-3

What I have tried to do:

f = open('j:/text.txt', 'r')
lines = []
for line in f:
    lines.append(line)
print (''.join(str(ord(c)) for c in line))
print (line)
print (lines)

But this converts only the last line and ignores the previous ones.

1
  • 3
    well .. put the print inside the loop? Sep 7, 2020 at 10:49

2 Answers 2

1

Try this:

with open('j:/text.txt', 'r', encoding="ascii") as file :
    lines = f.readlines()

for line in lines:
    line = line.replace("\n", "")
    print(''.join(str(ord(c)) for c in line))
2
  • work , but i forgot about remove \n at lines
    – tseries
    Sep 7, 2020 at 11:03
  • @tseries, I modified the code to delete the \n. Please mark my answer as the best answer to your code. Thanks
    – jalazbe
    Sep 7, 2020 at 13:24
1

I think you want to print every line's ASCII equivelant and the line itself. Put the first two print statements inside the for loop (Indent them once).

f = open('j:/text.txt', 'r')
lines = []
for line in f:
    lines.append(line)
    print (''.join(str(ord(c)) for c in line))
    print (line)
print (lines)
3
  • 2
    I should add that the file must be closed too, so it would be better if you used a with statement
    – Luke_
    Sep 7, 2020 at 10:55
  • Yeah, but it's best to reproduce the OP's original code. Sep 7, 2020 at 12:04
  • @SafwanSamsudeen, but it's an error in OP's code, and as such, would be more helpful if corrected.
    – SiHa
    Sep 8, 2020 at 11:38

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