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Home/ Questions/Q 890437
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T13:43:57+00:00 2026-05-15T13:43:57+00:00

Suppose there are two strings: $1 off delicious ham. $1 off delicious $5 ham.

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Suppose there are two strings:

$1 off delicious ham.
$1 off delicious $5 ham.

In Python, can I have a regex that matches when there is only one $ in the string? I.e., I want the RE to match on the first phrase, but not on the second. I tried something like:

re.search(r"\$[0-9]+.*!(\$)","$1 off delicious $5 ham.")

..saying “Match where you see a $ followed by anything EXCEPT for another $.” There was no match on the $$ example, but there was also no match on the $ example.

Thanks in advance!

Simple test method for checking:

def test(r):
  s = ("$1 off $5 delicious ham","$1 off any delicious ham")    
  for x in s:
    print x
    print re.search(r,x,re.I)
    print ""
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T13:43:57+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 1:43 pm
    >>> import re
    >>> onedollar = re.compile(r'^[^\$]*\$[^\$]*$')
    >>> onedollar.match('$1 off delicious ham.')
    <_sre.SRE_Match object at 0x7fe253c9c4a8>
    >>> onedollar.match('$1 off delicious $5 ham.')
    >>>
    

    Breakdown of regexp:
    ^ Anchor at start of string
    [^\$]* Zero or more characters that are not $
    \$ Match a dollar sign
    [^\$]* Zero or more characters that are not $
    $ Anchor at end of string

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