update: The original answer bellow is good for 2011, but since 2012, one is likely better using Python's ipaddress stdlib module - besides checking IP validity for IPv4 and IPv6, it can do a lot of other things as well.</update>
It looks like you are trying to validate IP addresses. A regular expression is probably not the best tool for this.
If you want to accept all valid IP addresses (including some addresses that you probably didn't even know were valid) then you can use IPy (Source):
from IPy import IP
IP('127.0.0.1')
If the IP address is invalid it will throw an exception.
Or you could use socket
(Source):
import socket
try:
socket.inet_aton(addr)
# legal
except socket.error:
# Not legal
If you really want to only match IPv4 with 4 decimal parts then you can split on dot and test that each part is an integer between 0 and 255.
def validate_ip(s):
a = s.split('.')
if len(a) != 4:
return False
for x in a:
if not x.isdigit():
return False
i = int(x)
if i < 0 or i > 255:
return False
return True
Note that your regular expression doesn't do this extra check. It would accept 999.999.999.999
as a valid address.
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