A simple Python module for parsing human names into their individual components.
Project description
A simple Python module for parsing human names into their individual components.
Attributes
HumanName.title
HumanName.first
HumanName.middle
HumanName.last
HumanName.suffix
Supports 3 comma placement variations for names of people in latin-based languages.
Title Firstname Middle Middle Lastname Suffix
Lastname, Title Firstname Middle Middle[,] Suffix [, Suffix]
Title Firstname M Lastname, Suffix [, Suffix]
Examples:
Doe-Ray, Col. John A. Jérôme III
Dr. Juan Q. Xavier de la Vega II
Juan Q. Xavier Velasquez y Garcia, Jr.
Capitalization Support
The HumanName class can try to guess the correct capitalization of name entered in all upper or lower case. It will not adjust the case of names entered in mixed case.
bob v. de la macdole-eisenhower phd -> Bob V. de la MacDole-Eisenhower Ph.D.
Over 100 unit tests with example names. Should be unicode safe but it’s fairly untested. Post a ticket and/or for names that fail and I will try to fix it. http://code.google.com/p/python-nameparser/issues/entry
HumanName instances will pass an equals (==) test if their lower case unicode representations are the same.
Usage
>>> from nameparser import HumanName >>> name = HumanName("Dr. Juan Q. Xavier de la Vega III") >>> name.title u'Dr.' >>> name.first u'Juan' >>> name.middle u'Q. Xavier' >>> name.last u'de la Vega' >>> name.suffix u'III' >>> name.full_name = "Doe-Ray, Col. John A. Jérôme III" >>> name.title u'Col.' >>> name.first u'John' >>> name.middle u'A. Jérôme' >>> name.last u'Doe-Ray' >>> name.suffix u'III' >>> name.full_name = "Juan Q. Xavier Velasquez y Garcia, Jr." >>> name.title u'' >>> name.first u'Juan' >>> name.middle u'Q. Xavier' >>> name.last u'Velasquez y Garcia' >>> name.suffix u'Jr.' >>> name.middle = "Jason Alexander" >>> name.middle u'Jason Alexander' >>> name <HumanName : [ Title: '' First: 'Juan' Middle: 'Jason Alexander' Last: 'Velasquez y Garcia' Suffix: 'Jr.' ]> >>> name = HumanName("Dr. Juan Q. Xavier de la Vega III") >>> name2 = HumanName("de la vega, dr. juan Q. xavier III") >>> name == name2 True >>> len(name) 5 >>> list(name) ['Dr.', 'Juan', 'Q. Xavier', 'de la Vega', 'III'] >>> name[1:-1] [u'Juan', u'Q. Xavier', u'de la Vega'] >>> name = HumanName('bob v. de la macdole-eisenhower phd') >>> name.capitalize() >>> unicode(name) u'Bob V. de la MacDole-Eisenhower Ph.D.' >>> # Don't touch good names >>> name = HumanName('Shirley Maclaine') >>> name.capitalize() >>> unicode(name) u'Shirley Maclaine'
Release Log
- 0.2.0
Significant refactor of parsing logic. Handle conjunctions and prefixes before parsing into attribute buckets.
Support attribute overriding by assignment.
Support multiple titles.
Lowercase titles constants to fix bug with comparison.
Move documentation to README.rst, add release log.
0.1.4 - Use set() in constants for improved speed. setuptools compatibility - sketerpot
0.1.3 - Add capitalization feature - twotwo
0.1.2 - Add slice support
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.