Python newbie here. Just starting to learn. I am following "How to Learn Python the Hard Way" and one of the exercises is to shorten a script as much as we can. I have hit a sort of road block and I'd appreciate any insight. The code simply takes a file and copies it into another file. This is what the code looked like at first.
from sys import argv
from os.path import exists
script, from_file, to_file = argv
print "Copying from %s to %s" % (from_file, to_file)
in_file = open(from_file)
indata = in_file.read()
print "The input file is %d bytes long" % len(indata)
print "Does the output file exist? %r" % exists(to_file)
print "Ready, hit RETURN to continue, CTRL-C to abort."
raw_input()
out_file = open(to_file, 'w')
out_file.write(indata)
print "Alright, all done."
out_file.close()
in_file.close()
Now the code looks like this:
from sys import argv; script, from_file, to_file = argv;
in_data = open(from_file).read()
out_file = open(to_file, 'w').write(in_data)
Is it cheating to use a semicolon as a way to keep two lines as one line? I got rid of some of the features because I felt like they were pointless for this particular exercise. The author said he was able to get the script down to one line and I would appreciate any suggestions for how to do this. The script works this way and I've tried fitting it all onto one or two lines with semicolons but I was wondering if there's a better solution. Thanks very much.
open(to_file, 'w').write(open(from_file).read())
. It makes one liner. But for copying files you should use shutil.copyfile as the answer bellow.