Python does not currently have an equivalent to scanf(). Regular expressions are generally more powerful, though also more verbose, than scanf() format strings. The table below offers some more-or-less equivalent mappings between scanf() format tokens and regular expressions.
scanf() Token | Regular Expression |
---|---|
%c |
. |
%5c |
.{5} |
%d |
[-+]\d+ |
%e , %E , %f , %g |
[-+](\d+(\.\d*)?|\d*\.\d+)([eE]\d+)? |
%i |
[-+](0[xX][\dA-Fa-f]+|0[0-7]*|\d+) |
%o |
0[0-7]* |
%s |
\S+ |
%u |
\d+ |
%x , %X |
0[xX][\dA-Fa-f]+ |
To extract the filename and numbers from a string like
/usr/sbin/sendmail - 0 errors, 4 warnings
you would use a scanf() format like
%s - %d errors, %d warnings
The equivalent regular expression would be
([^\s]+) - (\d+) errors, (\d+) warnings
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