"I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that." We hear you, Dave, but this is not a suitable function to add to the standard library. Many respondents are trying to tell you that in many different ways. If you keep arguing for it, we'll just ignore you. --Guido PS. Give up TDMA. Try Spambayes instead. It works much better and is less annoying for your correspondents. On 5/18/06, Dave Cinege <dcinegemlists2-dated-1148418122.b868e0 at psychosis.com> wrote: > On Thursday 18 May 2006 16:13, you wrote: > > Dave Cinege wrote: > > > For example: > > > > > > s = ' Chan: 11 SNR: 22 ESSID: "Spaced Out Wifi" Enc: On' > > > > My complaint with this example is that you are just using the wrong tool > > to do this job. If I was going to do this, I would've immediately jumped > > on the regex-press train. > > > > wifi_info = re.match('^\s+' > > 'Chan:\s+(?P<channel>[0-9]+)\s+' > > 'SNR:\s+(?P<snr>[0-9]+)\s+' > > 'ESSID:\s+"(?P<essid>[^"]*)"\s+' > > 'Enc:\s+(?P<encryption>[a-zA-Z]+)' > > , s) > > For the 5 years of been pythoning, I've used re probably twice. > I find regex to be a tool of last resort, and quite a bit of effort to get > right, as regex (for me) is quite prone it giving unintended results without > a good deal of thought. I don't want to have to think. That's why I use > python. : ) > > .split() and slicing has always been python's holy grail for me, and I find it > a lot easier to .replace() 'stray' chars with spaces or a delimiter and then > split() that. It's easier to read and (should be) a lot quicker to process > then regex. (Which I care about, as I'm also often on embedded CPU's of a few > hundred MHz) > > So .split works just super duper.....but I keep running in to situations where > I'd like a substr to be excluded from the split'ing. > > The clearest one is excluding a 'quoted' string that has whitespace. > Here's another, be it, a very poor example: > > s = '\t\tFrequency:2.462 GHz (Channel 11)' # This is real output from iwlist: > s.replace(':',')').replace(' (','))').split(None,-1,')') > ['Frequency', '2.462 GHz', 'Channel 11'] > > I wanted to preserve the '2.462 GHz' substr. Let's assume, that could come out > as '900 MHz' or '11.3409 GHz'. The above code gets what I want in 1 shot, > either way. Show me an easier way, that doesn't need multiple splits, and > string re-assembly, ....and I'll use it. > > Dave > > _______________________________________________ > Python-Dev mailing list > Python-Dev at python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-dev > Unsubscribe: http://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-dev/guido%40python.org > -- --Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)
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