re.match
is implicitly anchored to the start of the string. If you want to search a string for a substring that can be anywhere within it, then you need to use re.search
:
import re
a = " ebrj wjrbw erjwek wekjb rjERJK ABB RAEJKE BWE RWEJBEWJ B KREWBJ BWERBJ32J3B23B J BJ235JK BJJ523 2"
print re.search(ur'(wekjb|ABB)',a).group()
if re.search(ur'(wekjb|ABB)',a):
print 'success'
Output:
wekjb
success
Also, Python Regexes do not need to have a /
at the start and end.
Lastly, I added .group()
to the end of the print
line because I think this is what you want. Otherwise, you'd get something like <_sre.SRE_Match object at 0x01812220>
, which isn't too useful.
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