I am having a regular expression to match a particular pattern. Say, a pattern that will match all three letter words. But i want it to not match words like 'and','got' etc... What would be the best way to do it ,in Python.
My pattern is
r'\b\w{3}\b'
I tried
r'(\b\w{3}\b)(?!and)'
but fails.
Regexes match left to right, and lookaheads are no exception. Your expression will match three letters that are not followed by and (which is impossible because of the \b, by the way).
Move the lookahead before the \w to make it work:
r'(\b(?!and)\w{3}\b)'
You can add more words there --
r'(\b(?!and|got|may)\w{3}\b)'
but for more non-matches it may be more effective to match all three letter words and use code to strip the result of them.
Related
In python, I want to match substring containing two terms with up to a certain number of words in between but not when it is equal to a certain substring.
I have this regular expression (regex101) that does the first part of the job, matching two terms with up to a certain number of words in between.
But I want to add a part or condition with AND operator to exclude a specific sentence like "my very funny words"
my(?:\s+\w+){0,2}\s+words
Expected results for this input:
I'm searching for my whatever funny words inside this text
should match with my whatever funny words
while for this input:
I'm searching for my very funny words inside this text
there should be no match
Thank you all for helping out
You may use the following regex pattern:
my(?! very funny)(?:\s+\w+){0,2}\s+words
This inserts a negative lookahead (?! very funny) into your existing pattern to exclude the matches you don't want. Here is a working demo.
I want my regex to match the appearance of a certain word, except if it is followed by another specific word.
More specifically, I would like it to match "union" (in the sense of union or loyalty to a group, so it would not include words like "reunion", i.e. with word boundaries at the beginning and end of the string) in all cases, except when the string says "union europea" (which is understood as an administration and does not appeal to a group in the same way).
Using the pattern union\b does not help, because it would also match the aforementioned sentence.
You can use a negative lookahead:
pattern = '\W(union)\W(?!europea)'
As pointed out by #Michael Ruth, you probably don't want to capture words other than union. So, with some test data:
unionize
union
union europea
reunion
This pattern only captures union in the second case, (ie., it does not capture reunion or unionize. The \W are non-word characters, so additional letters (like from reunion and unionize) are not captured.
Use
pattern = r'\bunion\b(?!\W*europea)'
(?!\W*europea) excludes matches where union is followed with nonword characters (if any) and then europea string.
I am attempting to match paragraph numbers inside my block of text. Given the following sentence:
Refer to paragraph C.2.1a.5 for examples.
I would like to match the word C.2.1a.5.
My current code like so:
([0-9a-zA-Z]{1,2}\.)
Only matches C.2.1a. and es., which is not what I want. Is there a way to match the full C.2.1a.5 and not match es.?
https://regex101.com/r/cO8lqs/13723
I have attempted to use ^ and $, but doing so returns no matches.
You should use following regex to match the paragraph numbers in your text.
\b(?:[0-9a-zA-Z]{1,2}\.)+[0-9a-zA-Z]\b
Try this demo
Here is the explanation,
\b - Matches a word boundary hence avoiding matching partially in a large word like examples.
(?:[0-9a-zA-Z]{1,2}\.)+ - This matches an alphanumeric text with length one or two as you tried to match in your own regex.
[0-9a-zA-Z] - Finally the match ends with one alphanumeric character at the end. In case you want it to match one or two alphanumeric characters at the end too, just add {1,2} after it
\b - Matches a word boundary again to ensure it doesn't match partially in a large word.
EDIT:
As someone pointed out, in case your text has strings like A.A.A.A.A.A. or A.A.A or even 1.2 and you don't want to match these strings and only want to match strings that has exactly three dots within it, you should use following regex which is more specific in matching your paragraph numbers.
(?<!\.)\b(?:[0-9a-zA-Z]{1,2}\.){3}[0-9a-zA-Z]\b(?!\.)
This new regex matches only paragraph numbers having exactly three dots and those negative look ahead/behind ensures it doesn't match partially in large string like A.A.A.A.A.A
Updated regex demo
Check these python sample codes,
import re
s = 'Refer to paragraph C.2.1a.5 for examples. Refer to paragraph A.A.A.A.A.A.A for examples. Some more A.A.A or like 1.22'
print(re.findall(r'(?<!\.)\b(?:[0-9a-zA-Z]{1,2}\.){3}[0-9a-zA-Z]\b(?!\.)', s))
Output,
['C.2.1a.5']
Also for trying to use ^ and $, they are called start and end anchors respectively, and if you use them in your regex, then they will expect matching start of line and end of line which is not what you really intend to do hence you shouldn't be using them and like you already saw, using them won't work in this case.
If simple version is required, you can use this easy to understand and modify regex ([A-Z]{1}\.[0-9]{1,3}\.[0-9]{1,3}[a-z]{1}\.[0-9]{1,3})
I think we should keep the regex expression simple and readable.
You can use the regex
**(?:[a-zA-Z]+\.){3}[a-zA-Z]+**
Explanation -
The expression (?:[a-zA-Z]+.){3} ensures that the group (?:[a-zA-Z]+.) is to be repeated 3 times within the word. The group contains an alphabetic character followed a dot.
The word would end with an alphabetic character.
Output:
['C.2.1a.5']
Before I begin — it may be worth stating, that: this technically does not have to be solved using a Regex, it's just that I immediately thought of a Regex when I started solving this problem, and I'm interested in knowing whether it's possible to solve using a Regex.
I've spent the last couple hours trying to create a Regex that does the following.
The regex must match a string that is ten characters long, iff the first five characters and last five characters are identical but each individual character is opposite in case.
In other words, if you take the first five characters, invert the case of each individual character, that should match the last five characters of the string.
For example, the regex should match abCDeABcdE, since the first five characters and the last five characters are the same, but each matching character is opposite in case. In other words, flip_case("abCDe") == "ABcdE"
Here are a few more strings that should match:
abcdeABCDE, abcdEABCDe, zYxWvZyXwV.
And here are a few that shouldn't match:
abcdeABCDZ, although the case is opposite, the strings themselves do not match.
abcdeABCDe, is a very close match, but should not match since the e's are not opposite in case.
Here is the first regex I tried, which is obviously wrong since it doesn't account for the case-swap process.
/([a-zA-Z]{5})\1/g
My next though was whether the following is possible in a regex, but I've been reading several Regex tutorials and I can't seem to find it anywhere.
/([A-Z])[\1+32]/g
This new regex (that obviously doesn't work) is supposed to match a single uppercase letter, immediately followed by itself-plus-32-ascii, so, in other words, it should match an uppercase letter followed immediately by its' lowercase counterpart. But, as far as I'm concerned, you cannot "add an ascii value" to backreference in a regex.
And, bonus points to whoever can answer this — in this specific case, the string in question is known to be 10 characters long. Would it be possible to create a regex that matches strings of an arbitrary length?
You want to use the following pattern with the Python regex module:
^(?=(\p{L})(\p{L})(\p{L})(\p{L})(\p{L}))(?=.*(?!\1)(?i:\1)(?!\2)(?i:\2)(?!\3)(?i:\3)(?!\4)(?i:\4)(?!\5)(?i:\5)$)
See the regex demo
Details
^ - start of string
(?=(\p{L})(\p{L})(\p{L})(\p{L})(\p{L})) - a positive lookahead with a sequence of five capturing groups that capture the first five letters individually
(?=.*(?!\1)(?i:\1)(?!\2)(?i:\2)(?!\3)(?i:\3)(?!\4)(?i:\4)(?!\5)(?i:\5)$) - a ppositive lookahead that make sure that, at the end of the string, there are 5 letters that are the same as the ones captured at the start but are of different case.
In brief, the first (\p{L}) in the first lookahead captures the first a in abcdeABCDE and then, inside the second lookahead, (?!\1)(?i:\1) makes sure the fifth char from the end is the same (with the case insensitive mode on), and (?!\1) negative lookahead make sure this letter is not identical to the one captured.
The re module does not support inline modifier groups, so this expression won't work with that moduue.
Python regex based module demo:
import regex
strs = ['abcdeABCDE', 'abcdEABCDe', 'zYxWvZyXwV', 'abcdeABCDZ', 'abcdeABCDe']
rx = r'^(?=(\p{L})(\p{L})(\p{L})(\p{L})(\p{L}))(?=.*(?!\1)(?i:\1)(?!\2)(?i:\2)(?!\3)(?i:\3)(?!\4)(?i:\4)(?!\5)(?i:\5)$)'
for s in strs:
print("Testing {}...".format(s))
if regex.search(rx, s):
print("Matched")
Output:
Testing abcdeABCDE...
Matched
Testing abcdEABCDe...
Matched
Testing zYxWvZyXwV...
Matched
Testing abcdeABCDZ...
Testing abcdeABCDe...
I am having a hard time understanding regular expression pattern. Could someone help me regular expression pattern to match all words ending in s. And start with a and end with a (like ana).
How do I write ending?
Word boundaries are given by \b so the following regex matches words ending with ing or s: "\b(\w+?(?:ing|s))\b" where as \b is a word boundary, \w+ is one or more "word character" and (?:ing|s) is an uncaptured group of either ing or s.
As you asked "how to develop a regex":
First: Don't use regex for complex tasks. They are hard to read, write and maintain. For example there is a regex that validates email addresses - but its computer generated and nothing you should use in practice.
Start simple and add edge cases. At the beginning plan what characters you need to use: You said you need words ending with s or ing. So you probably need something to represent a word, endings of words and the literal characters s and ing. What is a word? This might change from case to case, but at least every alphabetical character. Looking up in the python documentation on regexes you can find \w which is [a-zA-Z0-9_], which fits my impression of a word character. There you can also find \b which is a word boundary.
So the "first pseudo code try" is something like \b\w...\w\b which matches a word. We still need to "formalize" ... which we want to have the meaning of "one ore more characters", which directly translates to \b\w+\b. We can now match a word! We still need the s or ing. | translates to or, so how is the following: \b\w+ing|s\b? If you test this, you'll see that it will match confusing things like ingest which should not match our regex. What is happening? As you probably already saw the | can't know "which part it should or", so we need to introduce parenthesis: \b\w+(ing|s)\b. Congratulations, you have now arrived at a working regex!
Why (and how) does this differ from the example I gave first? First I wrote \w+? instead of \w+, the ? turns the + into a non-greedy version. If you know what the difference between greedy and non greedy is, skip this paragraph. Consider the following: AaAAbA and we want to match the things enclosed with big letter A. A naive try: A\w+A, so one or more word characters enclosed with A. This matches AaA, but also AaAAbA, A is still something that can be matched by \w. Without further config the *+? quantifier all try to match as much as possible. Sometimes, like in the A example, you don't want that, you can then use a ? after the quantifier to signal you want a non-greedy version, a version that matches as little as possible.
But in our case this isn't needed, the words are well seperated by whitespaces, which are not part of \w. So in fact you can just let + be greedy and everything will be alright. If you use . (any character) you often need to be careful not to match to much.
The other difference is using (?:s|ing) instead of (s|ing). What does the ?: do here? It changes a capturing group to a non capturing group. Generally you don't want to get "everything" from the regex. Consider the following regex: I want to go to \w+. You are not interested in the whole sentence, but only in the \w+, so you can capture it in a group: I want to go to (\w+). This means that you are interested in this specific piece of information and want to retrieve it later. Sometimes (like when using |) you need to group expressions together, but are not interested in their content, you can then declare it as non capturing. Otherwise you will get the group (s or ing) but not the actual word!
So to summarize:
* start small
* add one case after another
* always test with examples
In fact I just tried re.findall(\b\w+(?:ing|s)\b, "fishing words") and it didn't work. \w+(?:ing|s) works. I've no idea why, maybe someone else can explain that. Regex are an arcane thing, only use them for easy and easy to test tasks.
Generally speaking I'd use \b to match "word boundaries" with \w which matches word components (short cut for [A-Za-z0-9_]). Then you can do an or grouping to match "s" or "ing". Result is:
/\b\w+(s|ing)\b/