0

I have a problem can't adding a new tab in reading file.
I've tried readline, but I am confused..

f = open('data.txt', 'r')
count = 0
for i in f.readlines():
     count += 1
     if count == 3:
          #adding new tab
     print i,

In here, I have data.txt which contains data like this:

af  Afrikaans
sq  Albanian
ar  Arabic
hy  Armenian
az  Azerbaijani
eu  Basque

But I can't adding new tab if the data is in a certain count readline.
I want to make it like this..

af  Afrikaans      hy   Armenian
sq  Albanian       az   Azerbaijani
ar  Arabic         eu   Basque
5
  • do you want to print the entries you read in the format you mentioned? I did not understand what you are looking for, but '\t' is tab. print '\t' print a tab char to stdout. hope it is what you are lloking for. Feb 5, 2015 at 21:10
  • yes, i just wanna print my stdout like a tab.. but not '\t' as you mean...
    – agaust
    Feb 5, 2015 at 21:15
  • what prevents you from using '\t'? you want to read if input has tabs between them? Feb 5, 2015 at 21:17
  • so far yet, but I am confused if the data within a certain range, then the next data will be displayed (like tabs)
    – agaust
    Feb 5, 2015 at 21:25
  • have you tried to split with '\t'? 1- line = file.readline() 2- line = line.split('\t') ? Feb 5, 2015 at 21:28

4 Answers 4

1

I'm a particular fan of the itertools grouper recipe for things like this.

from itertools import zip_longest
# in Python2 do:
## from itertools import izip_longest

data = """af  Afrikaans
sq  Albanian
ar  Arabic
hy  Armenian
az  Azerbaijani
eu  Basque""".splitlines()

def grouper(iterable, n, fillvalue=None):
    "Collect data into fixed-length chunks or blocks"
    # grouper('ABCDEFG', 3, 'x') --> ABC DEF Gxx"
    args = [iter(iterable)] * n
    return zip_longest(*args, fillvalue=fillvalue)

for line in zip(*grouper(data, 3, '')):
    print('\t'.join(line))

This can be nicely modular

# tablefy.py

from itertools import zip_longest

def rows(data, max_rows=None, columndelimiter="\t"):
    """Produces rows, squeezing extra data into max_rows by
    adding columns delimited by columndelimiter"""
    # rows(['a','b','c','d'], 3, "    ") --> ['a    d', 'b    ', 'c    ']

    if max_rows is None:
        return (row for row in data)

    def _grouper(iterable, n, fillvalue=None):
        """Collect data into fixed-length chunks or blocks"""
        # grouper('ABCDEFG', 3, 'x') --> ABC DEF Gxx
        args = [iter(iterable)] * n
        return zip_longest(*args, fillvalue=fillvalue)

    for line in _grouper(data, max_rows, fillvalue=""):
        yield "\t".join(line)

 

# my_file.py

data = """af  Afrikaans
sq  Albanian
ar  Arabic
hy  Armenian
az  Azerbaijani
eu  Basque""".splitlines()

import tablefy

for row in tablefy.rows(data, max_rows=3):
    print(row)
1
  • Plus because this is a good solution for this problem , but note that its not good for files with long length!!
    – Mazdak
    Feb 5, 2015 at 23:13
1

you can create one list to store your lines per 3 iteration then append this it to last_q and at last you can use zip function to zip last_q and join the pairs with \t then write to file again :

import copy
q = []
last_q= []
with open('newefile.txt','r') as f:
   for line in f:
        q.append(line.strip())
        if len(q)==3 :
            last_q.append(copy.copy(q))
            q=[]

with open('newefile.txt','w') as f:
    for lines in zip(*last_q) :
        print lines
        f.write('\t'.join(lines)+'\n')

Demo :

print last_q    
deque([deque(['af  Afrikaans\thy  Armenian', 'sq  Albanian\taz  Azerbaijani', 'ar  Arabic\teu  Basque'], maxlen=3)]) 

print zip(*last_q)
[('af  Afrikaans', 'hy  Armenian'), ('sq  Albanian', 'az  Azerbaijani'), ('ar  Arabic', 'eu  Basque')]

Final result :

af  Afrikaans   hy  Armenian
sq  Albanian    az  Azerbaijani
ar  Arabic      eu  Basque
5
  • I did not lower the vote sir... your answer is correct sir, but I am more able to understand what I consider it right.. :) thank you verry much for your help.. :)
    – agaust
    Feb 5, 2015 at 21:54
  • @agaust yes ,welcome ,but first , if you find an answer helpful and correct you can tell this to community with voting , also if you are a programmer or want to learn , you need to deal with general and more efficient ways! and refuse to being lazy ;)
    – Mazdak
    Feb 5, 2015 at 21:56
  • I think you're missing a ] somewhere in your deque([ line
    – Adam Smith
    Feb 5, 2015 at 22:12
  • @KasraAD what does making them deques do? Certainly the maxlen shouldn't matter, right? Unless I'm just completely not understanding the answer, it seems like lists would do the same job. How is this gist different from your answer?
    – Adam Smith
    Feb 5, 2015 at 22:50
  • 1
    @AdamSmith You are right, fixed! actually at the first i thought about using another way with max len , but after some changes i don't notice about this problem! thanks for reminding!
    – Mazdak
    Feb 5, 2015 at 23:07
0

I think what you want is actually print two different lines on the same line, separated by a tab. So you would have to read them all and then print them with the tab in the middle. Something like this:

f = open('data.txt', 'r')
lines = []
for i in f.readlines():
    lines.append(i.replace("\n", ""))

for i in range(0, len(lines)/2):
   print lines[i] +  "\t" + lines[len(lines)/2 + i]
3
  • how if the data is odd?
    – agaust
    Feb 5, 2015 at 21:32
  • If this solution worked, it's because it happened to work in this specific dataset. It's not really the best way to go about the process.
    – Adam Smith
    Feb 5, 2015 at 22:51
  • I omitted the odd-even check to keep it simple but you would actually need to add it.
    – Yohan
    Feb 6, 2015 at 15:26
-1

below is the code that will do what you aim to accomplish, hope it is what you want:

f = open('data.txt','r')
lines = [l.strip() for l in f.readlines()]
l = len(lines)
for i in range(l/2):
    print lines[i]+'\t'+ lines[i + l/2]
if l%2: #if it is odd
    print lines[-1]
1
  • 1
    Although this produces the correct output, it's incredibly specific to this use case and nearly none of this is reusable.
    – Adam Smith
    Feb 5, 2015 at 22:47

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