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Home/ Questions/Q 879641
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T11:57:56+00:00 2026-05-15T11:57:56+00:00

This is a question involving a conditional regular expression in python: I’d like to

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This is a question involving a conditional regular expression in python:

I’d like to match the string "abc" with

match(1)="a"
match(2)="b"
match(3)="c"

but also match the string " a" with

match(1)="a"
match(2)=""
match(3)=""

The following code ALMOST does this, the problem is that in the first case match(1)="a"
but in the second case, match(4)="a" (not match(1) as desired).

In fact, if you iterate through all the groups with for g in re.search(myre,teststring2).groups():, you get 6 groups (not 3 as was expected).

import re
import sys

teststring1 = "abc"
teststring2 = "  a"

myre = '^(?=(\w)(\w)(\w))|(?=\s{2}(\w)()())'

if re.search(myre,teststring1):
    print re.search(myre,teststring1).group(1)

if re.search(myre,teststring2):
   print re.search(myre,teststring2).group(1)

Any thoughts? (note this is for Python 2.5)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T11:57:57+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 11:57 am

    Maybe…:

    import re
    import sys
    
    teststring1 = "abc"
    teststring2 = "  a"
    
    myre = '^\s{0,2}(\w)(\w?)(\w?)$'
    
    if re.search(myre,teststring1):
        print re.search(myre,teststring1).group(1)
    
    if re.search(myre,teststring2):
       print re.search(myre,teststring2).group(1)
    

    This does give a in both cases as you wish, but maybe it would not match the way you want in other cases you’re not showing (e.g. with no spaces in front, or spaces and more than one letter afterwards, so that the total length of the matched string is != 3… but I’m just guessing that you don’t want matches in such cases…?)

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