# coding=utf8
# the above tag defines encoding for this document and is for Python 2.x compatibility
import re
regex = r"https?://\S+?cnbc\.com\S+"
test_str = ("\n\n"
"I have a text file of links after scrapping, I need to make a regular expression for these links so i can extract them from a file, but different links have same structure but different in length, like\n\n"
"https://www.cnbc.com/2016/10/12/billionaire-richard-branson-learned-a-key-business-lesson-playing-tennis.html\n\n"
"and this:\n\n"
"https://www.cnbc.com/2016/10/12/hedge-fund-bonus-makeover.html\n\n"
"I can successfully make RE for the base domain, but after that title give me a tough time, mine is\n\n"
"[h][t][t][p][s]:\\/\\/[w][w][w].[c][n][b][c].[c][o][m]\\/[2][0][1][5-8] \n\n"
"for https://www.cnbc.com/2016/10/11/ but dont know how to make for further with diiferent words for different links ahead,\n")
matches = re.finditer(regex, test_str, re.MULTILINE)
for matchNum, match in enumerate(matches, start=1):
print ("Match {matchNum} was found at {start}-{end}: {match}".format(matchNum = matchNum, start = match.start(), end = match.end(), match = match.group()))
for groupNum in range(0, len(match.groups())):
groupNum = groupNum + 1
print ("Group {groupNum} found at {start}-{end}: {group}".format(groupNum = groupNum, start = match.start(groupNum), end = match.end(groupNum), group = match.group(groupNum)))
# Note: for Python 2.7 compatibility, use ur"" to prefix the regex and u"" to prefix the test string and substitution.
Please keep in mind that these code samples are automatically generated and are not guaranteed to work. If you find any syntax errors, feel free to submit a bug report. For a full regex reference for Python, please visit: https://docs.python.org/3/library/re.html