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Python: re.compile and re.sub

Question part 1

I got this file f1:

<something @37>
<name>George Washington</name> 
<a23c>Joe Taylor</a23c>
</something @37>

and I want to re.compile it that it looks like this f1: (with spaces)

George Washington Joe Taylor

I tried this code but it kinda deletes everything:

import re
file = open('f1.txt')
fixed = open('fnew.txt','w')
text = file.read()

match = re.compile('<.*>')
for unwanted in text:
    fixed_doc = match.sub(r' ',text)

fixed.write(fixed_doc)

My guess is the re.compile line but I'm not quite sure what to do with it. I'm not supposed to use 3rd party extensions. Any ideas?


Question part 2

I had a different question about comparing 2 files I got this code from Alfe:

from collections import Counter

def test():
    with open('f1.txt') as f:
        contentsI = f.read()
    with open('f2.txt') as f:
        contentsO = f.read()

    tokensI = Counter(value for value in contentsI.split()
                        if value not in [])
    tokensO = Counter(value for value in contentsO.split()
                        if value not in [])
    return not (tokensI - tokensO) and not (set(tokensO) - set(tokensI))

Is it possible to implement the re.compile and re.sub in the 'if value not in []' section?

like image 646
dustinboettcher Avatar asked Aug 27 '13 04:08

dustinboettcher


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WHAT IS RE sub () in Python?

sub() function belongs to the Regular Expressions ( re ) module in Python. It returns a string where all matching occurrences of the specified pattern are replaced by the replace string. To use this function, we need to import the re module first. import re.

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By default, the count is set to zero, which means the re. sub() method will replace all pattern occurrences in the target string.

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3 Answers

I will explain what happens with your code:

import re
file = open('f1.txt')
fixed = open('fnew.txt','w')
text = file.read()

match = re.compile('<.*>')
for unwanted in text:
    fixed_doc = match.sub(r' ',text)

fixed.write(fixed_doc)

The instruction text = file.read() creates an object text of type string named text.
Note that I use bold characters text to express an OBJECT, and text to express the name == IDENTIFIER of this object.
As a consequence of the instruction for unwanted in text:, the identifier unwanted is successively assigned to each character referenced by the text object.

Besides, re.compile('<.*>') creates an object of type RegexObject (which I personnaly call compiled) regex or simply regex , <.*> being only the regex pattern).
You assign this compiled regex object to the identifier match: it's a very bad practice, because match is already the name of a method of regex objects in general, and of the one you created in particular, so then you could write match.match without error.
match is also the name of a function of the re module.
This use of this name for your particular need is very confusing. You must avoid that.

There's the same flaw with the use of file as a name for the file-handler of file f1. file is already an identifier used in the language, you must avoid it.

Well. Now this bad-named match object is defined, the instruction fixed_doc = match.sub(r' ',text) replaces all the occurences found by the regex match in text with the replacement r' '.
Note that it's completely superfluous to write r' ' instead of just ' ' because there's absolutely nothing in ' ' that needs to be escaped. It's a fad of some anxious people to write raw strings every time they have to write a string in a regex problem.

Because of its pattern <.+> in which the dot symbol means "greedily eat every character situated between a < and a > except if it is a newline character" , the occurences catched in the text by match are each line until the last > in it.
As the name unwanted doesn't appear in this instruction, it is the same operation that is done for each character of the text, one after the other. That is to say: nothing interesting.
To analyze the execution of a programm, you should put some printing instructions in your code, allowing to understand what happens. For example, if you do print repr(fixed_doc), you'll see the repeated printing of this: ' \n \n \n '. As I said: nothing interesting.

There's one more default in your code: you open files, but you don't shut them. It is mandatory to shut files, otherwise it could happen some weird phenomenons, that I personnally observed in some of my codes before I realized this need. Some people pretend it isn't mandatory, but it's false.
By the way, the better manner to open and shut files is to use the with statement. It does all the work without you have to worry about.

.

So , now I can propose you a code for your first problem:

import re

def ripl(mat=None,li = []):
    if mat==None:
        li[:] = []
        return
    if mat.group(1):
        li.append(mat.span(2))
        return ''
    elif mat.span() in li:
        return ''
    else:
        return mat.group()

r = re.compile('</[^>]+>'
               '|'
               '<([^>]+)>(?=.*?(</\\1>))',
               re.DOTALL)

text = '''<something @37>
<name>George <wxc>Washington</name> 
<a23c>Joe </zazaza>Taylor</a23c>
</something @37>'''
print '1------------------------------------1'
print text
print '2------------------------------------2'
ripl()
print r.sub(ripl,text)
print '3------------------------------------3'

result

1------------------------------------1
<something @37>
<name>George <wxc>Washington</name> 
<a23c>Joe </zazaza>Taylor</a23c>
</something @37>
2------------------------------------2

George <wxc>Washington 
Joe </zazaza>Taylor

3------------------------------------3

The principle is as follows:

When the regex detects a tag,
- if it's an end tag, it matches - if it's a start tag, it matches only if there is a corresponding end tag somewhere further in the text
For each match, the method sub() of the regex r calls the function ripl() to perform the replacement.
If the match is with a start tag (which is necessary followed somewhere in the text by its corresponding end tag, by construction of the regex), then ripl() returns ''.
If the match is with an end tag, ripl() returns '' only if this end tag has previously in the text been detected has being the corresponding end tag of a previous start tag. This is done possible by recording in a list li the span of each corresponding end tag's span each time a start tag is detected and matching.

The recording list li is defined as a default argument in order that it's always the same list that is used at each call of the function ripl() (please, refer to the functionning of default argument to undertsand, because it's subtle).
As a consequence of the definition of li as a parameter receiving a default argument, the list object li would retain all the spans recorded when analyzing several text in case several texts would be analyzed successively. In order to avoid the list li to retain spans of past text matches, it is necessary to make the list empty. I wrote the function so that the first parameter is defined with a default argument None: that allows to call ripl() without argument before any use of it in a regex's sub() method.
Then, one must think to write ripl() before any use of it.

.

If you want to remove the newlines of the text in order to obtain the precise result you showed in your question, the code must be modified to:

import re

def ripl(mat=None,li = []):
    if mat==None:
        li[:] = []
        return
    if mat.group(1):
        return ''
    elif mat.group(2):
        li.append(mat.span(3))
        return ''
    elif mat.span() in li:
        return ''
    else:
        return mat.group()


r = re.compile('( *\n *)'
               '|'
               '</[^>]+>'
               '|'
               '<([^>]+)>(?=.*?(</\\2>)) *',
               re.DOTALL)

text = '''<something @37>
<name>George <wxc>Washington</name> 
<a23c>Joe </zazaza>Taylor</a23c>
</something @37>'''
print '1------------------------------------1'
print text
print '2------------------------------------2'
ripl()
print r.sub(ripl,text)
print '3------------------------------------3'

result

1------------------------------------1
<something @37>
<name>George <wxc>Washington</name> 
<a23c>Joe </zazaza>Taylor</a23c>
</something @37>
2------------------------------------2
George <wxc>WashingtonJoe </zazaza>Taylor
3------------------------------------3
like image 104
eyquem Avatar answered Oct 03 '22 19:10

eyquem


You can use Beautiful Soup to do this easily:

from bs4 import BeautifulSoup
file = open('f1.txt')
fixed = open('fnew.txt','w')

#now for some soup

soup = BeautifulSoup(file)

fixed.write(str(soup.get_text()).replace('\n',' '))

The output of the above line will be:

George Washington Joe Taylor

(Atleast this works with the sample you gave me)

Sorry I don't understand part 2, good luck!

like image 44
Moe Jan Avatar answered Oct 03 '22 17:10

Moe Jan


Don't need re.compile

import re  

clean_string = ''  

with open('f1.txt') as f1:  
    for line in f1:  
        match = re.search('.+>(.+)<.+', line)  
        if match:  
            clean_string += (match.group(1))  
            clean_string += ' '  

print(clean_string) # 'George Washington Joe Taylor'
like image 38
user17630458 Avatar answered Oct 03 '22 19:10

user17630458