I'm looking for an equivalent to sscanf()
in Python. I want to parse /proc/net/*
files, in C I could do something like this:
int matches = sscanf(
buffer,
"%*d: %64[0-9A-Fa-f]:%X %64[0-9A-Fa-f]:%X %*X %*X:%*X %*X:%*X %*X %*d %*d %ld %*512s
",
local_addr, &local_port, rem_addr, &rem_port, &inode);
I thought at first to use str.split
, however it doesn't split on the given characters, but the sep
string as a whole:
>>> lines = open("/proc/net/dev").readlines()
>>> for l in lines[2:]:
>>> cols = l.split(string.whitespace + ":")
>>> print len(cols)
1
Which should be returning 17, as explained above.
Is there a Python equivalent to sscanf
(not RE), or a string splitting function in the standard library that splits on any of a range of characters that I'm not aware of?
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