[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I know I can use a variable in regular expressions. I want to use a > regex to find something based on the beginning of the string. I am > using yesterday's date to find all of my data from yesterday. > Yesterday's date is 20070731, and assigned to the variable > "yesterday_date". I want to loop thru a directory and find all of the > yesterday's data ONLY IF the feature class has the date at the > BEGINNING of the filename. > > Sample strings: > 20070731_test1 > Copy20070731_test1 > 20070731_test2 > Copy20070731_test2 > 20070731_test3 > Copy20070731_test3 > > I don't want the one's that start with "Copy". I can't figure out the > syntax of inserting the "^" into the regex. I've tried all of the > following, with no luck: > > re.compile(^yesterday_date) > re.compile(r'^yesterday_date') > re.compile(r'^[yesterday_date]') > re.compile(r'[^yesterday_date]') > > I don't know what I'm doing and I'm just guessing at this point. Can > anyone help? Thanks. > As is often the case, taking a larger look at the problem can reveal that Python has features that can help you without even getting down to more complex stuff.
You appear to require a list of the files whose names begin with a string representation of yesterday's date. If you take a look at the glob module you will see that it has a glob() function, and if you were to call it as names = glob.glob(yesterday_date + "*") it would return a list of the names of the files you are interested in. regards Steve -- Steve Holden +1 571 484 6266 +1 800 494 3119 Holden Web LLC/Ltd http://www.holdenweb.com Skype: holdenweb http://del.icio.us/steve.holden --------------- Asciimercial ------------------ Get on the web: Blog, lens and tag the Internet Many services currently offer free registration ----------- Thank You for Reading ------------- -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list