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I need to write a series of matrices out to a plain text file from python. All my matricies are in float format so the simple file.write() and file.writelines()

do not work. Is there a conversion method I can employ that doesn't have me looping through all the lists (matrix = list of lists in my case) converting the individual values?

I guess I should clarify, that it needn't look like a matrix, just the associated values in an easy to parse list, as I will be reading in later. All on one line may actually make this easier, but thanks to all for your thouhts!

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Can you explain? Why does file.write() not work for you? – JPCosta May 14 at 18:23

3 Answers

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m = [[1.1, 2.1, 3.1], [4.1, 5.1, 6.1], [7.1, 8.1, 9.1]]
file.write(str(m))

If you want more control over the format of each value:

def format(value):
    return "%.3f" % value

formatted = [[format(v) for v in r] for r in m]
file.write(str(formatted))
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str(m) produces something different – SilentGhost May 14 at 18:26
different from what? – John Millikin May 14 at 18:29
Oh, you wrote the other solution. Yes, depending on how the output should be formatted (comma-separated, etc), manual string building might be required. – John Millikin May 14 at 18:31
I don't think that representation of a matrix is what OP asks for. – SilentGhost May 14 at 18:32
Actually, I like seeing (and upvoted) both your solutions. I admit I also first interpreted the question the way SilentGhost did, but after reading John's solution I have to say that the question leaves the exact output format to inference. – Jarret Hardie May 14 at 18:35
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vote up 5 vote down

Why not use pickle?

import cPickle as pickle
pckl_file = file("test.pckl", "w")
pickle.dump([1,2,3], pckl_file)
pckl_file.close()
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vote up 4 vote down

the following works for me:

with open(fname, 'w') as f:
    f.writelines(','.join(str(j) for j in i) + '\n' for i in matrix)
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