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Start your free trialWilliam Harrison
9,585 PointsMy regex expression is not parsing correctly for twitter handles
Great! Now, make a new variable, twitters that is an re.search() where the pattern catches the Twitter handle for a person. Remember to mark it as being at the end of the string. You'll also want to use the re.MULTILINE flag.
My output, I think, is getting messed up with the email addresses. It appears to be outputting empty strings with the twitter handles.
import re
string = '''Love, Kenneth, kenneth+challenge@teamtreehouse.com, 555-555-5555, @kennethlove
Chalkley, Andrew, andrew@teamtreehouse.co.uk, 555-555-5556, @chalkers
McFarland, Dave, dave.mcfarland@teamtreehouse.com, 555-555-5557, @davemcfarland
Kesten, Joy, joy@teamtreehouse.com, 555-555-5558, @joykesten'''
contacts = re.search(r'(?P<email>[-\w\d+.]+@[-\w\d.]+), (?P<phone>\d{3}-\d{3}-\d{4})', string)
twitters = re.search(r'(@[\d\w]+)?$', string, re.M)
Johannes Scribante
19,175 PointsWell done! Does someone perhaps know why this would give an error? Would it not just make the group optional?
1 Answer
Oszkár Fehér
Treehouse Project ReviewerHi William My opinion, this is the most delicate part of python and the expressions are very precise, the best way to experiment a lot with this, as many cases possible, but this is the part what you don't need to learn word by word, it's enough to know how to look up the documentations. This line will help you to pass the quiz
twitters = re.search(r'(?P<twitter>@[-\w\d]+)+?$', string, re.M)
But I also noticed that the first quiz you solved well. I hope this helps you Keep up the good work, and nice job.
William Harrison
9,585 PointsWilliam Harrison
9,585 PointsI found my error. I needed to remove the ? in front of the $. Everything works now.