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Start your free trialPete P
7,613 PointsInserting a variable into a regex?
This one had me stumped for about 10 min:
'Create a function named find_words that takes a count and a string. Return a list of all of the words in the string that are count word characters long or longer.'
This code is what I came up with. I'm interested in knowing if there is a different solution to this challenge.
Thanks Again!
-Pete
import re
# EXAMPLE:
# >>> find_words(4, "dog, cat, baby, balloon, me")
# ['baby', 'balloon']
def find_words(count, sarg):
return re.findall(r'\w{%i,}' % count, sarg)
1 Answer
Chris Freeman
Treehouse Moderator 68,441 PointsYour code is spot on (I like the use of regex ranges). The regex is looking for a string. and any process of constructing with the correct "count" in the string also works:
# concatenation
re.findall(r'\w{'+ str(count) + ',}', sarg)
# format method
re.findall(r'\w{{{},}}'.format(count), sarg) # <-- a little clunky having to escape '{' using '{{' etc.
# use explicit counting instead of ranges: stack '\w' add '+' for "or more"
re.findall(r'\w' * count + '+', sarg)
Sophia Zeng
2,169 PointsSophia Zeng
2,169 PointsHi Chris,
I don't understand why you need to add 2 '+' in here: re.findall(r'\w{'+ str(count) + ',}', sarg)
Does it stand for at least one, or it has other meaning?
Thanks!!