2

I'm dealing with an application that exports text as as CSV type data. The text is broken up into fields where there was a hard return. I have been trying to use pythons CSV to restore the text.

This is an example of the text:

{"This is an example", "of what I what I have to deal with.  ", "Please pick up th following:", "eggs", "milk", "Thanks for picking groceries up for me"}

What is the best way to read this output this text like so:

This is an example
of what I have to deal with.
Please pick up the following:
eggs
milk
Thanks for picking up the groceries for me

I have tried a number of ways that just haven't been quite right.

Here is what I am doing so far:

import csv
import xlrd
book = xlrd.open_workbook("book1.xls")
sh = book.sheet_by_index(0)
cat = 'Mister Peanuts'

for r in range(sh.nrows)[0:]:
    cat_name = sh.cell_value(rowx=r, colx=1)
    cat_behavior = sh.cell_value(rowx=r, colx=5)

    if sh.cell_value(rowx=r, colx=1) == cat :       
        csv_reader = csv.reader( ([ cat_behavior ]), delimiter=',') 
        for row in csv_reader:

                for item in row:
                        item = item.strip()
                        print(item)
            pass    
    pass

So, the actual cell value that is returned for cat_behavior is the following:

['{"Mister Peanut spent 3.2 hours with {bojangles} fighting', '  "', ' "litter box was cleaned, sanitized and replaced "', ' " Food was replensished - with the best food possible"', ' ', ' "technician - don johnson performed all tasks"}']

I am now trying to take the above and run in through csv.reader to sanitize it and print it to a text file. I am now trying to make the (item) look normal.

1
  • Replace for r in range(sh.nrows)[0:]: with for r in sh.nrows: Oct 5, 2010 at 19:49

4 Answers 4

1
import csv
with open('test') as f:
    for row in csv.reader(f):
        for item in row:
            item=item.strip('{} "')
            print(item)

The strip method removes the specified characters from the left or right end of the string item.

1
  • Thanks so much. This did help me move forward. The problem is that the CSV may actually have squiggly brackets and quotations which could be a problem.
    – SPORKEATER
    Oct 5, 2010 at 3:55
1

Please explain what you have got to start with.

x = {"This is an example", ......., "Thanks for picking groceries up for me"}

That looks like a set. Then you pass [x] as the first arg of csv.reader!! That doesn't work:

[Python 2.7]
>>> import csv
>>> x = {"foo", "bar", "baz"}
>>> rdr = csv.reader([x]) # comma is the default delimiter
>>> list(rdr)
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: expected string or Unicode object, set found
>>>

You say "application that exports text as as CSV type data" -- what does "exports" mean? If it means "writes to a file", please (if you can't follow the examples dotted all over the web) give us a dump of the file to look at. If it means "method/function returns a python object", please do print(repr(python_object)) and update your question with a copy/paste of the print output.

What documentation about the application output do you have?

Update after comments and question edited:

You say that the cell value "returned" was:

['{"Mister Peanut spent 3.2 hours with {bojangles} fighting', ' "', ' "litter box was cleaned, sanitized and replaced "', ' " Food was replensished - with the best food possible"', ' ', ' "technician - don johnson performed all tasks"}']

This looks like what you printed after passing the ACTUAL data through the CSV mangle, not the raw value extracted by xlrd, which certainly won't be a list; it would be a single unicode object.

In case you didn't read it before: Please explain what you have got to start with.

Do you think it possible to do these:

(1) please do print(repr(cat_behavior)) and update your question with a copy/paste of the print output.

(2) say what documentation you have about the application that creates the Excel file.

2
  • I am using your xlrd to extract cells from the spreadsheet and then printing those cell values into a text file that someone can actually read. One of the cells that I need to print contains CSV like data. So, I am trying to make that text readable before printing it to the text file.
    – SPORKEATER
    Oct 5, 2010 at 3:59
  • I have edited to show what I am actually doing with an actual piece of text from the cell.
    – SPORKEATER
    Oct 5, 2010 at 4:42
0

You will need to look into csv.writer to export data to csv, rather than csv.reader.

EDIT: The body and title of question conflict. You're right about using csv.reader.You can use print in a for loop to achieve the result you are after.

1
  • Thanks, Tim. I am very close now using that method!
    – SPORKEATER
    Oct 5, 2010 at 5:13
0
>>> s
'{"This is an example", "of what I what I have to deal with.  ", "Please pick up th following:", "eggs", "milk", "Thanks for picking groceries up for me"}'

>>> print s.replace(",","\n").replace("{","").replace("}","").replace('"',"")
This is an example
 of what I what I have to deal with.
 Please pick up th following:
 eggs
 milk
 Thanks for picking groceries up for me

>>> open("output.csv","w").write( s.replace(",","\n").replace("{","").replace("}","").replace('"',"") )
3
  • Thanks. I am a newbie to python, but won't this cause a problem if there are nested quotations or curly brackets? This is an unfortunate possibility.
    – SPORKEATER
    Oct 5, 2010 at 3:57
  • if you have nested stuffs, then don't use this method.
    – ghostdog74
    Oct 5, 2010 at 4:00
  • There shouldn't be too much nesting in CSV files. Oct 5, 2010 at 19:47

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