Same as in Perl, but with a backslash instead of the dollar for accessing groups:
s = "0123456789"*100 # test string
import re
print re.sub("(.{64})", "\\1\n", s, 0, re.DOTALL)
re.DOTALL is the equivalent to Perl’s s/ option.
Same as in Perl, but with a backslash instead of the dollar for accessing groups:
s = "0123456789"*100 # test string
import re
print re.sub("(.{64})", "\\1\n", s, 0, re.DOTALL)
re.DOTALL is the equivalent to Perl’s s/ option.