Simple (?) Regular Expression Question

Tim Peters tim.one at comcast.net
Sun Jan 18 19:01:00 EST 2004


[Steve Zatz]
> Is '@' a special character in regular expressions?

Nope.

> I am asking because I don't understand the following:
>
> >>> import re
> >>> s = ' @'
> >>> re.sub(r'\b@','*',s)
> ' @'
> >>> s = ' a'
> >>> re.sub(r'\ba','*',s)
> ' *'

\b matches a "word boundary", meaning it has to have a word character on one
side (something that matches \w), and a non-word character on the other
(something that matches \W), regardless of order.  ' @' contains two
non-word characters (' ' and '@'), so \b doesn't match anything in it.  ' a'
contains a non-word character (' ') followed by a word character ('a'), so
\b matches (an empty string) betwen those two characters.





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