EDIT: The problem is actually how print
works with lists & strings. It prints the representation of the string, not the string itself, the representation of a string containing just a backslash is '\'
. So findall
is actually finding the single backslash correctly, but print
isn't printing it as you'd expect. Try:
>>> print(re.findall(r'\',"i am \nit")[0])
(The following is my original answer, it can be ignored (it's entirely irrelevant), I'd misinterpreted the question initially. But it seems to have been upvoted a bit, so I'll leave it here.)
The r
prefix on a string means the string is in "raw" mode, that is,
are not treated as special characters (it doesn't have anything to do with "regex").
However, r''
doesn't work, as you can't end a raw string with a backslash, it's stated in the docs:
Even in a raw string, string quotes can be escaped with a backslash, but the backslash remains in the string; for example, r""" is a valid string literal consisting of two characters: a backslash and a double quote; r"" is not a valid string literal (even a raw string cannot end in an odd number of backslashes). Specifically, a raw string cannot end in a single backslash (since the backslash would escape the following quote character).
But you actually can use a non-raw string to get a single backslash: ""
.
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