Hello, After some french discussions about this idea, I subscribed here to suggest adding a new string litteral, for regexp, inspired by other types like : u"", r"", b"", br"", f""…
The regexp string litteral could be represented by : re"" It would ease the use of regexps in Python, allowing to have some regexp litterals, like in Perl or JavaScript. We may end up with an integration like : >>> import re >>> if re".k" in 'ok': ... print "ok" ok >>> Regexps are part of the language in Perl, and the rather complicated integration of regexp in other languages, especially in Python, is something that comes up easily in language comparing discussion. I've always felt JavaScript integration being half the way it should, and new string litterals types in Python (like f"") looked like a good compromise to have a tight integration of regexps without asking to make them part of the language (as I imagine it has already been discussed years ago, and obviously denied…). As per XKCD illustration, using a regexp may be a problem on its own, but really, the "each-language a new and complicated approach" is another difficulty, of the level of writing regexps I think. And then, when you get the trick for Python, it feels to me still to much letters to type regarding the numerous problems one can solve using regexps. I know regexps are slower than string-based workflow (like .startswith) but regexps can do the most and the least, so they are rapide to come up with, once you started to think with them. As Python philosophy is to spare brain-cycles, sacrificing CPU-cycles, allowing to easily use regexps is a brain-cycle savior trick. What do you think ? -- Simon Descarpentries +336 769 702 53 http://acoeuro.com _______________________________________________ Python-ideas mailing list Python-ideas@python.org https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-ideas Code of Conduct: http://python.org/psf/codeofconduct/