python regular expression "\1"
Example
The following code using Python regex to find the repeating digits in given string
import re
result = re.search(r'(\d)\1{3}','54222267890' )
print result.group()
This gives the output:
2222
\1
is equivalent to re.search(...).group(1)
, the first parentheses-delimited expression inside of the regex.
It's also, fun fact, part of the reason that regular expressions are significantly slower in Python and other programming languages than required to be by CS theory.
\1
is a backreference.
It matches, what ever matched in your brackets, in this case the
You are basically saying
- match empty string at the beginning of a word (\b)
- match alphabetical characters from a-z, one or more times
- match the term in brackets again
cat in (' ''the')' the' hat
The first \1
means the first group - i.e. the first bracketed expression (\b[a-z]+)
From the docs \number
"Matches the contents of the group of the same number. Groups are numbered starting from 1. For example, (.+) \1 matches 'the the' or '55 55', but not 'thethe' (note the space after the group)"
In your case it is looking for a repeated "word" (well, block of lower case letters).
The second \1
is the replacement to use in case of a match, so a repeated word will be replaced by a single word.