In Python, calling
temp = open(filename,\'r\').readlines()
results in a list in which each element is a line in the file. It\'s a little st
I think this is the best option.
temp = [line.strip() for line in file.readlines()]
another example:
Reading file one row at the time. Removing unwanted chars with from end of the string str.rstrip(chars)
with open(filename, 'r') as fileobj:
for row in fileobj:
print( row.rstrip('\n') )
see also str.strip([chars])
and str.lstrip([chars])
(python >= 2.0)
def getText():
file=open("ex1.txt","r");
names=file.read().split("\n");
for x,word in enumerate(names):
if(len(word)>=20):
return 0;
print "length of ",word,"is over 20"
break;
if(x==20):
return 0;
break;
else:
return names;
def show(names):
for word in names:
len_set=len(set(word))
print word," ",len_set
for i in range(1):
names=getText();
if(names!=0):
show(names);
else:
break;
You can read the whole file and split lines using str.splitlines:
temp = file.read().splitlines()
Or you can strip the newline by hand:
temp = [line[:-1] for line in file]
Note: this last solution only works if the file ends with a newline, otherwise the last line will lose a character.
This assumption is true in most cases (especially for files created by text editors, which often do add an ending newline anyway).
If you want to avoid this you can add a newline at the end of file:
with open(the_file, 'r+') as f:
f.seek(-1, 2) # go at the end of the file
if f.read(1) != '\n':
# add missing newline if not already present
f.write('\n')
f.flush()
f.seek(0)
lines = [line[:-1] for line in f]
Or a simpler alternative is to strip
the newline instead:
[line.rstrip('\n') for line in file]
Or even, although pretty unreadable:
[line[:-(line[-1] == '\n') or len(line)+1] for line in file]
Which exploits the fact that the return value of or
isn't a boolean, but the object that was evaluated true or false.
The readlines
method is actually equivalent to:
def readlines(self):
lines = []
for line in iter(self.readline, ''):
lines.append(line)
return lines
# or equivalently
def readlines(self):
lines = []
while True:
line = self.readline()
if not line:
break
lines.append(line)
return lines
Since readline()
keeps the newline also readlines()
keeps it.
Note: for symmetry to readlines()
the writelines() method does not add ending newlines, so f2.writelines(f.readlines())
produces an exact copy of f
in f2
.
import csv
with open(filename) as f:
csvreader = csv.reader(f)
for line in csvreader:
print(line[0])
temp = open(filename,'r').read().splitlines()