I am looking for a Pythonic way to simplify this code:
fix = re.compile(r'((?<=>\n)(\t){2}(?=<))')
fixed_output = re.sub(fix, 1*2*' ', fixed_output)
fix = re.compile(r'((?<=>\n)(\t){3}(?=<))')
fixed_output = re.sub(fix, 2*2*' ', fixed_output)
# and so on...
That is: if there are n tab characters between “>” and “<“, they are replaced by *(n-1) * 2* characters. Can this be generalized to a single regular expression? In other words, is it possible to write a regular expression that uses the number of matches in order to determine the replacement string?
You can use a function instead of a fixed replacement string and take the number of matched tabulator characters to generate the replacement, for example:
Here the lambda expression
lambda m: (len(m.group(0))-1)*2*" "is used to replace n tabulator character by (n-1)·2 spaces.