68
votes

I'd like to split strings like these

'foofo21'
'bar432'
'foobar12345'

into

['foofo', '21']
['bar', '432']
['foobar', '12345']

Does somebody know an easy and simple way to do this in python?

10

10 Answers

67
votes

I would approach this by using re.match in the following way:

import re
match = re.match(r"([a-z]+)([0-9]+)", 'foofo21', re.I)
if match:
    items = match.groups()
print(items)
>> ("foofo", "21")
50
votes
>>> def mysplit(s):
...     head = s.rstrip('0123456789')
...     tail = s[len(head):]
...     return head, tail
... 
>>> [mysplit(s) for s in ['foofo21', 'bar432', 'foobar12345']]
[('foofo', '21'), ('bar', '432'), ('foobar', '12345')]
>>> 
27
votes
>>> r = re.compile("([a-zA-Z]+)([0-9]+)")
>>> m = r.match("foobar12345")
>>> m.group(1)
'foobar'
>>> m.group(2)
'12345'

So, if you have a list of strings with that format:

import re
r = re.compile("([a-zA-Z]+)([0-9]+)")
strings = ['foofo21', 'bar432', 'foobar12345']
print [r.match(string).groups() for string in strings]

Output:

[('foofo', '21'), ('bar', '432'), ('foobar', '12345')]
27
votes

Yet Another Option:

>>> [re.split(r'(\d+)', s) for s in ('foofo21', 'bar432', 'foobar12345')]
[['foofo', '21', ''], ['bar', '432', ''], ['foobar', '12345', '']]
10
votes

I'm always the one to bring up findall() =)

>>> strings = ['foofo21', 'bar432', 'foobar12345']
>>> [re.findall(r'(\w+?)(\d+)', s)[0] for s in strings]
[('foofo', '21'), ('bar', '432'), ('foobar', '12345')]

Note that I'm using a simpler (less to type) regex than most of the previous answers.

5
votes

here is a simple function to seperate multiple words and numbers from a string of any length, the re method only seperates first two words and numbers. I think this will help everyone else in the future,

def seperate_string_number(string):
    previous_character = string[0]
    groups = []
    newword = string[0]
    for x, i in enumerate(string[1:]):
        if i.isalpha() and previous_character.isalpha():
            newword += i
        elif i.isnumeric() and previous_character.isnumeric():
            newword += i
        else:
            groups.append(newword)
            newword = i

        previous_character = i

        if x == len(string) - 2:
            groups.append(newword)
            newword = ''
    return groups

print(seperate_string_number('10in20ft10400bg'))
# outputs : ['10', 'in', '20', 'ft', '10400', 'bg'] 
3
votes

without using regex, using isdigit() built-in function, only works if starting part is text and latter part is number

def text_num_split(item):
    for index, letter in enumerate(item, 0):
        if letter.isdigit():
            return [item[:index],item[index:]]

print(text_num_split("foobar12345"))

OUTPUT :

['foobar', '12345']
2
votes
import re

s = raw_input()
m = re.match(r"([a-zA-Z]+)([0-9]+)",s)
print m.group(0)
print m.group(1)
print m.group(2)
0
votes

here is simple solution for that problem, no needs for that 'cat walk' on keyboard, i mean regex :)) enjoy ^-^

user = input('Input: ') # user = 'foobar12345'
int_list, str_list = [], []

for item in user:
 try:
    item = int(item)  # searching for integers in your string
  except:
    str_list.append(item)
    string = ''.join(str_list)
  else:  # if there are integers i will add it to int_list but as str, because join function only can work with str
    int_list.append(str(item))
    integer = int(''.join(int_list))  # if you want it to be string just do z = ''.join(int_list)

final = [string, integer]  # you can also add it to dictionary d = {string: integer}
print(final)
0
votes

This is a little longer, but more versatile for cases where there are multiple, randomly placed, numbers in the string. Also, it requires no imports.

def getNumbers( input ):
    # Collect Info
    compile = ""
    complete = []

    for letter in input:
        # If compiled string
        if compile:
            # If compiled and letter are same type, append letter
            if compile.isdigit() == letter.isdigit():
                compile += letter
            
            # If compiled and letter are different types, append compiled string, and begin with letter
            else:
                complete.append( compile )
                compile = letter
            
        # If no compiled string, begin with letter
        else:
            compile = letter
        
    # Append leftover compiled string
    if compile:
        complete.append( compile )
    
    # Return numbers only
    numbers = [ word for word in complete if word.isdigit() ]
        
    return numbers