311

How can I skip the header row and start reading a file from line2?

0

8 Answers 8

583
with open(fname) as f:
    next(f)
    for line in f:
        #do something
4
  • 67
    if you need the header later, instead of next(f) use f.readline() and store it as a variable
    – damned
    Oct 8, 2013 at 5:38
  • 40
    Or use header_line = next(f).
    – Samuel
    Jan 6, 2015 at 23:41
  • 1
    myone complains 'file' object is not an iterator if I use next(f) approach. Instead the f.readline() worked. Sep 27, 2020 at 20:11
  • 1
    @soMuchToLearnAndShare Which python version did you use? It's better to provide information for reproducing the error.
    – Quan Hoang
    Oct 26, 2021 at 17:22
110
f = open(fname,'r')
lines = f.readlines()[1:]
f.close()
5
30

If you want the first line and then you want to perform some operation on file this code will helpful.

with open(filename , 'r') as f:
    first_line = f.readline()
    for line in f:
            # Perform some operations
2
  • 1
    It is not necessary to assign readline() to a variable if one does not need this line. I like this solution most, however.
    – Anna
    Apr 30, 2019 at 20:37
  • Mixing direct reads with using the file as an iterator isn't recommended (although in this specific case no harm is done).
    – chepner
    Dec 24, 2019 at 13:44
21

If slicing could work on iterators...

from itertools import islice
with open(fname) as f:
    for line in islice(f, 1, None):
        pass
5
  • 2
    This is a really nice and pythonic way of solving the problem and can be extended to an arbitrary number of header lines
    – Dai
    Feb 5, 2018 at 17:30
  • This is a really nice execution!
    – Diesel
    May 8, 2018 at 12:30
  • Marvellous solution
    – Russ Hyde
    Feb 13, 2019 at 14:36
  • 1
    This should be upvoted much, much more than it currently is.
    – chepner
    Dec 24, 2019 at 13:44
  • This solution is really good. This even works for in-memory uploaded file while iterating over file object.
    – haccks
    Nov 4, 2020 at 12:40
9
f = open(fname).readlines()
firstLine = f.pop(0) #removes the first line
for line in f:
    ...
1
  • 4
    This will read the entire file into memory at once, so it's only practical if you're reading a fairly small file. Dec 4, 2018 at 3:56
2

To generalize the task of reading multiple header lines and to improve readability I'd use method extraction. Suppose you wanted to tokenize the first three lines of coordinates.txt to use as header information.

Example

coordinates.txt
---------------
Name,Longitude,Latitude,Elevation, Comments
String, Decimal Deg., Decimal Deg., Meters, String
Euler's Town,7.58857,47.559537,0, "Blah"
Faneuil Hall,-71.054773,42.360217,0
Yellowstone National Park,-110.588455,44.427963,0

Then method extraction allows you to specify what you want to do with the header information (in this example we simply tokenize the header lines based on the comma and return it as a list but there's room to do much more).

def __readheader(filehandle, numberheaderlines=1):
    """Reads the specified number of lines and returns the comma-delimited 
    strings on each line as a list"""
    for _ in range(numberheaderlines):
        yield map(str.strip, filehandle.readline().strip().split(','))

with open('coordinates.txt', 'r') as rh:
    # Single header line
    #print next(__readheader(rh))

    # Multiple header lines
    for headerline in __readheader(rh, numberheaderlines=2):
        print headerline  # Or do other stuff with headerline tokens

Output

['Name', 'Longitude', 'Latitude', 'Elevation', 'Comments']
['String', 'Decimal Deg.', 'Decimal Deg.', 'Meters', 'String']

If coordinates.txt contains another headerline, simply change numberheaderlines. Best of all, it's clear what __readheader(rh, numberheaderlines=2) is doing and we avoid the ambiguity of having to figure out or comment on why author of the the accepted answer uses next() in his code.

2

If you want to read multiple CSV files starting from line 2, this works like a charm

for files in csv_file_list:
        with open(files, 'r') as r: 
            next(r)                  #skip headers             
            rr = csv.reader(r)
            for row in rr:
                #do something

(this is part of Parfait's answer to a different question)

0
# Open a connection to the file
with open('world_dev_ind.csv') as file:

    # Skip the column names
    file.readline()

    # Initialize an empty dictionary: counts_dict
    counts_dict = {}

    # Process only the first 1000 rows
    for j in range(0, 1000):

        # Split the current line into a list: line
        line = file.readline().split(',')

        # Get the value for the first column: first_col
        first_col = line[0]

        # If the column value is in the dict, increment its value
        if first_col in counts_dict.keys():
            counts_dict[first_col] += 1

        # Else, add to the dict and set value to 1
        else:
            counts_dict[first_col] = 1

# Print the resulting dictionary
print(counts_dict)

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