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I am writing my very first real Python program after years of MATLAB. The program reads in a comma delimited serial string from my Arduino GPS, converts the fields to numbers, plots them on a scatter graph, and then writes them to disk. Each line should look like this (with the precision degraded so no one shows up at my house):

2014, 12, 3, 16, 1, 56, 0, 46.3, -119.2, 118.3, 7

where the first 7 fields are the date and time, the next two are the coordinates, the next is the altitude, and the last is the number of satellites in view. If there is no lock, then I instead get something like this:

2014, 12, 3, 16, 1, 56, 0, , , , 0

I would like my program to see that there is no lock and skip that measurement. The relevant part of my code looks like this:

import serial
import string

ser = serial.Serial(
    port='COM27',
    baudrate=9600,
    parity=serial.PARITY_NONE,
    stopbits=serial.STOPBITS_ONE,
    bytesize=serial.EIGHTBITS,
    timeout=5
)

while True:
    line = ser.readline()
    values = string.split(line, ',')

    validList = True
    for x in values:
        if not x:
            validList == False

    if not validList:
        continue

    for n in range(0, 6):
        values[n] = int(values[n])

    values[6] = float(values[6])
    values[7] = float(values[7])

However, the program will run for a while and then throw the following error:

values[n] = int(values[n])
ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: ''

Now in MATLAB, the list would be a cell and my test would be:

if any(isempty(values))
    continue;
end

How should I be validating my list?

1
  • 1
    Why not a try except? Dec 3, 2014 at 17:00

3 Answers 3

1

You can check string in boolean context, empty string if False:

if not all(values): # h/t @chepner
    continue

But more pythonic is just to try to do what you want, and catch exception:

parts = line.split(',')
try:
    values = map(int, parts[:6]) + map(float, parts[6:])
    # you can check here, if you have enough items in values:
    assert len(values) > 7, "Too few values in this line"
except (ValueError, IndexError, AssertionError) as err:
    print err
    continue

In this case ValueError occurs when you cannot convert a string to desired format, and IndexError if there was less than 6 elements

You can use the same technique to unpack your values:

parts = line.split(',')
try:
    year, month, day, hour, minute, second = map(int, parts[:6])
    milisecond, lat, lon, alt, sat = map(float, parts[6:])
except (ValueError, IndexError) as err:
    print err
    continue
4
  • So the second technique is comparable to the MATLAB deal command? I can also see I have to learn more about map.
    – craigim
    Dec 3, 2014 at 17:30
  • @craigim I don't remember much MATLAB, map just applies function provided as a first argument to items from they later args (they must be sequences). Probably more pythonic would be to use list comprehension, but I love map for its concise form. PS I improved the second version a bit.
    – m.wasowski
    Dec 3, 2014 at 17:39
  • I'm still getting used to 0 based indexing and have a further question: to access the first 6 elements of the list, you use parts[:6], is that equivalent to parts[0:5], or is it a typo?
    – craigim
    Dec 3, 2014 at 21:15
  • the second number denotes a 'stop' element, so this is the first that goes not into the result sublist. So lst[:6], lst[6:] splits list in two parts, first having a six elements, second the rest. See diveintopython.net/native_data_types/lists.html
    – m.wasowski
    Dec 4, 2014 at 7:36
1

An empty value '' will evaluate as False. You can evaluate the truth of all elements in the row:

if not all(map(lambda x: bool(x), values)):
    pass
3
  • if not all(map(bool, values)): is sufficient
    – m.wasowski
    Dec 3, 2014 at 17:08
  • 2
    if not all(values) is also sufficient. There's no need to explicitly convert the string to a Boolean value.
    – chepner
    Dec 3, 2014 at 17:17
  • That's true. My initial response was map(lambda x: bool(x.strip()), l.split(",")) in the event that there were spaces ' ' in the line.
    – triphook
    Dec 3, 2014 at 17:39
1

The check can be thinned up, but the problem with your current code is

for x in values:
    if not x:
        validList == False

== is the boolean equality operator, = is assignment. Also, since you keep comparing, you loose the interim values you check.

Change it to:

for x in values:
    if not x:
        validList = False
        break

You could also just check one of the fields you know to be empty when there isn't a lock:

if not values[7]:
    continue
1
  • Gah! Of course == is the wrong operator. To be fair, MATLAB's code checker would have flagged my sloppiness (not that that's an excuse).
    – craigim
    Dec 3, 2014 at 17:40

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