Python RegEx

RegEx Module

Python has a built-in package called re, which can be used to work with Regular Expressions.

Import the re module:

import re


RegEx in Python

When you have imported the re module, you can start using regular expressions:

ExampleGet your own Python Server

Search the string to see if it starts with “The” and ends with “Spain”:

import re

txt = “The rain in Spain”
x = re.search(“^The.*Spain$”, txt)

Try it Yourself »


RegEx Functions

The re module offers a set of functions that allows us to search a string for a match:

FunctionDescription
findallReturns a list containing all matches
searchReturns a Match object if there is a match anywhere in the string
splitReturns a list where the string has been split at each match
subReplaces one or many matches with a string


Metacharacters

Metacharacters are characters with a special meaning:

CharacterDescriptionExampleTry it
[]A set of characters“[a-m]”Try it »
\Signals a special sequence (can also be used to escape special characters)“\d”Try it »
.Any character (except newline character)“he..o”Try it »
^Starts with“^hello”Try it »
$Ends with“planet$”Try it »
*Zero or more occurrences“he.*o”Try it »
+One or more occurrences“he.+o”Try it »
?Zero or one occurrences“he.?o”Try it »
{}Exactly the specified number of occurrences“he.{2}o”Try it »
|Either or“falls|stays”Try it »
()Capture and group  

Special Sequences

A special sequence is a \ followed by one of the characters in the list below, and has a special meaning:

CharacterDescriptionExampleTry it
\AReturns a match if the specified characters are at the beginning of the string“\AThe”Try it »
\bReturns a match where the specified characters are at the beginning or at the end of a word
(the “r” in the beginning is making sure that the string is being treated as a “raw string”)
r”\bain”

r”ain\b”
Try it »

Try it »
\BReturns a match where the specified characters are present, but NOT at the beginning (or at the end) of a word
(the “r” in the beginning is making sure that the string is being treated as a “raw string”)
r”\Bain”

r”ain\B”
Try it »

Try it »
\dReturns a match where the string contains digits (numbers from 0-9)“\d”Try it »
\DReturns a match where the string DOES NOT contain digits“\D”Try it »
\sReturns a match where the string contains a white space character“\s”Try it »
\SReturns a match where the string DOES NOT contain a white space character“\S”Try it »
\wReturns a match where the string contains any word characters (characters from a to Z, digits from 0-9, and the underscore _ character)“\w”Try it »
\WReturns a match where the string DOES NOT contain any word characters“\W”Try it »
\ZReturns a match if the specified characters are at the end of the string“Spain\Z”Try it »

Sets

A set is a set of characters inside a pair of square brackets [] with a special meaning:

SetDescriptionTry it
[arn]Returns a match where one of the specified characters (ar, or n) is presentTry it »
[a-n]Returns a match for any lower case character, alphabetically between a and nTry it »
[^arn]Returns a match for any character EXCEPT ar, and nTry it »
[0123]Returns a match where any of the specified digits (012, or 3) are presentTry it »
[0-9]Returns a match for any digit between 0 and 9Try it »
[0-5][0-9]Returns a match for any two-digit numbers from 00 and 59Try it »
[a-zA-Z]Returns a match for any character alphabetically between a and z, lower case OR upper caseTry it »
[+]In sets, +*.|()$,{} has no special meaning, so [+] means: return a match for any + character in the stringTry it »

The findall() Function

The findall() function returns a list containing all matches.

Example

Print a list of all matches:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.findall("ai", txt)
print(x)

The list contains the matches in the order they are found.

If no matches are found, an empty list is returned:

Example

Return an empty list if no match was found:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.findall("Portugal", txt)
print(x)

The search() Function

The search() function searches the string for a match, and returns a Match object if there is a match.

If there is more than one match, only the first occurrence of the match will be returned:

Example

Search for the first white-space character in the string:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.search("\s", txt)

print("The first white-space character is located in position:", x.start())

If no matches are found, the value None is returned:

Example

Make a search that returns no match:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.search("Portugal", txt)
print(x)

The split() Function

The split() function returns a list where the string has been split at each match:

Example

Split at each white-space character:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.split("\s", txt)
print(x)

You can control the number of occurrences by specifying the maxsplit parameter:

Example

Split the string only at the first occurrence:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.split("\s", txt, 1)
print(x)

The sub() Function

The sub() function replaces the matches with the text of your choice:

Example

Replace every white-space character with the number 9:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.sub("\s", "9", txt)
print(x)

You can control the number of replacements by specifying the count parameter:

Example

Replace the first 2 occurrences:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.sub("\s", "9", txt, 2)
print(x)

Match Object

A Match Object is an object containing information about the search and the result.

Note: If there is no match, the value None will be returned, instead of the Match Object.

Example

Do a search that will return a Match Object:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.search("ai", txt)
print(x) #this will print an object

The Match object has properties and methods used to retrieve information about the search, and the result:

.span() returns a tuple containing the start-, and end positions of the match.
.string returns the string passed into the function
.group() returns the part of the string where there was a match

Example

Print the position (start- and end-position) of the first match occurrence.

The regular expression looks for any words that starts with an upper case “S”:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.search(r"\bS\w+", txt)
print(x.span())

Example

Print the string passed into the function:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.search(r"\bS\w+", txt)
print(x.string)

Example

Print the part of the string where there was a match.

The regular expression looks for any words that starts with an upper case “S”:

import re

txt = "The rain in Spain"
x = re.search(r"\bS\w+", txt)
print(x.group())

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