Extract string from between quotations

Question:

I want to extract information from user-inputted text. Imagine I input the following:

SetVariables "a" "b" "c"

How would I extract information between the first set of quotations? Then the second? Then the third?

Asked By: Reznor

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Answers:

>>> import re
>>> re.findall('"([^"]*)"', 'SetVariables "a" "b" "c" ')
['a', 'b', 'c']
Answered By: jspcal

Regular expressions are good at this:

import re
quoted = re.compile('"[^"]*"')
for value in quoted.findall(userInputtedText):
    print value
Answered By: Alex Martelli

You could do a string.split() on it. If the string is formatted properly with the quotation marks (i.e. even number of quotation marks), every odd value in the list will contain an element that is between quotation marks.

>>> s = 'SetVariables "a" "b" "c"';
>>> l = s.split('"')[1::2]; # the [1::2] is a slicing which extracts odd values
>>> print l;
['a', 'b', 'c']
>>> print l[2]; # to show you how to extract individual items from output
c

This is also a faster approach than regular expressions. With the timeit module, the speed of this code is around 4 times faster:

% python timeit.py -s 'import re' 're.findall(""([^"]*)"", "SetVariables "a" "b" "c" ")'
1000000 loops, best of 3: 2.37 usec per loop

% python timeit.py '"SetVariables "a" "b" "c"".split(""")[1::2];'
1000000 loops, best of 3: 0.569 usec per loop
Answered By: Roman