3

I have a text file which contains some Persian text, I want to read the file and calculate the number of occurrence of each word then print the calculated values. this is my code:

f = open('C:/python programs/hafez.txt')
wordDict ={}
for line in f:
    wordList = line.strip().split(' ')
    for word in wordList:
        if word not in wordDict:  
            wordDict[word] = 1
        else: wordDict[word] = wordDict[word]+1

print((str(wordDict)))

It produces results which has wrong coding format, I tried various ways to fix this but no good result! Here is part of the text that this code produces:

{"\x00'\x063\x06(\x06": 3, "\x00,\x06'\x06E\x06G\x06": 16, "\x00'\x063\x06*\x06E\x06'\x069\x06": 1, '\x00-\x064\x061\x06': 1, .....}

6
  • 1
    What character encoding is your file in ? This is the first question you have to answer first. It could be unicode in UCS-2 encoding. Feb 23, 2014 at 7:12
  • Actually I don't know! How can I find that? Feb 23, 2014 at 7:20
  • 1
    Open the file in Notepad++ and look at the encoding. Similarly, if it opens in a browser look at the detected encoding in the menu. If that doesn't help learn what are the current encodings for persian, and how they are stored in binary, then look at the file in a hex editor. Feb 23, 2014 at 7:26
  • The encoding is OEM 720 Feb 23, 2014 at 7:52
  • 1
    It is in this encoding: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_page_720 Feb 23, 2014 at 8:01

4 Answers 4

7

There are several ways to deal with this, but perhaps the easiest is with codecs.open(). (I'm assuming you're using Python 2.7 for some of the other tricks here with Counter and with).

import codecs
from collections import Counter
wordDict = Counter()

with codecs.open('C:/python programs/hafez.txt','r',encoding='cp720') as f:
    for line in f:
        wordDict.update(line.strip().split())

for word, count in wordDict.most_common(): 
    print word, count

In Python 3, you need the parentheses with print (it's a function in Python 3 but a statement in Python 2), and you don't need to import codecs because the builtin open() has support for different encodings.

If your encoding isn't Code Page 720, then you need to replace that option with the abbreviation for the appropriate encoding.

This is a good opportunity to learn some about encodings. While I agree with Joel, that no programmer should pretend that we live in a US English / ASCII world, the issue of encoding becomes especially pertinent when you're dealing with a non Latin alphabet on a regular basis. (Besides, ASCII isn't even enough for English -- many English words are borrowings that kept their accents, amongst other issues.) Good starting places are Joel's article (The Absolute Minimum Every Software Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets (No Excuses!)), the Pragmatic Unicode (including the Unicode sandwich), and for ease of producing said sandwich in Python 2, the codecs module. There's also a HOWTO in the Python docs, which is easier to understand after you've read the other articles.

If you've decided to go full Python 3, then you can simple select your exact version from the listbox at the top of the documentation pages. The BDFL's summary of the differences between Python 2 and 3 also includes a bit on issues with Unicode and how it's handled differently in Python 2 and 3.

11
  • +1 for codecs.open(). Note: .update() make changes inplace, it returns None; remove the assignment. print wordDict prints word representions (it is not very readable on Python 2). You could print one word at a time for word, count in wordDict.most_common(): print word, count
    – jfs
    Feb 23, 2014 at 11:32
  • @RaminZahedi : That was the error mentioned in the other comment, it's now been fixed.
    – Livius
    Feb 23, 2014 at 11:37
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    @Livius I'm using win7 and now sth weird is happening! when I run the module from IDLE it works but with wrong encoding but when I run the module from command prompt it says:File "C:\Python33\lib\encodings\cp437.py", line 19, in encode return codecs.charmap_encode(input,self.errors,encoding_map)[0] UnicodeEncodeError: 'charmap' codec can't encode character '\u0631' in position 1: character maps to <undefined> Feb 23, 2014 at 12:14
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    Your terminal doesn't support Persian characters -- CP437 is a Latin based encoding. Since you're using Python 3, can just add a file=myoutputfile argument to your print() call and redirect the output to a file, which you can then open in your favorite editor. (Of course, you have to do open the file first -- I recommend setting the encoding on the output file to utf-8.)
    – Livius
    Feb 23, 2014 at 12:20
  • 2
    @Livius it works!! it works!! the correct encoding was: UTF-16 Feb 23, 2014 at 12:23
1

I think in general you could encode your txt file with UTF-8, and read UTF-8 in python with # -- coding: UTF-8 -- in the start part of py file.

2
  • It produced the same result as before Feb 23, 2014 at 7:29
  • 2
    The coding line in a source file describes the coding of the source file and not of its inputs.
    – Livius
    Feb 23, 2014 at 11:12
0

Consider using the python Counter subclass for counting occurrences of words.

As for the text, python2.7 is not unicode by default. Read: http://docs.python.org/2/howto/unicode.html

You can use

for i,j in wordDict.iteritems():
    print unicode(i),j
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  • it produces this error: UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xcc in position 5: ordinal not in range(128) Feb 23, 2014 at 7:15
  • You need to specify the encoding when converting to unicode! Yes, you can get away with not specifying it if you're using UTF-8 / ASCII, but explicit is better than implicit.
    – Livius
    Feb 23, 2014 at 11:24
0

I admit I don't know python, I'm learning it since a few days. And for the moment I'm a little confused between python 2 and 3, since it handles strings differently.

Just a tip to where to look : read your file into a string ( I don't know if you should open the file in binary mode ). Then convert it to unicode using

unicodestr = str.decode('cp720')
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