1.. _regex-howto: 2 3**************************** 4 Regular Expression HOWTO 5**************************** 6 7:Author: A.M. Kuchling <amk@amk.ca> 8 9.. TODO: 10 Document lookbehind assertions 11 Better way of displaying a RE, a string, and what it matches 12 Mention optional argument to match.groups() 13 Unicode (at least a reference) 14 15 16.. topic:: Abstract 17 18 This document is an introductory tutorial to using regular expressions in Python 19 with the :mod:`re` module. It provides a gentler introduction than the 20 corresponding section in the Library Reference. 21 22 23Introduction 24============ 25 26Regular expressions (called REs, or regexes, or regex patterns) are essentially 27a tiny, highly specialized programming language embedded inside Python and made 28available through the :mod:`re` module. Using this little language, you specify 29the rules for the set of possible strings that you want to match; this set might 30contain English sentences, or e-mail addresses, or TeX commands, or anything you 31like. You can then ask questions such as "Does this string match the pattern?", 32or "Is there a match for the pattern anywhere in this string?". You can also 33use REs to modify a string or to split it apart in various ways. 34 35Regular expression patterns are compiled into a series of bytecodes which are 36then executed by a matching engine written in C. For advanced use, it may be 37necessary to pay careful attention to how the engine will execute a given RE, 38and write the RE in a certain way in order to produce bytecode that runs faster. 39Optimization isn't covered in this document, because it requires that you have a 40good understanding of the matching engine's internals. 41 42The regular expression language is relatively small and restricted, so not all 43possible string processing tasks can be done using regular expressions. There 44are also tasks that *can* be done with regular expressions, but the expressions 45turn out to be very complicated. In these cases, you may be better off writing 46Python code to do the processing; while Python code will be slower than an 47elaborate regular expression, it will also probably be more understandable. 48 49 50Simple Patterns 51=============== 52 53We'll start by learning about the simplest possible regular expressions. Since 54regular expressions are used to operate on strings, we'll begin with the most 55common task: matching characters. 56 57For a detailed explanation of the computer science underlying regular 58expressions (deterministic and non-deterministic finite automata), you can refer 59to almost any textbook on writing compilers. 60 61 62Matching Characters 63------------------- 64 65Most letters and characters will simply match themselves. For example, the 66regular expression ``test`` will match the string ``test`` exactly. (You can 67enable a case-insensitive mode that would let this RE match ``Test`` or ``TEST`` 68as well; more about this later.) 69 70There are exceptions to this rule; some characters are special 71:dfn:`metacharacters`, and don't match themselves. Instead, they signal that 72some out-of-the-ordinary thing should be matched, or they affect other portions 73of the RE by repeating them or changing their meaning. Much of this document is 74devoted to discussing various metacharacters and what they do. 75 76Here's a complete list of the metacharacters; their meanings will be discussed 77in the rest of this HOWTO. 78 79.. code-block:: none 80 81 . ^ $ * + ? { } [ ] \ | ( ) 82 83The first metacharacters we'll look at are ``[`` and ``]``. They're used for 84specifying a character class, which is a set of characters that you wish to 85match. Characters can be listed individually, or a range of characters can be 86indicated by giving two characters and separating them by a ``'-'``. For 87example, ``[abc]`` will match any of the characters ``a``, ``b``, or ``c``; this 88is the same as ``[a-c]``, which uses a range to express the same set of 89characters. If you wanted to match only lowercase letters, your RE would be 90``[a-z]``. 91 92Metacharacters are not active inside classes. For example, ``[akm$]`` will 93match any of the characters ``'a'``, ``'k'``, ``'m'``, or ``'$'``; ``'$'`` is 94usually a metacharacter, but inside a character class it's stripped of its 95special nature. 96 97You can match the characters not listed within the class by :dfn:`complementing` 98the set. This is indicated by including a ``'^'`` as the first character of the 99class. For example, ``[^5]`` will match any character except ``'5'``. If the 100caret appears elsewhere in a character class, it does not have special meaning. 101For example: ``[5^]`` will match either a ``'5'`` or a ``'^'``. 102 103Perhaps the most important metacharacter is the backslash, ``\``. As in Python 104string literals, the backslash can be followed by various characters to signal 105various special sequences. It's also used to escape all the metacharacters so 106you can still match them in patterns; for example, if you need to match a ``[`` 107or ``\``, you can precede them with a backslash to remove their special 108meaning: ``\[`` or ``\\``. 109 110Some of the special sequences beginning with ``'\'`` represent 111predefined sets of characters that are often useful, such as the set 112of digits, the set of letters, or the set of anything that isn't 113whitespace. 114 115Let's take an example: ``\w`` matches any alphanumeric character. If 116the regex pattern is expressed in bytes, this is equivalent to the 117class ``[a-zA-Z0-9_]``. If the regex pattern is a string, ``\w`` will 118match all the characters marked as letters in the Unicode database 119provided by the :mod:`unicodedata` module. You can use the more 120restricted definition of ``\w`` in a string pattern by supplying the 121:const:`re.ASCII` flag when compiling the regular expression. 122 123The following list of special sequences isn't complete. For a complete 124list of sequences and expanded class definitions for Unicode string 125patterns, see the last part of :ref:`Regular Expression Syntax 126<re-syntax>` in the Standard Library reference. In general, the 127Unicode versions match any character that's in the appropriate 128category in the Unicode database. 129 130``\d`` 131 Matches any decimal digit; this is equivalent to the class ``[0-9]``. 132 133``\D`` 134 Matches any non-digit character; this is equivalent to the class ``[^0-9]``. 135 136``\s`` 137 Matches any whitespace character; this is equivalent to the class ``[ 138 \t\n\r\f\v]``. 139 140``\S`` 141 Matches any non-whitespace character; this is equivalent to the class ``[^ 142 \t\n\r\f\v]``. 143 144``\w`` 145 Matches any alphanumeric character; this is equivalent to the class 146 ``[a-zA-Z0-9_]``. 147 148``\W`` 149 Matches any non-alphanumeric character; this is equivalent to the class 150 ``[^a-zA-Z0-9_]``. 151 152These sequences can be included inside a character class. For example, 153``[\s,.]`` is a character class that will match any whitespace character, or 154``','`` or ``'.'``. 155 156The final metacharacter in this section is ``.``. It matches anything except a 157newline character, and there's an alternate mode (:const:`re.DOTALL`) where it will 158match even a newline. ``.`` is often used where you want to match "any 159character". 160 161 162Repeating Things 163---------------- 164 165Being able to match varying sets of characters is the first thing regular 166expressions can do that isn't already possible with the methods available on 167strings. However, if that was the only additional capability of regexes, they 168wouldn't be much of an advance. Another capability is that you can specify that 169portions of the RE must be repeated a certain number of times. 170 171The first metacharacter for repeating things that we'll look at is ``*``. ``*`` 172doesn't match the literal character ``'*'``; instead, it specifies that the 173previous character can be matched zero or more times, instead of exactly once. 174 175For example, ``ca*t`` will match ``'ct'`` (0 ``'a'`` characters), ``'cat'`` (1 ``'a'``), 176``'caaat'`` (3 ``'a'`` characters), and so forth. 177 178Repetitions such as ``*`` are :dfn:`greedy`; when repeating a RE, the matching 179engine will try to repeat it as many times as possible. If later portions of the 180pattern don't match, the matching engine will then back up and try again with 181fewer repetitions. 182 183A step-by-step example will make this more obvious. Let's consider the 184expression ``a[bcd]*b``. This matches the letter ``'a'``, zero or more letters 185from the class ``[bcd]``, and finally ends with a ``'b'``. Now imagine matching 186this RE against the string ``'abcbd'``. 187 188+------+-----------+---------------------------------+ 189| Step | Matched | Explanation | 190+======+===========+=================================+ 191| 1 | ``a`` | The ``a`` in the RE matches. | 192+------+-----------+---------------------------------+ 193| 2 | ``abcbd`` | The engine matches ``[bcd]*``, | 194| | | going as far as it can, which | 195| | | is to the end of the string. | 196+------+-----------+---------------------------------+ 197| 3 | *Failure* | The engine tries to match | 198| | | ``b``, but the current position | 199| | | is at the end of the string, so | 200| | | it fails. | 201+------+-----------+---------------------------------+ 202| 4 | ``abcb`` | Back up, so that ``[bcd]*`` | 203| | | matches one less character. | 204+------+-----------+---------------------------------+ 205| 5 | *Failure* | Try ``b`` again, but the | 206| | | current position is at the last | 207| | | character, which is a ``'d'``. | 208+------+-----------+---------------------------------+ 209| 6 | ``abc`` | Back up again, so that | 210| | | ``[bcd]*`` is only matching | 211| | | ``bc``. | 212+------+-----------+---------------------------------+ 213| 6 | ``abcb`` | Try ``b`` again. This time | 214| | | the character at the | 215| | | current position is ``'b'``, so | 216| | | it succeeds. | 217+------+-----------+---------------------------------+ 218 219The end of the RE has now been reached, and it has matched ``'abcb'``. This 220demonstrates how the matching engine goes as far as it can at first, and if no 221match is found it will then progressively back up and retry the rest of the RE 222again and again. It will back up until it has tried zero matches for 223``[bcd]*``, and if that subsequently fails, the engine will conclude that the 224string doesn't match the RE at all. 225 226Another repeating metacharacter is ``+``, which matches one or more times. Pay 227careful attention to the difference between ``*`` and ``+``; ``*`` matches 228*zero* or more times, so whatever's being repeated may not be present at all, 229while ``+`` requires at least *one* occurrence. To use a similar example, 230``ca+t`` will match ``'cat'`` (1 ``'a'``), ``'caaat'`` (3 ``'a'``\ s), but won't 231match ``'ct'``. 232 233There are two more repeating qualifiers. The question mark character, ``?``, 234matches either once or zero times; you can think of it as marking something as 235being optional. For example, ``home-?brew`` matches either ``'homebrew'`` or 236``'home-brew'``. 237 238The most complicated repeated qualifier is ``{m,n}``, where *m* and *n* are 239decimal integers. This qualifier means there must be at least *m* repetitions, 240and at most *n*. For example, ``a/{1,3}b`` will match ``'a/b'``, ``'a//b'``, and 241``'a///b'``. It won't match ``'ab'``, which has no slashes, or ``'a////b'``, which 242has four. 243 244You can omit either *m* or *n*; in that case, a reasonable value is assumed for 245the missing value. Omitting *m* is interpreted as a lower limit of 0, while 246omitting *n* results in an upper bound of infinity. 247 248Readers of a reductionist bent may notice that the three other qualifiers can 249all be expressed using this notation. ``{0,}`` is the same as ``*``, ``{1,}`` 250is equivalent to ``+``, and ``{0,1}`` is the same as ``?``. It's better to use 251``*``, ``+``, or ``?`` when you can, simply because they're shorter and easier 252to read. 253 254 255Using Regular Expressions 256========================= 257 258Now that we've looked at some simple regular expressions, how do we actually use 259them in Python? The :mod:`re` module provides an interface to the regular 260expression engine, allowing you to compile REs into objects and then perform 261matches with them. 262 263 264Compiling Regular Expressions 265----------------------------- 266 267Regular expressions are compiled into pattern objects, which have 268methods for various operations such as searching for pattern matches or 269performing string substitutions. :: 270 271 >>> import re 272 >>> p = re.compile('ab*') 273 >>> p 274 re.compile('ab*') 275 276:func:`re.compile` also accepts an optional *flags* argument, used to enable 277various special features and syntax variations. We'll go over the available 278settings later, but for now a single example will do:: 279 280 >>> p = re.compile('ab*', re.IGNORECASE) 281 282The RE is passed to :func:`re.compile` as a string. REs are handled as strings 283because regular expressions aren't part of the core Python language, and no 284special syntax was created for expressing them. (There are applications that 285don't need REs at all, so there's no need to bloat the language specification by 286including them.) Instead, the :mod:`re` module is simply a C extension module 287included with Python, just like the :mod:`socket` or :mod:`zlib` modules. 288 289Putting REs in strings keeps the Python language simpler, but has one 290disadvantage which is the topic of the next section. 291 292 293.. _the-backslash-plague: 294 295The Backslash Plague 296-------------------- 297 298As stated earlier, regular expressions use the backslash character (``'\'``) to 299indicate special forms or to allow special characters to be used without 300invoking their special meaning. This conflicts with Python's usage of the same 301character for the same purpose in string literals. 302 303Let's say you want to write a RE that matches the string ``\section``, which 304might be found in a LaTeX file. To figure out what to write in the program 305code, start with the desired string to be matched. Next, you must escape any 306backslashes and other metacharacters by preceding them with a backslash, 307resulting in the string ``\\section``. The resulting string that must be passed 308to :func:`re.compile` must be ``\\section``. However, to express this as a 309Python string literal, both backslashes must be escaped *again*. 310 311+-------------------+------------------------------------------+ 312| Characters | Stage | 313+===================+==========================================+ 314| ``\section`` | Text string to be matched | 315+-------------------+------------------------------------------+ 316| ``\\section`` | Escaped backslash for :func:`re.compile` | 317+-------------------+------------------------------------------+ 318| ``"\\\\section"`` | Escaped backslashes for a string literal | 319+-------------------+------------------------------------------+ 320 321In short, to match a literal backslash, one has to write ``'\\\\'`` as the RE 322string, because the regular expression must be ``\\``, and each backslash must 323be expressed as ``\\`` inside a regular Python string literal. In REs that 324feature backslashes repeatedly, this leads to lots of repeated backslashes and 325makes the resulting strings difficult to understand. 326 327The solution is to use Python's raw string notation for regular expressions; 328backslashes are not handled in any special way in a string literal prefixed with 329``'r'``, so ``r"\n"`` is a two-character string containing ``'\'`` and ``'n'``, 330while ``"\n"`` is a one-character string containing a newline. Regular 331expressions will often be written in Python code using this raw string notation. 332 333In addition, special escape sequences that are valid in regular expressions, 334but not valid as Python string literals, now result in a 335:exc:`DeprecationWarning` and will eventually become a :exc:`SyntaxError`, 336which means the sequences will be invalid if raw string notation or escaping 337the backslashes isn't used. 338 339 340+-------------------+------------------+ 341| Regular String | Raw string | 342+===================+==================+ 343| ``"ab*"`` | ``r"ab*"`` | 344+-------------------+------------------+ 345| ``"\\\\section"`` | ``r"\\section"`` | 346+-------------------+------------------+ 347| ``"\\w+\\s+\\1"`` | ``r"\w+\s+\1"`` | 348+-------------------+------------------+ 349 350 351Performing Matches 352------------------ 353 354Once you have an object representing a compiled regular expression, what do you 355do with it? Pattern objects have several methods and attributes. 356Only the most significant ones will be covered here; consult the :mod:`re` docs 357for a complete listing. 358 359+------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 360| Method/Attribute | Purpose | 361+==================+===============================================+ 362| ``match()`` | Determine if the RE matches at the beginning | 363| | of the string. | 364+------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 365| ``search()`` | Scan through a string, looking for any | 366| | location where this RE matches. | 367+------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 368| ``findall()`` | Find all substrings where the RE matches, and | 369| | returns them as a list. | 370+------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 371| ``finditer()`` | Find all substrings where the RE matches, and | 372| | returns them as an :term:`iterator`. | 373+------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 374 375:meth:`~re.Pattern.match` and :meth:`~re.Pattern.search` return ``None`` if no match can be found. If 376they're successful, a :ref:`match object <match-objects>` instance is returned, 377containing information about the match: where it starts and ends, the substring 378it matched, and more. 379 380You can learn about this by interactively experimenting with the :mod:`re` 381module. If you have :mod:`tkinter` available, you may also want to look at 382:source:`Tools/demo/redemo.py`, a demonstration program included with the 383Python distribution. It allows you to enter REs and strings, and displays 384whether the RE matches or fails. :file:`redemo.py` can be quite useful when 385trying to debug a complicated RE. 386 387This HOWTO uses the standard Python interpreter for its examples. First, run the 388Python interpreter, import the :mod:`re` module, and compile a RE:: 389 390 >>> import re 391 >>> p = re.compile('[a-z]+') 392 >>> p 393 re.compile('[a-z]+') 394 395Now, you can try matching various strings against the RE ``[a-z]+``. An empty 396string shouldn't match at all, since ``+`` means 'one or more repetitions'. 397:meth:`~re.Pattern.match` should return ``None`` in this case, which will cause the 398interpreter to print no output. You can explicitly print the result of 399:meth:`!match` to make this clear. :: 400 401 >>> p.match("") 402 >>> print(p.match("")) 403 None 404 405Now, let's try it on a string that it should match, such as ``tempo``. In this 406case, :meth:`~re.Pattern.match` will return a :ref:`match object <match-objects>`, so you 407should store the result in a variable for later use. :: 408 409 >>> m = p.match('tempo') 410 >>> m 411 <re.Match object; span=(0, 5), match='tempo'> 412 413Now you can query the :ref:`match object <match-objects>` for information 414about the matching string. Match object instances 415also have several methods and attributes; the most important ones are: 416 417+------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 418| Method/Attribute | Purpose | 419+==================+============================================+ 420| ``group()`` | Return the string matched by the RE | 421+------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 422| ``start()`` | Return the starting position of the match | 423+------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 424| ``end()`` | Return the ending position of the match | 425+------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 426| ``span()`` | Return a tuple containing the (start, end) | 427| | positions of the match | 428+------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 429 430Trying these methods will soon clarify their meaning:: 431 432 >>> m.group() 433 'tempo' 434 >>> m.start(), m.end() 435 (0, 5) 436 >>> m.span() 437 (0, 5) 438 439:meth:`~re.Match.group` returns the substring that was matched by the RE. :meth:`~re.Match.start` 440and :meth:`~re.Match.end` return the starting and ending index of the match. :meth:`~re.Match.span` 441returns both start and end indexes in a single tuple. Since the :meth:`~re.Pattern.match` 442method only checks if the RE matches at the start of a string, :meth:`!start` 443will always be zero. However, the :meth:`~re.Pattern.search` method of patterns 444scans through the string, so the match may not start at zero in that 445case. :: 446 447 >>> print(p.match('::: message')) 448 None 449 >>> m = p.search('::: message'); print(m) 450 <re.Match object; span=(4, 11), match='message'> 451 >>> m.group() 452 'message' 453 >>> m.span() 454 (4, 11) 455 456In actual programs, the most common style is to store the 457:ref:`match object <match-objects>` in a variable, and then check if it was 458``None``. This usually looks like:: 459 460 p = re.compile( ... ) 461 m = p.match( 'string goes here' ) 462 if m: 463 print('Match found: ', m.group()) 464 else: 465 print('No match') 466 467Two pattern methods return all of the matches for a pattern. 468:meth:`~re.Pattern.findall` returns a list of matching strings:: 469 470 >>> p = re.compile(r'\d+') 471 >>> p.findall('12 drummers drumming, 11 pipers piping, 10 lords a-leaping') 472 ['12', '11', '10'] 473 474The ``r`` prefix, making the literal a raw string literal, is needed in this 475example because escape sequences in a normal "cooked" string literal that are 476not recognized by Python, as opposed to regular expressions, now result in a 477:exc:`DeprecationWarning` and will eventually become a :exc:`SyntaxError`. See 478:ref:`the-backslash-plague`. 479 480:meth:`~re.Pattern.findall` has to create the entire list before it can be returned as the 481result. The :meth:`~re.Pattern.finditer` method returns a sequence of 482:ref:`match object <match-objects>` instances as an :term:`iterator`:: 483 484 >>> iterator = p.finditer('12 drummers drumming, 11 ... 10 ...') 485 >>> iterator #doctest: +ELLIPSIS 486 <callable_iterator object at 0x...> 487 >>> for match in iterator: 488 ... print(match.span()) 489 ... 490 (0, 2) 491 (22, 24) 492 (29, 31) 493 494 495Module-Level Functions 496---------------------- 497 498You don't have to create a pattern object and call its methods; the 499:mod:`re` module also provides top-level functions called :func:`~re.match`, 500:func:`~re.search`, :func:`~re.findall`, :func:`~re.sub`, and so forth. These functions 501take the same arguments as the corresponding pattern method with 502the RE string added as the first argument, and still return either ``None`` or a 503:ref:`match object <match-objects>` instance. :: 504 505 >>> print(re.match(r'From\s+', 'Fromage amk')) 506 None 507 >>> re.match(r'From\s+', 'From amk Thu May 14 19:12:10 1998') #doctest: +ELLIPSIS 508 <re.Match object; span=(0, 5), match='From '> 509 510Under the hood, these functions simply create a pattern object for you 511and call the appropriate method on it. They also store the compiled 512object in a cache, so future calls using the same RE won't need to 513parse the pattern again and again. 514 515Should you use these module-level functions, or should you get the 516pattern and call its methods yourself? If you're accessing a regex 517within a loop, pre-compiling it will save a few function calls. 518Outside of loops, there's not much difference thanks to the internal 519cache. 520 521 522Compilation Flags 523----------------- 524 525Compilation flags let you modify some aspects of how regular expressions work. 526Flags are available in the :mod:`re` module under two names, a long name such as 527:const:`IGNORECASE` and a short, one-letter form such as :const:`I`. (If you're 528familiar with Perl's pattern modifiers, the one-letter forms use the same 529letters; the short form of :const:`re.VERBOSE` is :const:`re.X`, for example.) 530Multiple flags can be specified by bitwise OR-ing them; ``re.I | re.M`` sets 531both the :const:`I` and :const:`M` flags, for example. 532 533Here's a table of the available flags, followed by a more detailed explanation 534of each one. 535 536+---------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 537| Flag | Meaning | 538+=================================+============================================+ 539| :const:`ASCII`, :const:`A` | Makes several escapes like ``\w``, ``\b``, | 540| | ``\s`` and ``\d`` match only on ASCII | 541| | characters with the respective property. | 542+---------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 543| :const:`DOTALL`, :const:`S` | Make ``.`` match any character, including | 544| | newlines. | 545+---------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 546| :const:`IGNORECASE`, :const:`I` | Do case-insensitive matches. | 547+---------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 548| :const:`LOCALE`, :const:`L` | Do a locale-aware match. | 549+---------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 550| :const:`MULTILINE`, :const:`M` | Multi-line matching, affecting ``^`` and | 551| | ``$``. | 552+---------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 553| :const:`VERBOSE`, :const:`X` | Enable verbose REs, which can be organized | 554| (for 'extended') | more cleanly and understandably. | 555+---------------------------------+--------------------------------------------+ 556 557 558.. data:: I 559 IGNORECASE 560 :noindex: 561 562 Perform case-insensitive matching; character class and literal strings will 563 match letters by ignoring case. For example, ``[A-Z]`` will match lowercase 564 letters, too. Full Unicode matching also works unless the :const:`ASCII` 565 flag is used to disable non-ASCII matches. When the Unicode patterns 566 ``[a-z]`` or ``[A-Z]`` are used in combination with the :const:`IGNORECASE` 567 flag, they will match the 52 ASCII letters and 4 additional non-ASCII 568 letters: 'İ' (U+0130, Latin capital letter I with dot above), 'ı' (U+0131, 569 Latin small letter dotless i), 'ſ' (U+017F, Latin small letter long s) and 570 'K' (U+212A, Kelvin sign). ``Spam`` will match ``'Spam'``, ``'spam'``, 571 ``'spAM'``, or ``'ſpam'`` (the latter is matched only in Unicode mode). 572 This lowercasing doesn't take the current locale into account; 573 it will if you also set the :const:`LOCALE` flag. 574 575 576.. data:: L 577 LOCALE 578 :noindex: 579 580 Make ``\w``, ``\W``, ``\b``, ``\B`` and case-insensitive matching dependent 581 on the current locale instead of the Unicode database. 582 583 Locales are a feature of the C library intended to help in writing programs 584 that take account of language differences. For example, if you're 585 processing encoded French text, you'd want to be able to write ``\w+`` to 586 match words, but ``\w`` only matches the character class ``[A-Za-z]`` in 587 bytes patterns; it won't match bytes corresponding to ``é`` or ``ç``. 588 If your system is configured properly and a French locale is selected, 589 certain C functions will tell the program that the byte corresponding to 590 ``é`` should also be considered a letter. 591 Setting the :const:`LOCALE` flag when compiling a regular expression will cause 592 the resulting compiled object to use these C functions for ``\w``; this is 593 slower, but also enables ``\w+`` to match French words as you'd expect. 594 The use of this flag is discouraged in Python 3 as the locale mechanism 595 is very unreliable, it only handles one "culture" at a time, and it only 596 works with 8-bit locales. Unicode matching is already enabled by default 597 in Python 3 for Unicode (str) patterns, and it is able to handle different 598 locales/languages. 599 600 601.. data:: M 602 MULTILINE 603 :noindex: 604 605 (``^`` and ``$`` haven't been explained yet; they'll be introduced in section 606 :ref:`more-metacharacters`.) 607 608 Usually ``^`` matches only at the beginning of the string, and ``$`` matches 609 only at the end of the string and immediately before the newline (if any) at the 610 end of the string. When this flag is specified, ``^`` matches at the beginning 611 of the string and at the beginning of each line within the string, immediately 612 following each newline. Similarly, the ``$`` metacharacter matches either at 613 the end of the string and at the end of each line (immediately preceding each 614 newline). 615 616 617.. data:: S 618 DOTALL 619 :noindex: 620 621 Makes the ``'.'`` special character match any character at all, including a 622 newline; without this flag, ``'.'`` will match anything *except* a newline. 623 624 625.. data:: A 626 ASCII 627 :noindex: 628 629 Make ``\w``, ``\W``, ``\b``, ``\B``, ``\s`` and ``\S`` perform ASCII-only 630 matching instead of full Unicode matching. This is only meaningful for 631 Unicode patterns, and is ignored for byte patterns. 632 633 634.. data:: X 635 VERBOSE 636 :noindex: 637 638 This flag allows you to write regular expressions that are more readable by 639 granting you more flexibility in how you can format them. When this flag has 640 been specified, whitespace within the RE string is ignored, except when the 641 whitespace is in a character class or preceded by an unescaped backslash; this 642 lets you organize and indent the RE more clearly. This flag also lets you put 643 comments within a RE that will be ignored by the engine; comments are marked by 644 a ``'#'`` that's neither in a character class or preceded by an unescaped 645 backslash. 646 647 For example, here's a RE that uses :const:`re.VERBOSE`; see how much easier it 648 is to read? :: 649 650 charref = re.compile(r""" 651 &[#] # Start of a numeric entity reference 652 ( 653 0[0-7]+ # Octal form 654 | [0-9]+ # Decimal form 655 | x[0-9a-fA-F]+ # Hexadecimal form 656 ) 657 ; # Trailing semicolon 658 """, re.VERBOSE) 659 660 Without the verbose setting, the RE would look like this:: 661 662 charref = re.compile("&#(0[0-7]+" 663 "|[0-9]+" 664 "|x[0-9a-fA-F]+);") 665 666 In the above example, Python's automatic concatenation of string literals has 667 been used to break up the RE into smaller pieces, but it's still more difficult 668 to understand than the version using :const:`re.VERBOSE`. 669 670 671More Pattern Power 672================== 673 674So far we've only covered a part of the features of regular expressions. In 675this section, we'll cover some new metacharacters, and how to use groups to 676retrieve portions of the text that was matched. 677 678 679.. _more-metacharacters: 680 681More Metacharacters 682------------------- 683 684There are some metacharacters that we haven't covered yet. Most of them will be 685covered in this section. 686 687Some of the remaining metacharacters to be discussed are :dfn:`zero-width 688assertions`. They don't cause the engine to advance through the string; 689instead, they consume no characters at all, and simply succeed or fail. For 690example, ``\b`` is an assertion that the current position is located at a word 691boundary; the position isn't changed by the ``\b`` at all. This means that 692zero-width assertions should never be repeated, because if they match once at a 693given location, they can obviously be matched an infinite number of times. 694 695``|`` 696 Alternation, or the "or" operator. If *A* and *B* are regular expressions, 697 ``A|B`` will match any string that matches either *A* or *B*. ``|`` has very 698 low precedence in order to make it work reasonably when you're alternating 699 multi-character strings. ``Crow|Servo`` will match either ``'Crow'`` or ``'Servo'``, 700 not ``'Cro'``, a ``'w'`` or an ``'S'``, and ``'ervo'``. 701 702 To match a literal ``'|'``, use ``\|``, or enclose it inside a character class, 703 as in ``[|]``. 704 705``^`` 706 Matches at the beginning of lines. Unless the :const:`MULTILINE` flag has been 707 set, this will only match at the beginning of the string. In :const:`MULTILINE` 708 mode, this also matches immediately after each newline within the string. 709 710 For example, if you wish to match the word ``From`` only at the beginning of a 711 line, the RE to use is ``^From``. :: 712 713 >>> print(re.search('^From', 'From Here to Eternity')) #doctest: +ELLIPSIS 714 <re.Match object; span=(0, 4), match='From'> 715 >>> print(re.search('^From', 'Reciting From Memory')) 716 None 717 718 To match a literal ``'^'``, use ``\^``. 719 720``$`` 721 Matches at the end of a line, which is defined as either the end of the string, 722 or any location followed by a newline character. :: 723 724 >>> print(re.search('}$', '{block}')) #doctest: +ELLIPSIS 725 <re.Match object; span=(6, 7), match='}'> 726 >>> print(re.search('}$', '{block} ')) 727 None 728 >>> print(re.search('}$', '{block}\n')) #doctest: +ELLIPSIS 729 <re.Match object; span=(6, 7), match='}'> 730 731 To match a literal ``'$'``, use ``\$`` or enclose it inside a character class, 732 as in ``[$]``. 733 734``\A`` 735 Matches only at the start of the string. When not in :const:`MULTILINE` mode, 736 ``\A`` and ``^`` are effectively the same. In :const:`MULTILINE` mode, they're 737 different: ``\A`` still matches only at the beginning of the string, but ``^`` 738 may match at any location inside the string that follows a newline character. 739 740``\Z`` 741 Matches only at the end of the string. 742 743``\b`` 744 Word boundary. This is a zero-width assertion that matches only at the 745 beginning or end of a word. A word is defined as a sequence of alphanumeric 746 characters, so the end of a word is indicated by whitespace or a 747 non-alphanumeric character. 748 749 The following example matches ``class`` only when it's a complete word; it won't 750 match when it's contained inside another word. :: 751 752 >>> p = re.compile(r'\bclass\b') 753 >>> print(p.search('no class at all')) 754 <re.Match object; span=(3, 8), match='class'> 755 >>> print(p.search('the declassified algorithm')) 756 None 757 >>> print(p.search('one subclass is')) 758 None 759 760 There are two subtleties you should remember when using this special sequence. 761 First, this is the worst collision between Python's string literals and regular 762 expression sequences. In Python's string literals, ``\b`` is the backspace 763 character, ASCII value 8. If you're not using raw strings, then Python will 764 convert the ``\b`` to a backspace, and your RE won't match as you expect it to. 765 The following example looks the same as our previous RE, but omits the ``'r'`` 766 in front of the RE string. :: 767 768 >>> p = re.compile('\bclass\b') 769 >>> print(p.search('no class at all')) 770 None 771 >>> print(p.search('\b' + 'class' + '\b')) 772 <re.Match object; span=(0, 7), match='\x08class\x08'> 773 774 Second, inside a character class, where there's no use for this assertion, 775 ``\b`` represents the backspace character, for compatibility with Python's 776 string literals. 777 778``\B`` 779 Another zero-width assertion, this is the opposite of ``\b``, only matching when 780 the current position is not at a word boundary. 781 782 783Grouping 784-------- 785 786Frequently you need to obtain more information than just whether the RE matched 787or not. Regular expressions are often used to dissect strings by writing a RE 788divided into several subgroups which match different components of interest. 789For example, an RFC-822 header line is divided into a header name and a value, 790separated by a ``':'``, like this: 791 792.. code-block:: none 793 794 From: author@example.com 795 User-Agent: Thunderbird 1.5.0.9 (X11/20061227) 796 MIME-Version: 1.0 797 To: editor@example.com 798 799This can be handled by writing a regular expression which matches an entire 800header line, and has one group which matches the header name, and another group 801which matches the header's value. 802 803Groups are marked by the ``'('``, ``')'`` metacharacters. ``'('`` and ``')'`` 804have much the same meaning as they do in mathematical expressions; they group 805together the expressions contained inside them, and you can repeat the contents 806of a group with a repeating qualifier, such as ``*``, ``+``, ``?``, or 807``{m,n}``. For example, ``(ab)*`` will match zero or more repetitions of 808``ab``. :: 809 810 >>> p = re.compile('(ab)*') 811 >>> print(p.match('ababababab').span()) 812 (0, 10) 813 814Groups indicated with ``'('``, ``')'`` also capture the starting and ending 815index of the text that they match; this can be retrieved by passing an argument 816to :meth:`~re.Match.group`, :meth:`~re.Match.start`, :meth:`~re.Match.end`, and 817:meth:`~re.Match.span`. Groups are 818numbered starting with 0. Group 0 is always present; it's the whole RE, so 819:ref:`match object <match-objects>` methods all have group 0 as their default 820argument. Later we'll see how to express groups that don't capture the span 821of text that they match. :: 822 823 >>> p = re.compile('(a)b') 824 >>> m = p.match('ab') 825 >>> m.group() 826 'ab' 827 >>> m.group(0) 828 'ab' 829 830Subgroups are numbered from left to right, from 1 upward. Groups can be nested; 831to determine the number, just count the opening parenthesis characters, going 832from left to right. :: 833 834 >>> p = re.compile('(a(b)c)d') 835 >>> m = p.match('abcd') 836 >>> m.group(0) 837 'abcd' 838 >>> m.group(1) 839 'abc' 840 >>> m.group(2) 841 'b' 842 843:meth:`~re.Match.group` can be passed multiple group numbers at a time, in which case it 844will return a tuple containing the corresponding values for those groups. :: 845 846 >>> m.group(2,1,2) 847 ('b', 'abc', 'b') 848 849The :meth:`~re.Match.groups` method returns a tuple containing the strings for all the 850subgroups, from 1 up to however many there are. :: 851 852 >>> m.groups() 853 ('abc', 'b') 854 855Backreferences in a pattern allow you to specify that the contents of an earlier 856capturing group must also be found at the current location in the string. For 857example, ``\1`` will succeed if the exact contents of group 1 can be found at 858the current position, and fails otherwise. Remember that Python's string 859literals also use a backslash followed by numbers to allow including arbitrary 860characters in a string, so be sure to use a raw string when incorporating 861backreferences in a RE. 862 863For example, the following RE detects doubled words in a string. :: 864 865 >>> p = re.compile(r'\b(\w+)\s+\1\b') 866 >>> p.search('Paris in the the spring').group() 867 'the the' 868 869Backreferences like this aren't often useful for just searching through a string 870--- there are few text formats which repeat data in this way --- but you'll soon 871find out that they're *very* useful when performing string substitutions. 872 873 874Non-capturing and Named Groups 875------------------------------ 876 877Elaborate REs may use many groups, both to capture substrings of interest, and 878to group and structure the RE itself. In complex REs, it becomes difficult to 879keep track of the group numbers. There are two features which help with this 880problem. Both of them use a common syntax for regular expression extensions, so 881we'll look at that first. 882 883Perl 5 is well known for its powerful additions to standard regular expressions. 884For these new features the Perl developers couldn't choose new single-keystroke metacharacters 885or new special sequences beginning with ``\`` without making Perl's regular 886expressions confusingly different from standard REs. If they chose ``&`` as a 887new metacharacter, for example, old expressions would be assuming that ``&`` was 888a regular character and wouldn't have escaped it by writing ``\&`` or ``[&]``. 889 890The solution chosen by the Perl developers was to use ``(?...)`` as the 891extension syntax. ``?`` immediately after a parenthesis was a syntax error 892because the ``?`` would have nothing to repeat, so this didn't introduce any 893compatibility problems. The characters immediately after the ``?`` indicate 894what extension is being used, so ``(?=foo)`` is one thing (a positive lookahead 895assertion) and ``(?:foo)`` is something else (a non-capturing group containing 896the subexpression ``foo``). 897 898Python supports several of Perl's extensions and adds an extension 899syntax to Perl's extension syntax. If the first character after the 900question mark is a ``P``, you know that it's an extension that's 901specific to Python. 902 903Now that we've looked at the general extension syntax, we can return 904to the features that simplify working with groups in complex REs. 905 906Sometimes you'll want to use a group to denote a part of a regular expression, 907but aren't interested in retrieving the group's contents. You can make this fact 908explicit by using a non-capturing group: ``(?:...)``, where you can replace the 909``...`` with any other regular expression. :: 910 911 >>> m = re.match("([abc])+", "abc") 912 >>> m.groups() 913 ('c',) 914 >>> m = re.match("(?:[abc])+", "abc") 915 >>> m.groups() 916 () 917 918Except for the fact that you can't retrieve the contents of what the group 919matched, a non-capturing group behaves exactly the same as a capturing group; 920you can put anything inside it, repeat it with a repetition metacharacter such 921as ``*``, and nest it within other groups (capturing or non-capturing). 922``(?:...)`` is particularly useful when modifying an existing pattern, since you 923can add new groups without changing how all the other groups are numbered. It 924should be mentioned that there's no performance difference in searching between 925capturing and non-capturing groups; neither form is any faster than the other. 926 927A more significant feature is named groups: instead of referring to them by 928numbers, groups can be referenced by a name. 929 930The syntax for a named group is one of the Python-specific extensions: 931``(?P<name>...)``. *name* is, obviously, the name of the group. Named groups 932behave exactly like capturing groups, and additionally associate a name 933with a group. The :ref:`match object <match-objects>` methods that deal with 934capturing groups all accept either integers that refer to the group by number 935or strings that contain the desired group's name. Named groups are still 936given numbers, so you can retrieve information about a group in two ways:: 937 938 >>> p = re.compile(r'(?P<word>\b\w+\b)') 939 >>> m = p.search( '(((( Lots of punctuation )))' ) 940 >>> m.group('word') 941 'Lots' 942 >>> m.group(1) 943 'Lots' 944 945Additionally, you can retrieve named groups as a dictionary with 946:meth:`~re.Match.groupdict`:: 947 948 >>> m = re.match(r'(?P<first>\w+) (?P<last>\w+)', 'Jane Doe') 949 >>> m.groupdict() 950 {'first': 'Jane', 'last': 'Doe'} 951 952Named groups are handy because they let you use easily-remembered names, instead 953of having to remember numbers. Here's an example RE from the :mod:`imaplib` 954module:: 955 956 InternalDate = re.compile(r'INTERNALDATE "' 957 r'(?P<day>[ 123][0-9])-(?P<mon>[A-Z][a-z][a-z])-' 958 r'(?P<year>[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9])' 959 r' (?P<hour>[0-9][0-9]):(?P<min>[0-9][0-9]):(?P<sec>[0-9][0-9])' 960 r' (?P<zonen>[-+])(?P<zoneh>[0-9][0-9])(?P<zonem>[0-9][0-9])' 961 r'"') 962 963It's obviously much easier to retrieve ``m.group('zonem')``, instead of having 964to remember to retrieve group 9. 965 966The syntax for backreferences in an expression such as ``(...)\1`` refers to the 967number of the group. There's naturally a variant that uses the group name 968instead of the number. This is another Python extension: ``(?P=name)`` indicates 969that the contents of the group called *name* should again be matched at the 970current point. The regular expression for finding doubled words, 971``\b(\w+)\s+\1\b`` can also be written as ``\b(?P<word>\w+)\s+(?P=word)\b``:: 972 973 >>> p = re.compile(r'\b(?P<word>\w+)\s+(?P=word)\b') 974 >>> p.search('Paris in the the spring').group() 975 'the the' 976 977 978Lookahead Assertions 979-------------------- 980 981Another zero-width assertion is the lookahead assertion. Lookahead assertions 982are available in both positive and negative form, and look like this: 983 984``(?=...)`` 985 Positive lookahead assertion. This succeeds if the contained regular 986 expression, represented here by ``...``, successfully matches at the current 987 location, and fails otherwise. But, once the contained expression has been 988 tried, the matching engine doesn't advance at all; the rest of the pattern is 989 tried right where the assertion started. 990 991``(?!...)`` 992 Negative lookahead assertion. This is the opposite of the positive assertion; 993 it succeeds if the contained expression *doesn't* match at the current position 994 in the string. 995 996To make this concrete, let's look at a case where a lookahead is useful. 997Consider a simple pattern to match a filename and split it apart into a base 998name and an extension, separated by a ``.``. For example, in ``news.rc``, 999``news`` is the base name, and ``rc`` is the filename's extension. 1000 1001The pattern to match this is quite simple: 1002 1003``.*[.].*$`` 1004 1005Notice that the ``.`` needs to be treated specially because it's a 1006metacharacter, so it's inside a character class to only match that 1007specific character. Also notice the trailing ``$``; this is added to 1008ensure that all the rest of the string must be included in the 1009extension. This regular expression matches ``foo.bar`` and 1010``autoexec.bat`` and ``sendmail.cf`` and ``printers.conf``. 1011 1012Now, consider complicating the problem a bit; what if you want to match 1013filenames where the extension is not ``bat``? Some incorrect attempts: 1014 1015``.*[.][^b].*$`` The first attempt above tries to exclude ``bat`` by requiring 1016that the first character of the extension is not a ``b``. This is wrong, 1017because the pattern also doesn't match ``foo.bar``. 1018 1019``.*[.]([^b]..|.[^a].|..[^t])$`` 1020 1021The expression gets messier when you try to patch up the first solution by 1022requiring one of the following cases to match: the first character of the 1023extension isn't ``b``; the second character isn't ``a``; or the third character 1024isn't ``t``. This accepts ``foo.bar`` and rejects ``autoexec.bat``, but it 1025requires a three-letter extension and won't accept a filename with a two-letter 1026extension such as ``sendmail.cf``. We'll complicate the pattern again in an 1027effort to fix it. 1028 1029``.*[.]([^b].?.?|.[^a]?.?|..?[^t]?)$`` 1030 1031In the third attempt, the second and third letters are all made optional in 1032order to allow matching extensions shorter than three characters, such as 1033``sendmail.cf``. 1034 1035The pattern's getting really complicated now, which makes it hard to read and 1036understand. Worse, if the problem changes and you want to exclude both ``bat`` 1037and ``exe`` as extensions, the pattern would get even more complicated and 1038confusing. 1039 1040A negative lookahead cuts through all this confusion: 1041 1042``.*[.](?!bat$)[^.]*$`` The negative lookahead means: if the expression ``bat`` 1043doesn't match at this point, try the rest of the pattern; if ``bat$`` does 1044match, the whole pattern will fail. The trailing ``$`` is required to ensure 1045that something like ``sample.batch``, where the extension only starts with 1046``bat``, will be allowed. The ``[^.]*`` makes sure that the pattern works 1047when there are multiple dots in the filename. 1048 1049Excluding another filename extension is now easy; simply add it as an 1050alternative inside the assertion. The following pattern excludes filenames that 1051end in either ``bat`` or ``exe``: 1052 1053``.*[.](?!bat$|exe$)[^.]*$`` 1054 1055 1056Modifying Strings 1057================= 1058 1059Up to this point, we've simply performed searches against a static string. 1060Regular expressions are also commonly used to modify strings in various ways, 1061using the following pattern methods: 1062 1063+------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 1064| Method/Attribute | Purpose | 1065+==================+===============================================+ 1066| ``split()`` | Split the string into a list, splitting it | 1067| | wherever the RE matches | 1068+------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 1069| ``sub()`` | Find all substrings where the RE matches, and | 1070| | replace them with a different string | 1071+------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 1072| ``subn()`` | Does the same thing as :meth:`!sub`, but | 1073| | returns the new string and the number of | 1074| | replacements | 1075+------------------+-----------------------------------------------+ 1076 1077 1078Splitting Strings 1079----------------- 1080 1081The :meth:`~re.Pattern.split` method of a pattern splits a string apart 1082wherever the RE matches, returning a list of the pieces. It's similar to the 1083:meth:`~str.split` method of strings but provides much more generality in the 1084delimiters that you can split by; string :meth:`!split` only supports splitting by 1085whitespace or by a fixed string. As you'd expect, there's a module-level 1086:func:`re.split` function, too. 1087 1088 1089.. method:: .split(string [, maxsplit=0]) 1090 :noindex: 1091 1092 Split *string* by the matches of the regular expression. If capturing 1093 parentheses are used in the RE, then their contents will also be returned as 1094 part of the resulting list. If *maxsplit* is nonzero, at most *maxsplit* splits 1095 are performed. 1096 1097You can limit the number of splits made, by passing a value for *maxsplit*. 1098When *maxsplit* is nonzero, at most *maxsplit* splits will be made, and the 1099remainder of the string is returned as the final element of the list. In the 1100following example, the delimiter is any sequence of non-alphanumeric characters. 1101:: 1102 1103 >>> p = re.compile(r'\W+') 1104 >>> p.split('This is a test, short and sweet, of split().') 1105 ['This', 'is', 'a', 'test', 'short', 'and', 'sweet', 'of', 'split', ''] 1106 >>> p.split('This is a test, short and sweet, of split().', 3) 1107 ['This', 'is', 'a', 'test, short and sweet, of split().'] 1108 1109Sometimes you're not only interested in what the text between delimiters is, but 1110also need to know what the delimiter was. If capturing parentheses are used in 1111the RE, then their values are also returned as part of the list. Compare the 1112following calls:: 1113 1114 >>> p = re.compile(r'\W+') 1115 >>> p2 = re.compile(r'(\W+)') 1116 >>> p.split('This... is a test.') 1117 ['This', 'is', 'a', 'test', ''] 1118 >>> p2.split('This... is a test.') 1119 ['This', '... ', 'is', ' ', 'a', ' ', 'test', '.', ''] 1120 1121The module-level function :func:`re.split` adds the RE to be used as the first 1122argument, but is otherwise the same. :: 1123 1124 >>> re.split(r'[\W]+', 'Words, words, words.') 1125 ['Words', 'words', 'words', ''] 1126 >>> re.split(r'([\W]+)', 'Words, words, words.') 1127 ['Words', ', ', 'words', ', ', 'words', '.', ''] 1128 >>> re.split(r'[\W]+', 'Words, words, words.', 1) 1129 ['Words', 'words, words.'] 1130 1131 1132Search and Replace 1133------------------ 1134 1135Another common task is to find all the matches for a pattern, and replace them 1136with a different string. The :meth:`~re.Pattern.sub` method takes a replacement value, 1137which can be either a string or a function, and the string to be processed. 1138 1139.. method:: .sub(replacement, string[, count=0]) 1140 :noindex: 1141 1142 Returns the string obtained by replacing the leftmost non-overlapping 1143 occurrences of the RE in *string* by the replacement *replacement*. If the 1144 pattern isn't found, *string* is returned unchanged. 1145 1146 The optional argument *count* is the maximum number of pattern occurrences to be 1147 replaced; *count* must be a non-negative integer. The default value of 0 means 1148 to replace all occurrences. 1149 1150Here's a simple example of using the :meth:`~re.Pattern.sub` method. It replaces colour 1151names with the word ``colour``:: 1152 1153 >>> p = re.compile('(blue|white|red)') 1154 >>> p.sub('colour', 'blue socks and red shoes') 1155 'colour socks and colour shoes' 1156 >>> p.sub('colour', 'blue socks and red shoes', count=1) 1157 'colour socks and red shoes' 1158 1159The :meth:`~re.Pattern.subn` method does the same work, but returns a 2-tuple containing the 1160new string value and the number of replacements that were performed:: 1161 1162 >>> p = re.compile('(blue|white|red)') 1163 >>> p.subn('colour', 'blue socks and red shoes') 1164 ('colour socks and colour shoes', 2) 1165 >>> p.subn('colour', 'no colours at all') 1166 ('no colours at all', 0) 1167 1168Empty matches are replaced only when they're not adjacent to a previous empty match. 1169:: 1170 1171 >>> p = re.compile('x*') 1172 >>> p.sub('-', 'abxd') 1173 '-a-b--d-' 1174 1175If *replacement* is a string, any backslash escapes in it are processed. That 1176is, ``\n`` is converted to a single newline character, ``\r`` is converted to a 1177carriage return, and so forth. Unknown escapes such as ``\&`` are left alone. 1178Backreferences, such as ``\6``, are replaced with the substring matched by the 1179corresponding group in the RE. This lets you incorporate portions of the 1180original text in the resulting replacement string. 1181 1182This example matches the word ``section`` followed by a string enclosed in 1183``{``, ``}``, and changes ``section`` to ``subsection``:: 1184 1185 >>> p = re.compile('section{ ( [^}]* ) }', re.VERBOSE) 1186 >>> p.sub(r'subsection{\1}','section{First} section{second}') 1187 'subsection{First} subsection{second}' 1188 1189There's also a syntax for referring to named groups as defined by the 1190``(?P<name>...)`` syntax. ``\g<name>`` will use the substring matched by the 1191group named ``name``, and ``\g<number>`` uses the corresponding group number. 1192``\g<2>`` is therefore equivalent to ``\2``, but isn't ambiguous in a 1193replacement string such as ``\g<2>0``. (``\20`` would be interpreted as a 1194reference to group 20, not a reference to group 2 followed by the literal 1195character ``'0'``.) The following substitutions are all equivalent, but use all 1196three variations of the replacement string. :: 1197 1198 >>> p = re.compile('section{ (?P<name> [^}]* ) }', re.VERBOSE) 1199 >>> p.sub(r'subsection{\1}','section{First}') 1200 'subsection{First}' 1201 >>> p.sub(r'subsection{\g<1>}','section{First}') 1202 'subsection{First}' 1203 >>> p.sub(r'subsection{\g<name>}','section{First}') 1204 'subsection{First}' 1205 1206*replacement* can also be a function, which gives you even more control. If 1207*replacement* is a function, the function is called for every non-overlapping 1208occurrence of *pattern*. On each call, the function is passed a 1209:ref:`match object <match-objects>` argument for the match and can use this 1210information to compute the desired replacement string and return it. 1211 1212In the following example, the replacement function translates decimals into 1213hexadecimal:: 1214 1215 >>> def hexrepl(match): 1216 ... "Return the hex string for a decimal number" 1217 ... value = int(match.group()) 1218 ... return hex(value) 1219 ... 1220 >>> p = re.compile(r'\d+') 1221 >>> p.sub(hexrepl, 'Call 65490 for printing, 49152 for user code.') 1222 'Call 0xffd2 for printing, 0xc000 for user code.' 1223 1224When using the module-level :func:`re.sub` function, the pattern is passed as 1225the first argument. The pattern may be provided as an object or as a string; if 1226you need to specify regular expression flags, you must either use a 1227pattern object as the first parameter, or use embedded modifiers in the 1228pattern string, e.g. ``sub("(?i)b+", "x", "bbbb BBBB")`` returns ``'x x'``. 1229 1230 1231Common Problems 1232=============== 1233 1234Regular expressions are a powerful tool for some applications, but in some ways 1235their behaviour isn't intuitive and at times they don't behave the way you may 1236expect them to. This section will point out some of the most common pitfalls. 1237 1238 1239Use String Methods 1240------------------ 1241 1242Sometimes using the :mod:`re` module is a mistake. If you're matching a fixed 1243string, or a single character class, and you're not using any :mod:`re` features 1244such as the :const:`~re.IGNORECASE` flag, then the full power of regular expressions 1245may not be required. Strings have several methods for performing operations with 1246fixed strings and they're usually much faster, because the implementation is a 1247single small C loop that's been optimized for the purpose, instead of the large, 1248more generalized regular expression engine. 1249 1250One example might be replacing a single fixed string with another one; for 1251example, you might replace ``word`` with ``deed``. :func:`re.sub` seems like the 1252function to use for this, but consider the :meth:`~str.replace` method. Note that 1253:meth:`!replace` will also replace ``word`` inside words, turning ``swordfish`` 1254into ``sdeedfish``, but the naive RE ``word`` would have done that, too. (To 1255avoid performing the substitution on parts of words, the pattern would have to 1256be ``\bword\b``, in order to require that ``word`` have a word boundary on 1257either side. This takes the job beyond :meth:`!replace`'s abilities.) 1258 1259Another common task is deleting every occurrence of a single character from a 1260string or replacing it with another single character. You might do this with 1261something like ``re.sub('\n', ' ', S)``, but :meth:`~str.translate` is capable of 1262doing both tasks and will be faster than any regular expression operation can 1263be. 1264 1265In short, before turning to the :mod:`re` module, consider whether your problem 1266can be solved with a faster and simpler string method. 1267 1268 1269match() versus search() 1270----------------------- 1271 1272The :func:`~re.match` function only checks if the RE matches at the beginning of the 1273string while :func:`~re.search` will scan forward through the string for a match. 1274It's important to keep this distinction in mind. Remember, :func:`!match` will 1275only report a successful match which will start at 0; if the match wouldn't 1276start at zero, :func:`!match` will *not* report it. :: 1277 1278 >>> print(re.match('super', 'superstition').span()) 1279 (0, 5) 1280 >>> print(re.match('super', 'insuperable')) 1281 None 1282 1283On the other hand, :func:`~re.search` will scan forward through the string, 1284reporting the first match it finds. :: 1285 1286 >>> print(re.search('super', 'superstition').span()) 1287 (0, 5) 1288 >>> print(re.search('super', 'insuperable').span()) 1289 (2, 7) 1290 1291Sometimes you'll be tempted to keep using :func:`re.match`, and just add ``.*`` 1292to the front of your RE. Resist this temptation and use :func:`re.search` 1293instead. The regular expression compiler does some analysis of REs in order to 1294speed up the process of looking for a match. One such analysis figures out what 1295the first character of a match must be; for example, a pattern starting with 1296``Crow`` must match starting with a ``'C'``. The analysis lets the engine 1297quickly scan through the string looking for the starting character, only trying 1298the full match if a ``'C'`` is found. 1299 1300Adding ``.*`` defeats this optimization, requiring scanning to the end of the 1301string and then backtracking to find a match for the rest of the RE. Use 1302:func:`re.search` instead. 1303 1304 1305Greedy versus Non-Greedy 1306------------------------ 1307 1308When repeating a regular expression, as in ``a*``, the resulting action is to 1309consume as much of the pattern as possible. This fact often bites you when 1310you're trying to match a pair of balanced delimiters, such as the angle brackets 1311surrounding an HTML tag. The naive pattern for matching a single HTML tag 1312doesn't work because of the greedy nature of ``.*``. :: 1313 1314 >>> s = '<html><head><title>Title</title>' 1315 >>> len(s) 1316 32 1317 >>> print(re.match('<.*>', s).span()) 1318 (0, 32) 1319 >>> print(re.match('<.*>', s).group()) 1320 <html><head><title>Title</title> 1321 1322The RE matches the ``'<'`` in ``'<html>'``, and the ``.*`` consumes the rest of 1323the string. There's still more left in the RE, though, and the ``>`` can't 1324match at the end of the string, so the regular expression engine has to 1325backtrack character by character until it finds a match for the ``>``. The 1326final match extends from the ``'<'`` in ``'<html>'`` to the ``'>'`` in 1327``'</title>'``, which isn't what you want. 1328 1329In this case, the solution is to use the non-greedy qualifiers ``*?``, ``+?``, 1330``??``, or ``{m,n}?``, which match as *little* text as possible. In the above 1331example, the ``'>'`` is tried immediately after the first ``'<'`` matches, and 1332when it fails, the engine advances a character at a time, retrying the ``'>'`` 1333at every step. This produces just the right result:: 1334 1335 >>> print(re.match('<.*?>', s).group()) 1336 <html> 1337 1338(Note that parsing HTML or XML with regular expressions is painful. 1339Quick-and-dirty patterns will handle common cases, but HTML and XML have special 1340cases that will break the obvious regular expression; by the time you've written 1341a regular expression that handles all of the possible cases, the patterns will 1342be *very* complicated. Use an HTML or XML parser module for such tasks.) 1343 1344 1345Using re.VERBOSE 1346---------------- 1347 1348By now you've probably noticed that regular expressions are a very compact 1349notation, but they're not terribly readable. REs of moderate complexity can 1350become lengthy collections of backslashes, parentheses, and metacharacters, 1351making them difficult to read and understand. 1352 1353For such REs, specifying the :const:`re.VERBOSE` flag when compiling the regular 1354expression can be helpful, because it allows you to format the regular 1355expression more clearly. 1356 1357The ``re.VERBOSE`` flag has several effects. Whitespace in the regular 1358expression that *isn't* inside a character class is ignored. This means that an 1359expression such as ``dog | cat`` is equivalent to the less readable ``dog|cat``, 1360but ``[a b]`` will still match the characters ``'a'``, ``'b'``, or a space. In 1361addition, you can also put comments inside a RE; comments extend from a ``#`` 1362character to the next newline. When used with triple-quoted strings, this 1363enables REs to be formatted more neatly:: 1364 1365 pat = re.compile(r""" 1366 \s* # Skip leading whitespace 1367 (?P<header>[^:]+) # Header name 1368 \s* : # Whitespace, and a colon 1369 (?P<value>.*?) # The header's value -- *? used to 1370 # lose the following trailing whitespace 1371 \s*$ # Trailing whitespace to end-of-line 1372 """, re.VERBOSE) 1373 1374This is far more readable than:: 1375 1376 pat = re.compile(r"\s*(?P<header>[^:]+)\s*:(?P<value>.*?)\s*$") 1377 1378 1379Feedback 1380======== 1381 1382Regular expressions are a complicated topic. Did this document help you 1383understand them? Were there parts that were unclear, or Problems you 1384encountered that weren't covered here? If so, please send suggestions for 1385improvements to the author. 1386 1387The most complete book on regular expressions is almost certainly Jeffrey 1388Friedl's Mastering Regular Expressions, published by O'Reilly. Unfortunately, 1389it exclusively concentrates on Perl and Java's flavours of regular expressions, 1390and doesn't contain any Python material at all, so it won't be useful as a 1391reference for programming in Python. (The first edition covered Python's 1392now-removed :mod:`!regex` module, which won't help you much.) Consider checking 1393it out from your library. 1394