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Start your free trialAnup Dudani
700 PointsRegular Expressions in python
Now, write a function named numbers() that takes two arguments: a count as an integer and a string. Return an re.search for exactly count numbers in the string. Remember, you can multiply strings and integers to create your pattern.
For example: r"\w" * 5 would create r"\w\w\w\w\w".
import re
def first_number(myString):
return re.search(r'\d',myString)
def numbers(count, myString):
return re.search(r'\w'*count, myString)
Why am i getting it wrong?
1 Answer
Martin Cornejo Saavedra
18,132 PointsBecause it asks to search for numbers (\d), not characters (\w):
import re
def first_number(myString):
return re.search(r'\d',myString)
def numbers(count, myString):
return re.search(r'\d'*count, myString) #change \w for \d
Cristian Romero
11,911 PointsCristian Romero
11,911 PointsThe wording of the 2nd part of the question was a bit confusing but I got it!