Variable-Width Lookbehind Issue in Python

regex module: variable-width lookbehind

In addition to the answer by HamZa, for any regex of any complexity in Python, I recommend using the outstanding regex module by Matthew Barnett. It supports infinite lookbehind—one of the few engines to do so, along with .NET and JGSoft.

This allows you to do for instance:

import regex
if regex.search("(?<!right |left )shoulder", "left shoulder"):
    print("It matches!")
else:
    print("Nah... No match.")

You could also use \s+ if you wished.

Output:

It matches!

In most regex engines, lookbehinds needs to be of fixed width. This means you can't use quantifiers in a lookbehind in Python +*?. The solution is to move \s* outside your lookbehind:

(?<!left|right)\s*shoulder

You will notice that this expression matches every combination. So we need to change the quantifier from * to +:

(?<!left|right)\s+shoulder

The only problem with this solution is that it won't find shoulder if it's at the beginning of the string, so we might add an alternative with an anchor:

^shoulder|(?<!left|right)\s+shoulder

If you want to get rid of the whitespaces just use the strip function.

Online demo