Summary: in this tutorial, you’ll learn how to use the sets and ranges to create patterns that match a set of characters.
Several characters or character sets inside square brackets []
mean matching for any character or character set among them.
Sets
For example, [abc]
means any of three characters. 'a'
, 'b'
, or 'c'
. The [abc]
is called a set. And you can use the set with regular characters to construct a search pattern.
For example, the following program uses the pattern licen[cs]e
that matches both license
and licence
:
import re s = 'A licence or license' pattern = 'licen[cs]e' matches = re.finditer(pattern, s) for match in matches: print(match.group())
Code language: PHP (php)
Output:
licence license
The pattern licen[cs]e
searches for:
licen
- then one of the letters
[cs]
- then
e
.
Therefore, it matches license
and licence
.
Ranges
When a set consists of many characters in e.g., from a
to z
or 1
to 9
, it’ll tedious to list them in a set. Instead, you can use character ranges in square brackets. For example, [a-z]
is a character in the range from a
to z
and [0-9]
is a digit from 0
to 9
.
Also, you can use multiple ranges within the same square brackets. For example, [a-z0-9]
has two ranges that match for a character that is either from a
to z
or a digit from 0
to 9
.
Similarly, you can use one or more character sets inside the square brackets like [\d\s]
means a digit or a space character.
Likewise, you can mix the character with character sets. For example, [\d_]
matches for a digit or an underscore.
Excluding sets & ranges
To negate a set or a range, you use the caret character (^
) at the beginning of the set and range. For example, the range [^0-9]
matches any character except a digit. It is the same as the character set \D
.
Notice that regex also uses the caret (^
) as an anchor that matches at the beginning of a string. However, if you use the caret (^
) inside the square brackets, the regex will treat it as a negation operator, not an anchor.
The following example uses the caret (^
) to negate the set [aeoiu]
to match the consonants in the string 'Python'
:
import re s = 'Python' pattern = '[^aeoiu]' matches = re.finditer(pattern, s) for match in matches: print(match.group())
Code language: JavaScript (javascript)
Output:
P y t h n
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