46

I'm browsing through a Python file pointer of a text file in read-only mode using file.readline() looking for a special line. Once I find that line I want to pass the file pointer to a method that is expecting the file pointer to be at the START of that readline (not right after it.)

How do I essentially undo one file.readline() operation on a file pointer?

5 Answers 5

66

You have to remember the position by calling file.tell() before the readline and then calling file.seek() to rewind. Something like:

fp = open('myfile')
last_pos = fp.tell()
line = fp.readline()
while line != '':
  if line == 'SPECIAL':
    fp.seek(last_pos)
    other_function(fp)
    break
  last_pos = fp.tell()
  line = fp.readline()

I can't recall if it is safe to call file.seek() inside of a for line in file loop so I usually just write out the while loop. There is probably a much more pythonic way of doing this.

2
  • 4
    It doesn't seem to be safe to call in a for line in file loop. "OSError: telling position disabled by next() call"
    – Jiminion
    Mar 11, 2016 at 19:29
  • @Jiminion: Yeah, you have to use .readline() (which is slightly less efficient, but preserves necessary positional information) for that to work. You can still write a loop over lines pretty easily though, either with the walrus in more modern Python, while line := fp.readline():, or with two-arg iter (on any version) for line in iter(fp.readline, ''): (change '' to b'' if the file is opened in binary mode). Mar 26, 2023 at 15:43
15

You record the starting point of the line with thefile.tell() before you call readline, and get back to that point, if you need to, with thefile.seek.

>>> with open('bah.txt', 'w') as f:
...   f.writelines('Hello %s\n' % i for i in range(5))
... 
>>> with open('bah.txt') as f:
...   f.readline()
...   x = f.tell()
...   f.readline()
...   f.seek(x)
...   f.readline()
... 
'Hello 0\n'
'Hello 1\n'
'Hello 1\n'
>>> 

as you see, the seek/tell "pair" is "undoing", so to speak, the file pointer movement performed by readline. Of course, this can only work on an actual seekable (i.e., disk) file, not (e.g.) on file-like objects built w/the makefile method of sockets, etc etc.

6

If your method simply wants to iterate through the file, then you could use itertools.chain to make an appropriate iterator:

import itertools

# do something to the marker line and everything after
def process(it):
    for line in it:
        print line,
        
with open(filename,'r') as f:
    for line in f:
        if 'marker' in line:
            it=itertools.chain((line,),f)
            process(it)
            break
0
1
fin = open('myfile')
for l in fin:
    if l == 'myspecialline':
        # Move the pointer back to the beginning of this line
        fin.seek(fin.tell() - len(l))
        break
# now fin points to the start of your special line
3
  • I'm thinking along the same lines as you, but the file.seek help suggests otherwise: If the file is opened in text mode, only offsets returned by tell() are legal. Aug 17, 2010 at 19:06
  • I've used this before a few times and haven't had any problems, I'm assuming his has something to do with other character encodings
    – GWW
    Aug 17, 2010 at 19:27
  • 2
    in text mode, \r\n is going to translate to \n so you will lose a character. In this case, that character would be the CR (\r) so no one notices ;)
    – D.Shawley
    Aug 24, 2010 at 3:05
0

If you don't know the last line because you didn't visit it you can read backwards until you see a newline character:

with open(logfile, 'r') as f:
    # go to EOF
    f.seek(0, os.SEEK_END)
    nlines = f.tell()
    i=0
    while True:
        f.seek(nlines-i)
        char = f.read(1)
        if char=='\n':
            break
        i+=1

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