In article <d8f8d76d-0a47-4f59-8f09-da2a44cc1...@googlegroups.com>, Rick Johnson <rantingrickjohn...@gmail.com> wrote:
> As an aside i prefer to only utilize a "character set" when > nothing else will suffice. And in this case r"[0-9][0-9]*" > can be expressed just as correctly (and less noisy IMHO) as > r"\d\d*". Even better, r"\d+" >>> re.search(r'(\d\d*)', '111aaa222').groups() ('111',) >>> re.search(r'(\d+)', '111aaa222').groups() ('111',) Oddly enough, I prefer character sets to the backslash notation, but I suppose that's largely because when I first learned regexes, that new-fangled backslash stuff hadn't been invented yet. :-) I know I've said this before, but people should put more effort into learning regex. There are lots of good tools in Python (startswith, endswith, split, in, etc) which handle many of the most common regex use cases. Regex is also not as easy to use in Python as it is in a language like Perl where it's baked into the syntax. As a result, pythonistas tend to shy away from regex, and either never learn the full power, or let their skills grow rusty. Which is a shame, because for many tasks, there's no better tool. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list