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Start your free trialThan Win Hline
1,679 PointsWhy this isn't working?
print(re.findall(r'\b\w{3}+\b', "dog, cat, baby, balloon, me")) if I do this, it gives me the correct answer but when I put this concept in function, it gives me emplty list.
import re
# EXAMPLE:
# >>> find_words(4, "dog, cat, baby, balloon, me")
# ['baby', 'balloon']
def find_words(count, data):
return re.findall(r'\b\{count}+\b', data)
2 Answers
Zimri Leijen
11,835 PointsYou have a literal string in your regular expression, so count
is taken literally, not as a variable.
This was actually quite tricky to fix, because of the weird ways string interpolation works in python.
def find_words(count, data):
pattern = r'\b\w{%s}\b' %(count)
return re.findall(pattern, data)
Than Win Hline
1,679 Pointsthank you.