[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >>> import re > >>> r = re.compile('(a|b*)+') > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? > File "c:\python24\lib\sre.py", line 180, in compile > return _compile(pattern, flags) > File "c:\python24\lib\sre.py", line 227, in _compile > raise error, v # invalid expression > sre_constants.error: nothing to repeat > > but > > >>> r = re.compile('(a|b*c*)+') > >>> r.match('def').group() > '' > > Why is there a difference in behaviour between the two cases. Surely the > two cases are equivalent to: > > >>> r = re.compile('(a|b)*') > >>> r.match('def').group() > ''
equivalent? >>> re.match("(a|b*c*)", "abc").groups() ('a',) >>> re.match("(a|b)*", "abc").groups() ('b',) I have no time to sort out why your second example doesn't give the same error (that might be a bug in the RE compiler), but no, a repeated group with a min-length of 1 is not, in general, the same thing as a re- peated group with a min-length of zero. </F> -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list