PYTHON REGULAR EXPRESSIONS
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A regular expression is a special sequence of characters that helps you match or find other strings
or sets of strings, using a specialized syntax held in a pattern. Regular expressions are widely used
in UNIX world.
The module re provides full support for Perl-like regular expressions in Python. The re module
raises the exception re.error if an error occurs while compiling or using a regular expression.
We would cover two important functions, which would be used to handle regular expressions. But a
small thing first: There are various characters, which would have special meaning when they are
used in regular expression. To avoid any confusion while dealing with regular expressions, we
would use Raw Strings as r'expression'.
The match Function
This function attempts to match RE pattern to string with optional flags.
Here is the syntax for this function −
re.match(pattern, string, flags=0)
Here is the description of the parameters:
Parameter Description
pattern This is the regular expression to be matched.
string This is the string, which would be searched to match the pattern at
the beginning of string.
flags You can specify different flags using bitwise OR | . These are
modifiers, which are listed in the table below.
The re.match function returns a match object on success, None on failure. We usegroupnum or
groups function of match object to get matched expression.
Match Object Methods Description
groupnum = 0 This method returns entire match orspecificsubgroupnum
groups This method returns all matching subgroups in a tuple
emptyifthereweren ′ tany
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import re
line = "Cats are smarter than dogs"
matchObj = re.match( r'(.*) are (.*?) .*', line, re.M|re.I)
if matchObj:
print "matchObj.group() : ", matchObj.group()
print "matchObj.group(1) : ", matchObj.group(1)
print "matchObj.group(2) : ", matchObj.group(2)
else:
print "No match!!"
When the above code is executed, it produces following result −
matchObj.group() : Cats are smarter than dogs
matchObj.group(1) : Cats
matchObj.group(2) : smarter
The search Function
This function searches for first occurrence of RE pattern within string with optional flags.
Here is the syntax for this function:
re.search(pattern, string, flags=0)
Here is the description of the parameters:
Parameter Description
pattern This is the regular expression to be matched.
string This is the string, which would be searched to match the pattern
anywhere in the string.
flags You can specify different flags using bitwise OR | . These are
modifiers, which are listed in the table below.
The re.search function returns a match object on success, none on failure. We use groupnum or
groups function of match object to get matched expression.
Match Object Methods Description
groupnum = 0 This method returns entire match orspecificsubgroupnum
groups This method returns all matching subgroups in a tuple
emptyifthereweren ′ tany
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import re
line = "Cats are smarter than dogs";
searchObj = re.search( r'(.*) are (.*?) .*', line, re.M|re.I)
if searchObj:
print "searchObj.group() : ", searchObj.group()
print "searchObj.group(1) : ", searchObj.group(1)
print "searchObj.group(2) : ", searchObj.group(2)
else:
print "Nothing found!!"
When the above code is executed, it produces following result −
matchObj.group() : Cats are smarter than dogs
matchObj.group(1) : Cats
matchObj.group(2) : smarter
Matching Versus Searching
Python offers two different primitive operations based on regular expressions: match checks for a
match only at the beginning of the string, while search checks for a match anywhere in the string
thisiswhatPerldoesbydefault.
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import re
line = "Cats are smarter than dogs";
matchObj = re.match( r'dogs', line, re.M|re.I)
if matchObj:
print "match --> matchObj.group() : ", matchObj.group()
else:
print "No match!!"
searchObj = re.search( r'dogs', line, re.M|re.I)
if searchObj:
print "search --> searchObj.group() : ", searchObj.group()
else:
print "Nothing found!!"
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
No match!!
search --> matchObj.group() : dogs
Search and Replace
One of the most important re methods that use regular expressions is sub.
Syntax
re.sub(pattern, repl, string, max=0)
This method replaces all occurrences of the RE pattern in string with repl, substituting all
occurrences unless max provided. This method returns modified string.
Example
#!/usr/bin/python
import re
phone = "2004-959-559 # This is Phone Number"
# Delete Python-style comments
num = re.sub(r'#.*$', "", phone)
print "Phone Num : ", num
# Remove anything other than digits
num = re.sub(r'\D', "", phone)
print "Phone Num : ", num
When the above code is executed, it produces the following result −
Phone Num : 2004-959-559
Phone Num : 2004959559
Regular Expression Modifiers: Option Flags
Regular expression literals may include an optional modifier to control various aspects of
matching. The modifiers are specified as an optional flag. You can provide multiple modifiers
using exclusive OR | , as shown previously and may be represented by one of these −
Modifier Description
re.I Performs case-insensitive matching.
re.L Interprets words according to the current locale. This interpretation
affects the alphabetic group \wand\W, as well as word boundary
behavior \band\B.
re.M Makes $ match the end of a line (not just the end of the string) and
makes ^ match the start of any line (not just the start of the string).
re.S Makes a period dot match any character, including a newline.
re.U Interprets letters according to the Unicode character set. This flag
affects the behavior of \w, \W, \b, \B.
re.X Permits "cuter" regular expression syntax. It ignores whitespace
exceptinsideaset[]orwhenescapedbyabackslash and treats unescaped # as a
comment marker.
Regular Expression Patterns
Except for control characters, + ?. ∗ $ ( [ ] { } | \), all characters match themselves. You can
escape a control character by preceding it with a backslash.
Following table lists the regular expression syntax that is available in Python −
Pattern Description
^ Matches beginning of line.
$ Matches end of line.
. Matches any single character except newline. Using m option allows it
to match newline as well.
[...] Matches any single character in brackets.
[^...] Matches any single character not in brackets
re* Matches 0 or more occurrences of preceding expression.
re+ Matches 1 or more occurrence of preceding expression.
re? Matches 0 or 1 occurrence of preceding expression.
re{ n} Matches exactly n number of occurrences of preceding expression.
re{ n,} Matches n or more occurrences of preceding expression.
re{ n, m} Matches at least n and at most m occurrences of preceding expression.
a| b Matches either a or b.
re Groups regular expressions and remembers matched text.
?imx Temporarily toggles on i, m, or x options within a regular expression. If
in parentheses, only that area is affected.
? − imx Temporarily toggles off i, m, or x options within a regular expression. If
in parentheses, only that area is affected.
? : re Groups regular expressions without remembering matched text.
?imx: re Temporarily toggles on i, m, or x options within parentheses.
? − imx: re Temporarily toggles off i, m, or x options within parentheses.
?#... Comment.
? = re Specifies position using a pattern. Doesn't have a range.
? !re Specifies position using pattern negation. Doesn't have a range.
? > re Matches independent pattern without backtracking.
\w Matches word characters.
\W Matches nonword characters.
\s Matches whitespace. Equivalent to [\t\n\r\f].
\S Matches nonwhitespace.
\d Matches digits. Equivalent to [0-9].
\D Matches nondigits.
\A Matches beginning of string.
\Z Matches end of string. If a newline exists, it matches just before
newline.
\z Matches end of string.
\G Matches point where last match finished.
\b Matches word boundaries when outside brackets. Matches backspace
0x08 when inside brackets.
\B Matches nonword boundaries.
\n, \t, etc. Matches newlines, carriage returns, tabs, etc.
\1...\9 Matches nth grouped subexpression.
\10 Matches nth grouped subexpression if it matched already. Otherwise
refers to the octal representation of a character code.
Regular Expression Examples
Literal characters
Example Description
python Match "python".
Character classes
Example Description
[Pp]ython Match "Python" or "python"
rub[ye] Match "ruby" or "rube"
[aeiou] Match any one lowercase vowel
[0-9] Match any digit; same as [0123456789]
[a-z] Match any lowercase ASCII letter
[A-Z] Match any uppercase ASCII letter
[a-zA-Z0-9] Match any of the above
[^aeiou] Match anything other than a lowercase vowel
[^0-9] Match anything other than a digit
Special Character Classes
Example Description
. Match any character except newline
\d Match a digit: [0-9]
\D Match a nondigit: [^0-9]
\s Match a whitespace character: [ \t\r\n\f]
\S Match nonwhitespace: [^ \t\r\n\f]
\w Match a single word character: [A-Za-z0-9_]
\W Match a nonword character: [^A-Za-z0-9_]
Repetition Cases
Example Description
ruby? Match "rub" or "ruby": the y is optional
ruby* Match "rub" plus 0 or more ys
ruby+ Match "rub" plus 1 or more ys
\d{3} Match exactly 3 digits
\d{3,} Match 3 or more digits
\d{3,5} Match 3, 4, or 5 digits
Nongreedy repetition
This matches the smallest number of repetitions −
Example Description
<.*> Greedy repetition: matches "<python>perl>"
<.*?> Nongreedy: matches "<python>" in "<python>perl>"
Grouping with Parentheses
Example Description
\D\d+ No group: + repeats \d
\D\d+ Grouped: + repeats \D\d pair
[Pp]ython(, ?)+ Match "Python", "Python, python, python", etc.
Backreferences
This matches a previously matched group again −
Example Description
[Pp]ython&\1ails Match python&pails or Python&Pails
['"][^\1]*\1 Single or double-quoted string. \1 matches whatever the 1st group
matched. \2 matches whatever the 2nd group matched, etc.
Alternatives
Example Description
python|perl Match "python" or "perl"
ruby|le) Match "ruby" or "ruble"
Python!+|\? "Python" followed by one or more ! or one ?
Anchors
This needs to specify match position.
Example Description
^Python Match "Python" at the start of a string or internal line
Python$ Match "Python" at the end of a string or line
\APython Match "Python" at the start of a string
Python\Z Match "Python" at the end of a string
\bPython\b Match "Python" at a word boundary
\brub\B \B is nonword boundary: match "rub" in "rube" and "ruby" but not alone
Python?=! Match "Python", if followed by an exclamation point.
Python?!! Match "Python", if not followed by an exclamation point.
Special Syntax with Parentheses
Example Description
R?#comment Matches "R". All the rest is a comment
R?iuby Case-insensitive while matching "uby"
R?i:uby Same as above
rub?:y|le) Group only without creating \1 backreference
Processing math: 79%
How to Prepare for a Case Interview
What is a case interview?
It is an interview method designed to:
test your analytical ability
test your ability to think logically and organize your answer
observe your thought process
test your tolerance for ambiguity and data overload
assess your poise, self‐confidence, and communication skills under pressure
see if you are genuinely intrigued by problem solving
determine if it is a good “fit” for you
How should you prepare for a case interview?
1. Become familiar with business frameworks, which can help you structure your thought process.
Some commonly used frameworks include:
Porter’s 5 Forces: Barriers to Entry, Bargaining Power of Buyers, Bargaining Power of Suppliers
Availability of Substitute Products, and Level of Competition Among Firms
3 C’s: Cost, Customers, Competitors (Capacity sometimes added as a 4th C)
4 P’s: Product, Price, Place, Promotion
SWOT Analysis: Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats
Profit = Revenue ‐ Costs: revenue is a function of price and volume; costs can be divided into fixed and
variable components
Note: Frameworks may or may not be appropriate for the case you are given. Be careful not to force a
framework onto the problem. However, a general understanding of the various frameworks will help you
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2. Some questions require you to make assumptions. The idea is not that you have the right answer to a question
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see. You should also be familiar with:
Population of Canada and the U.S.
Men & Women represent what percentage of the population?
Average life expectancy
People per household
Number of households
% that have cable, DVD, PC, smart phones, Mac & the Internet
3. Research and practice case interviewing in order to become more familiar with the process. Case examples are
available at various consulting firm websites:
www.mcgill.ca/caps Page |1
The Boston Consulting Group
Practice case interviews
https://www.bcg.com/careers/path/consulting/practice-interview-cases.aspx
Interactive case library
https://www.bcg.com/Interactives/ICL/
McKinsey & Co.
Interviewing
This site includes interview tips and downloadable practice tests.
https://www.mckinsey.com/careers/interviewing
Oliver Wyman
Case interview tips & simulations
http://www.oliverwyman.com/careers/entry-level/interview-preparation.html
Deloitte
Case interview tips
https://www2.deloitte.com/us/en/pages/careers/articles/join-deloitte-careers-case-interview-
tips.html
Preparing for the case interview
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tool.html
4. CaPS also has the following books and online materials:
Case in Point: Complete Case Interview Preparation
Case in point: Graph and Analysis for Consulting and Case Interviews
Case Interview Questions for Tech Companies: 155 Real Interview Questions and Answers
Case Interview Secrets: A formar McKinsey Interviewer Reveals How to Get Multiple Job Offers in Consulting
How to Get Into the Top Consulting Firms: A Surefire Case Interview Method
Mastering the Case Interview: The Complete Guide to Consulting, Marketing, and Management Interviews
The WetFeet Insider Guides: Ace Your Case
Vault Career Guides (Online) http://careerinsider.vault.com/career-insider-login.aspx?parrefer=7165
(Registration with your McGIll e-mail is required).
o Once you are logged in, click the “Guides” link -> “Consulting” link to download these guides:
Vault Guide to the Case Interview
Vault Case Interview Practice 2: More Case Interviews
Vault Case Interviews Practice Guide: More Sample Cases
5. Brush up on your math skills. Errors most commonly occur with the zeros. 100,000 turns into 10,000 or
1,000,000.
www.mcgill.ca/caps Page |2