I have a string from which i want to extract 3 groups:
'19 janvier 2012' -> '19', 'janvier', '2012'
Month name could contain non ASCII characters, so [A-Za-z]
does not work for me:
>>> import re
>>> re.search(ur'(\d{,2}) ([A-Za-z]+) (\d{4})', u'20 janvier 2012', re.UNICODE).groups()
(u'20', u'janvier', u'2012')
>>> re.search(ur'(\d{,2}) ([A-Za-z]+) (\d{4})', u'20 février 2012', re.UNICODE).groups()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'groups'
>>>
I could use \w
but it matches digits and underscore:
>>> re.search(ur'(\w+)', u'février', re.UNICODE).groups()
(u'f\xe9vrier',)
>>> re.search(ur'(\w+)', u'fé_q23vrier', re.UNICODE).groups()
(u'f\xe9_q23vrier',)
>>>
I tried to use [:alpha:], but it's not working:
>>> re.search(ur'[:alpha:]+', u'février', re.UNICODE).groups()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'groups'
>>>
If i could somehow match \w
without [_0-9]
, but i don't know how. And even if i find out how to do this, is there a ready shortcut like [:alpha:]
which works in Python?
You can construct a new character class:
[^\W\d_]
instead of \w
. Translated into English, it means "Any character that is not a non-alphanumeric character ([^\W]
is the same as \w
), but that is also not a digit and not an underscore".
Therefore, it will only allow Unicode letters.