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)
'\t'
as you mean...