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I created a simple program that reads a file and asks the user to input a word and then tells how many times that word is used. I want to improve it so you don't have to type the exact directory each time. I imported Tkinter and used the code fileName= filedialog.askfilename() so that a box pops up and lets me choose the file. Every time I try to use it though I get the following error code...

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "/Users/AshleyStallings/Documents/School Work/Computer Programming/Side Projects/How many? (Python).py", line 24, in <module>
    for line in fileScan.read().split():   #reads a line of the file and stores
  File "/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.3/lib/python3.3/encodings/ascii.py", line 26, in decode
    return codecs.ascii_decode(input, self.errors)[0]
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0x8e in position 12: ordinal not in range(128)

The only time I don't seem to get this error code is when I try to open a .txt file. But I'm wanting to open .docx files also. Thanks for your help in advance :)

# Name: Ashley Stallings
# Program decription: Asks user to input a word to search for in a specified
# file and then tells how many times it's used.
from tkinter import filedialog

print ("Hello! Welcome to the 'How Many' program.")
fileName= filedialog.askopenfilename()  #Gets file name


cont = "Yes"

while cont == "Yes":
    word=input("Please enter the word you would like to scan for. ") #Asks for word
    capitalized= word.capitalize()  
    lowercase= word.lower()
    accumulator = 0

    print ("\n")
    print ("\n")        #making it pretty
    print ("Searching...")

    fileScan= open(fileName, 'r')  #Opens file

    for line in fileScan.read().split():   #reads a line of the file and stores
        line=line.rstrip("\n")
        if line == capitalized or line == lowercase:
            accumulator += 1
    fileScan.close

    print ("The word", word, "is in the file", accumulator, "times.")

    cont = input ('Type "Yes" to check for another word or \
"No" to quit. ')  #deciding next step
    cont = cont.capitalize()

    if cont != "No" and cont != "Yes":
        print ("Invalid input!")

print ("\n")
print ("Thanks for using How Many!")  #ending

P.S. Not sure if it matters, but I'm running OSx

6
  • As a side note, you almost certainly don't want for line in fileScan.read().split():—that will treat each word as a separate line. You probably just want for line in fileScan:.
    – abarnert
    Jul 15, 2013 at 19:37
  • Hmmm... I'm splitting it at the words though so that it can compare each word to the word it's searching for. And then add one each time the word is found. Jul 15, 2013 at 19:40
  • Then the name and comments are misleading, because it doesn't read a line of the file, it reads the whole file, and splits it into words, not caring about the separate lines. And the rstrip is useless in that case, because you've already split out all the whitespace.
    – abarnert
    Jul 15, 2013 at 19:41
  • Another aside: fileScan.close is not going to close the file, that is just the reference to the close method (you forgot to call it by adding ()). You might also want to look at using the with statement like the following, which saves you from closing the file manually: with open(fileName, 'r') as fileScan: Jul 15, 2013 at 19:41
  • Thanks for the tips guys. This is one of my first time working with files in Python so I'm still trying to figure it all out :) Jul 15, 2013 at 19:43

1 Answer 1

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The only time I don't seem to get this error code is when I try to open a .txt file. But I'm wanting to open .docx files also.

A docx file isn't just a text file; it's an Office Open XML file: a zipfile containing an XML document and any other supporting files. Trying to read it as a text file isn't going to work.

For example, the first 4 bytes of the file are going to be this:

b'PK\x03\x04`

You can't interpret that as UTF-8, ASCII, or anything else without getting a bunch of garbage. You're certainly not going to find your words in this.


You can do some processing on your own—use zipfile to access the document.xml inside the archive, then use an XML parser to get the text nodes, and then rejoin them so you can split them on whitespace. For example:

import itertools
import zipfile
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET

with zipfile.ZipFile('foo.docx') as z:
    document = z.open('word/document.xml')
    tree = ET.parse(document)

textnodes = tree.findall('.//{http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/wordprocessingml/2006/main}t')
text = itertools.chain.from_iterable(node.text.split() for node in textnodes)
for word in text:
    # ...

Of course it would be better to actually parse the xmlns declarations and register the w namespace properly, so you can just use 'w:t', but if you have any idea what that means, you already know that, and if you don't, this isn't the place for a tutorial on XML namespaces and ElementTree.


So, how are you supposed to know that it's a zipfile full of stuff, and the actual text is in the file word/document.xml, and the actual text within that file is in the .//w:t nodes, and the namespace w maps to http://schemas.openxmlformats.org/wordprocessingml/2006/main, and so on? Well, you could read all the relevant documentation and figure it out, using some sample files and a bit of exploration to guide you, if you already know enough about this stuff. But if you don't, there's a major learning curve ahead of you.

And even if you do know what you're doing, it would probably be a better idea to search PyPI for a docx parser module and just use that.

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