Reputation: 31
I'm learning Python and wanted to automate one of my assignments in a cybersecurity class. I'm trying to figure out how I would look for the contents of a file that are bound by a set of parenthesis. The contents of the (.txt) file look like:
cow.jpg : jphide[v5](asdfl;kj88876)
fish.jpg : jphide[v5](65498ghjk;0-)
snake.jpg : jphide[v5](poi098*/8!@#)
test_practice_0707.jpg : jphide[v5](sJ*=tT@&Ve!2)
test_practice_0101.jpg : jphide[v5](nKFdFX+C!:V9)
test_practice_0808.jpg : jphide[v5](!~rFX3FXszx6)
test_practice_0202.jpg : jphide[v5](X&aC$|mg!wC2)
test_practice_0505.jpg : jphide[v5](pe8f%yC$V6Z3)
dog.jpg : negative`
And here is my code so far:
import sys, os, subprocess, glob, shutil
# Finding the .jpg files that will be copied.
sourcepath = os.getcwd() + '\\imgs\\'
destpath = 'stegdetect'
rawjpg = glob.glob(sourcepath + '*.jpg')
# Copying the said .jpg files into the destpath variable
for filename in rawjpg:
shutil.copy(filename, destpath)
# Asks user for what password file they want to use.
passwords = raw_input("Enter your password file with the .txt extension:")
shutil.copy(passwords, 'stegdetect')
# Navigating to stegdetect. Feel like this could be abstracted.
os.chdir('stegdetect')
# Preparing the arguments then using subprocess to run
args = "stegbreak.exe -r rules.ini -f " + passwords + " -t p *.jpg"
# Uses open to open the output file, and then write the results to the file.
with open('cracks.txt', 'w') as f: # opens cracks.txt and prepares to w
subprocess.call(args, stdout=f)
# Processing whats in the new file.
f = open('cracks.txt')
Upvotes: 3
Views: 514
Reputation: 6209
You should use regular expressions which are implemented in the Python re module
a simple regex like \(.*\)
could match your "parenthesis string"
but it would be better with a group \((.*)\)
which allows to get only the content in the parenthesis.
import re
test_string = """cow.jpg : jphide[v5](asdfl;kj88876)
fish.jpg : jphide[v5](65498ghjk;0-)
snake.jpg : jphide[v5](poi098*/8!@#)
test_practice_0707.jpg : jphide[v5](sJ*=tT@&Ve!2)
test_practice_0101.jpg : jphide[v5](nKFdFX+C!:V9)
test_practice_0808.jpg : jphide[v5](!~rFX3FXszx6)
test_practice_0202.jpg : jphide[v5](X&aC$|mg!wC2)
test_practice_0505.jpg : jphide[v5](pe8f%yC$V6Z3)
dog.jpg : negative`"""
REGEX = re.compile(r'\((.*)\)', re.MULTILINE)
print(REGEX.findall(test_string))
# ['asdfl;kj88876', '65498ghjk;0-', 'poi098*/8!@#', 'sJ*=tT@&Ve!2', 'nKFdFX+C!:V9' , '!~rFX3FXszx6', 'X&aC$|mg!wC2', 'pe8f%yC$V6Z3']
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 32923
I'm learning Python
If you are learning you should consider alternative implementations, not only regexps.
TO iterate line by line of a text file you just open the file and for over the file handle:
with open('file.txt') as f:
for line in f:
do_something(line)
Each line is a string with the line contents, including the end-of-line char '/n'. To find the start index of a specific substring in a string you can use find:
>>> A = "hello (world)"
>>> A.find('(')
6
>>> A.find(')')
12
To get a substring from the string you can use the slice notation in the form:
>>> A[6:12]
'(world'
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 3927
If it should just be bound by ( and ) you can use the following regex, which ensures starting ( and closing ) and you can have numbers and characters between them. You can add any other symbol also that you want to include.
[\(][a-z A-Z 0-9]*[\)]
[\(] - starts the bracket
[a-z A-Z 0-9]* - all text inside bracket
[\)] - closes the bracket
So for input sdfsdfdsf(sdfdsfsdf)sdfsdfsdf
, the output will be (sdfdsfsdf)
Test this regex here: https://regex101.com/
Upvotes: 2