2

i am trying to prepend each line of a file with " (2 spaces/tabs after ") and append with string- "\r\n"+". the lines of the file before this operation looks like as folllows.

        <!--You have a CHOICE of the next 5 items at this level-->
        <!--Optional:-->
        <urn:Account id=\"?\">
           <!--Optional:-->
           ............
           .............    

I am using the following code,

inf=open("req.txt","r")

outf=open("out.txt","w")

for line in inf.readlines():

    outf.write("\"          "+line+"\\r\\n\" +")

inf.close()

outf.close()

prepending is happening as expected but appending is not happening properly. Final result was all lines were prepended with - \r\n" +" except the first line. first line was prepended with only " .

I want each line prepended with " and appended with "\r\n"+"

2
  • 1
    Just a comment: readlines() is quite inefficient for large files -- just iterate over the file object itself instead.
    – jnnnnn
    May 29, 2012 at 7:32
  • how to do that, please give sample code. May 29, 2012 at 7:57

2 Answers 2

1

You should probably use python's built in string formatting.

outf.write("%s%s%s" % ('"          ', line, '\r\n" +'))

However! You're not removing the newlines from your data before changing it. As a result you're getting your format, the entire line (including the newline) and then your second part.

You'll want to run it through python's built in rstrip method.

outf.write("%s%s%s" % ('"          ', line.rstrip(), '\r\n" +'))

One thing you want to watch out for is that rstrip will remove any white space, if you want to remove just newlines then you can use:

outf.write("%s%s%s" % ('"          ', line.rstrip("\r\n"), '\r\n" +'))

However, once you do this, you'll need to put a new line at the end of your string again.

outf.write("%s%s%s%s" % ('"          ', line.rstrip("\r\n"), '\r\n" +', "\r\n"))

However! Depending on your OS your default line ending may be different, to do it correctly you'll want to import os then:

outf.write("%s%s%s%s" % ('"          ', line.rstrip(os.linesep), '\r\n" +', os.linesep))
4
  • Just out of curiosity, why aren't all \r\n replaced with os.linesep?
    – lfxgroove
    May 29, 2012 at 7:33
  • You can indeed do that for the parameter to rstrip but the 3rd string argument is a literal \r\n not a carriage return and a line feed. In the case of rstrip, it doesn't really matter, because the line ending is either going to be \r or \n or \r\n depending on your OS, but I changed it to be consistent. :) May 29, 2012 at 7:36
  • The information provided by OmnipotentEntity is useful for me but the code given did not work for me. but the below code worked for me. May 29, 2012 at 7:52
  • l = '"%s\\r\\n"+\n' %(line[:-1]) outf.write(l) May 29, 2012 at 7:52
1

Is there a reason you are not using a xml module to read/write the xml file? Because it could simplify your code.

Edit: Here's a PyMOTW ElementTree tutorial, and the Docs python.org/xml.etree.ElementTree

1
  • really i do not know about that module May 29, 2012 at 7:51

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.