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I have a text file that looks like this:

BALLOTS CAST
Riding 0
YES YES NO YES
NO NO NO NO 
.
.
.
YES NO YES YES

Riding 1
YES NO NO YES
NO NO YES NO 
.
.
.
YES YES YES YES

and so on. I have the user's input for the riding number called riding, and then I need to make a list of the votes for that riding. For example, if the riding choice is 0, then I need a list [[YES YES NO YES], [NO NO NO NO], ..., [YES NO YES YES]].

I need to figure out a way to use readline() and the while loop. Here's roughly what I have:

ballots = open(FILENAME, 'r')
line = ballots.readline().rstrip()
L = []
i = 0
if riding.isdigit():
    while i < ???:
        line = ballots.readline().rstrip()
        i += 1
        if line == 'Riding ' + riding:
            while line != '\n':
                L.append(line.rstrip().split())

but I just get an empty list. I also tried this with 180 instead of ??? because that's how many lines there are, but I don't know what to actually put in its place. I tried max(enumerate(ballots))[0] but it empties the ballots list completely (or somehow else makes everything empty).

Can anyone point out my errors and what I should change? As I said, I have to use readline() and while and I can't import anything.

Also, the reason I put if riding.isdigit() is because there is also the option to choose all ridings. It works:

if riding == 'all':
    line = ballots.readline().rstrip()
    for line in ballots:
        if line[0:6] != 'Riding' and line != '\n':
            L.append(line.rstrip().split())

the only problem is I can't figure out how to use the while loop instead of the for loop...

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  • Have you tried using the csv module? Nov 28, 2012 at 7:52

3 Answers 3

3

Take a look at Pickle: http://docs.python.org/2.7/library/pickle.html?highlight=pickle#pickle It is very useful for saving and restoring python objects to files, e.g. lists.

1
  • 1
    Nice suggestion, but OP just asked about for loop to while loop conversion.
    – 0xC0DED00D
    Nov 28, 2012 at 9:48
2

You'd need to use a state variable to detect when you should read lines, and when you are done just break the loop:

lines = []
with open(FILENAME, 'r') as ballots:
    foundriding = False
    ballots.next()  # skip first line
    for line in ballots:
        if line.rstrip() == 'Riding ' + riding:
            foundriding = True
            continue
        if not foundriding: 
            continue
        line = line.rstrip()
        if line and not line.startswith('Riding '):
            lines.append(line)
        else:
            break

The above code will skip all lines until it finds the correct Riding <number> line, at which point it'll set foundriding to True. Once the flag is set, it'll add all subsequent lines to lines until it finds an empty line or another that starts with Riding. At that point it'll break the reading loop.

Another alternative is to use itertools.takewhile():

from itertools import takewhile
with open(FILENAME, 'r') as ballots:
    ballots.next()  # skip first line
    for line in takewhile(lambda l: l.rstrip() != 'Riding ' + riding, ballots):
        pass  # skip lines
    lines = [l.rstrip() for l in takewhile(lambda l: l.rstrip() and not l.startswith('Riding '), ballots)]

takewhile will take lines from ballots until the test returns False. After that, we can take more lines with a different test, namely that the line is not empty and doesn't start with Riding.

Neither solution needs to read the whole file. We stop reading when we found the correct riding and all it's votes have been read into lines.

I use the ballots file object like an iterator. That's not quite the same method as .readline(); if .readline() is a hard requirement (uhoh, teachers and homework), you can turn ballot.readline() into an iterator too:

ballotiterator = iter(ballots.readline, '')

then use ballotiterator instead of ballots wherever you see for line in ballots, ballots.next() or takewhile(..., ballots).

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1

Another solution using regular expressions:

import re
with open("test.txt") as infile:
    text = infile.read()
    if riding.isdigit():
        section = re.search(r"(?sm)^Riding " + riding + r".*?(?=Riding|\Z)", text)
        matches = re.findall(r"(?:(?:YES|NO) ?)+", section.group(0))
        result = [s.split() for s in matches]
        print(result)

With riding set to "1", this results in

[['YES', 'NO', 'NO', 'YES'], ['NO', 'NO', 'YES', 'NO'], ['YES', 'YES', 'YES', 'YES']]

Of course, you might want to use

result = [[True if value == "YES" else False for value in s.split()] 
                                             for s in matches]

instead, in order to get

[[True, False, False, True], [False, False, True, False], [True, True, True, True]]

No error checking is done (e. g. whether a segment labeled Riding x is present in the input file at all), but that can be added trivially.

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  • 1
    OP wanted to use the while loop and understand it. The solution you are offering is good, but seems like not relevant. Nov 28, 2012 at 8:13

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