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Hi everyone,

I'm parsing strings that could have any number of quoted strings inside them (I'm parsing code, and trying to avoid PLY). I want to find out if a substring is quoted, and I have the substrings index. My initial thought was to use re to find all the matches and then figure out the range of indexes they represent.

It seems like I should use re with a regex like \"[^\"]+\"|'[^']+' (I'm avoiding dealing with triple quoted and such strings at the moment). When I use findall() I get a list of the matching strings, which is somewhat nice, but I need indexes.

My substring might be as simple as c, and I need to figure out if this particular c is actually quoted or not.

Thanks in advance.

+5  A: 

This is what you want:

re.finditer(pattern, string[, flags])

Return an iterator yielding MatchObject instances over all

non-overlapping matches for the RE pattern in string. The string is scanned left-to-right, and matches are returned in the order found. Empty matches are included in the result unless they touch the beginning of another match.

You can then get the start and end positions from the MatchObjects.

e.g.

[(m.start(0), m.end(0)) for m in re.finditer(pattern, string)]
Dave Kirby
Awesome! That works nicely. Thank you.
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