On 12 août, 12:43, Martin <mdeka...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Aug 12, 1:42 pm, Martin <mdeka...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > > > > On Aug 12, 1:23 pm, Steven D'Aprano <st...@remove-this- > > > cybersource.com.au> wrote: > > > On Wed, 12 Aug 2009 05:12:22 -0700, Martin wrote: > > > > I tried > > > > > re.findall((\w+COORDINATE).*\s+VALUE\s+=\s([\d\.\w-]+),s) > > > > You need to put quotes around strings. > > > > In this case, because you're using regular expressions, you should use a > > > raw string: > > > > re.findall(r"(\w+COORDINATE).*\s+VALUE\s+=\s([\d\.\w-]+)",s) > > > > will probably work. > > > > -- > > > Steven > > > Thanks I see. > > > so I tried it and if I use it as it is, it matches the first instance: > > I > > n [594]: re.findall(r"(\w+COORDINATE).*\s+VALUE\s+=\s([\d\.\w-]+)",s) > > Out[594]: [('NORTHBOUNDINGCOORDINATE', '1')] > > > So I adjusted the first part of the regex, on the basis I could sub > > NORTH for SOUTH etc. > > > In [595]: re.findall(r"(NORTHBOUNDINGCOORDINATE).*\s+VALUE\s+=\s([\d\. > > \w-]+)",s) > > Out[595]: [('NORTHBOUNDINGCOORDINATE', '1')] > > > But in both cases it doesn't return the decimal value rather the value > > that comes after NUM_VAL = , rather than VALUE = ? > > I think I kind of got that to work...but I am clearly not quite > understanding how it works as I tried to use it again to match > something else. > > In this case I want to print the values 0.000000 and 2223901.039333 > from a string like this... > > YDim=1200\n\t\tUpperLeftPointMtrs=(0.000000,2223901.039333)\n\t\t > > I tried which I though was matching the statement and printing the > decimal number after the equals sign?? > > re.findall(r"(\w+UpperLeftPointMtrs)*=\s([\d\.\w-]+)", s) > > where s is the string > > Many thanks for the help
You have to do it with 2 matches in the same regex: regex = r"UpperLeftPointMtrs=\(([\d\.]+),([\d\.]+)" The first match is before the , and the second one is after the , :) You should probably learn how to play with regexes. I personnaly use a visual tool called RX Toolkit[1] that comes with Komodo IDE. [1] http://docs.activestate.com/komodo/4.4/regex.html -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list