modification of your loop will work:
def letters(input):
valids = []
for character in input:
if character.isalpha():
valids.append(character)
return ''.join(valids)
(The ''.join(valids) at the end takes all of the characters that you have collected in a list, and joins them together into a string. Your original function returned that list of characters instead)
You can also filter out characters from a string:
def letters(input):
return ''.join(filter(str.isalpha, input))
or with a list comprehension:
def letters(input):
return ''.join([c for c in input if c.isalpha()])
or you could use a regular expression, as others have suggested.
import re
valids = re.sub(r"[^A-Za-z]+", '', my_string)
EDIT: If it needs to be a for loop, something like this should work:
output = ''
for character in input:
if character.isalpha():
output += character
See re.sub, for performance consider a re.compile to optimize the pattern once.
Below you find a short version which matches all characters not in the range from A to Z and replaces them with the empty string. The re.I flag ignores the case, thus also lowercase (a-z) characters are replaced.
import re
def charFilter(myString)
return re.sub('[^A-Z]+', '', myString, 0, re.I)
If you really need that loop there are many awnsers, explaining that specifically. However you might want to give a reason why you need a loop.
If you want to operate on the number sequences and thats the reason for the loop consider replacing the replacement string parameter with a function like:
import re
def numberPrinter(matchString) {
print(matchString)
return ''
}
def charFilter(myString)
return re.sub('[^A-Z]+', '', myString, 0, re.I)
The method string.isalpha() checks whether string consists of alphabetic characters only. You can use it to check if any modification is needed.
As to the other part of the question, pst is just right. You can read about regular expressions in the python doc: http://docs.python.org/library/re.html
They might seem daunting but are really useful once you get the hang of them.
Of course you can use isalpha. Also, valids can be a string.
Here you go:
def letters(input):
valids = ""
for character in input:
if character.isalpha():
valids += character
return valids
Not using a for-loop. But that's already been thoroughly covered.
Might be a little late, and I'm not sure about performance, but I just thought of this solution which seems pretty nifty:
set(x).intersection(y)
You could use it like:
from string import ascii_letters
def letters(string):
return ''.join(set(string).intersection(ascii_letters))
NOTE:
This will not preserve linear order. Which in my use case is fine, but be warned.

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