How to search for the last occurrence of a regular expression in a string in python?

One approach is to prefix the regex with (?s:.*) and force the engine to try matching at the furthest position and gradually backing off:

re.search("(?s:.*)pattern", "target_text")

Do note that the result of this method may differ from re.findall("pattern", "target_text")[-1], since the findall method searches for non-overlapping matches, and not all substrings which can be matched are included in the result.

For example, executing the regex a.a on abaca, findall would return aba as the only match and select it as the last match, while the code above will return aca as the match.


Yet another alternative is to use regex package, which supports REVERSE matching mode.

The result would be more or less the same as the method with (?s:.*) in re package as described above. However, since I haven't tried the package myself, it's not clear how backreference works in REVERSE mode - the pattern might require modification in such cases.


import re
re.search("pattern(?!.*pattern)", "target_text")

or

import re
re.findall("pattern", "target_text")[-1]

You can use these 2 approaches.

If you want positions use

x="abc abc abc"
print [(i.start(),i.end(),i.group()) for i in re.finditer(r"abc",x)][-1]