I'm trying to escape the characters -]\^$*. each with a single backslash \.
For example the string: ^stack.*/overflo\w$arr=1 will become:
\^stack\.\*/overflo\\w\$arr=1 What's the most efficient way to do that in Python?
re.escape double escapes which isn't what I want:
'\\^stack\\.\\*\\/overflow\\$arr\\=1' I need this to escape for something else (nginx).
06 Answers
This is one way to do it (in Python 3.x):
escaped = a_string.translate(str.maketrans({"-": r"\-", "]": r"\]", "\\": r"\\", "^": r"\^", "$": r"\$", "*": r"\*", ".": r"\."})) For reference, for escaping strings to use in regex:
import re escaped = re.escape(a_string) 4Just assuming this is for a regular expression, use re.escape.
We could use built-in function repr() or string interpolation fr'{}' escape all backwardslashs \ in Python 3.7.*
repr('my_string') or fr'{my_string}'
re.escape doesn't double escape. It just looks like it does if you run in the repl. The second layer of escaping is caused by outputting to the screen.
When using the repl, try using print to see what is really in the string.
$ python >>> import re >>> re.escape("\^stack\.\*/overflo\\w\$arr=1") '\\\\\\^stack\\\\\\.\\\\\\*\\/overflo\\\\w\\\\\\$arr\\=1' >>> print re.escape("\^stack\.\*/overflo\\w\$arr=1") \\\^stack\\\.\\\*\/overflo\\w\\\$arr\=1 >>> Simply using re.sub might also work instead of str.maketrans. And this would also work in python 2.x
>>> print(re.sub(r'(\-|\]|\^|\$|\*|\.|\\)',lambda m:{'-':'\-',']':'\]','\\':'\\\\','^':'\^','$':'\$','*':'\*','.':'\.'}[m.group()],"^stack.*/overflo\w$arr=1")) \^stack\.\*/overflo\\w\$arr=1 Utilize the output of built-in repr to deal with \r\n\t and process the output of re.escape is what you want:
re.escape(repr(a)[1:-1]).replace('\\\\', '\\')