If this is a function call. then the lookbehind is put on the stack first. Then the lookahead is put on the stack. Then the lookahead is evaluated. Then the lookbehind is evaluated.
So. We're stating a lookbehind. Inside that we want to make sure that what we are about to eat is an 8. Then we eat it. Since it's going on in a lookbehind, the characters that the lookbehind eats, are before the main cursor.
(?<=8) is not just checking that what was just eaten by main is an 8. What happens is that the lookbehind cursor goes back one character and eats an 8. Then it returns with "I'm OK". Or "I couldn't eat an 8 here"
@Yatin No.. :D
(?<=.) this will go back one character and eat it. Anything other than a newline. It FAILS at the beginning of the string, because it can't go back.
(?<=.). will fail at every beginning character of a new line. The main cursor is not allowed to proceed.
If it's 9875. Then the lookahead can eat 875. And it reports success. Then the lookbehind is happy, and proceeds to eat an 8. And reports to main "I'm happy" :)
Perhaps I can't count. Maybe it's suppose to be nums[-1::-8]
Wait... So all I need to do is find some online python compiler/runner, then study that page, and then I can Answer half of all the Questions coming into Stack Overflow? :D
c -- default is +1. The sign of c indicates forward or backward, absolute value of c indicates steps. Default is forward with step size 1. Positive means forward, negative means backward.
a -- When c is positive or blank, default is 0. When c is negative, default is -1.
b -- When c is positive or blank, default is len. When c is negative, default is -(len+1).