1

I have a text file with a list of strings.

I want to search a .csv file for rows that begin with those strings and put them in a new .csv file.

In this instance, the text file is called 'output.txt', the original .csv is 'input.csv' and the new .csv file is 'corrected.csv'.

The code:

import csv

file = open('output.txt')
while 1:
    line = file.readline()
    writer = csv.writer(open('corrected.csv','wb'), dialect = 'excel')
    for row in csv.reader('input.csv'):
        if not row[0].startswith(line):
            writer.writerow(row)
    writer.close()
    if not line:
        break
    pass

The error:

Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Python32\Sample Program\csvParser.py", line 9, in <module>
writer.writerow(row)
TypeError: 'str' does not support the buffer interface`

New error:

Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Python32\Sample Program\csvParser.py", line 12, in <module>
for row in reader:
_csv.Error: line contains NULL byte

Problem was that the CSV file was saved with tabs instead of commas, new issue now is the following:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\Python32\Sample Program\csvParser.py", line 13, in <module>
    if row[0] not in lines:
IndexError: list index out of range

The CSV file has 500+ entries of data... does this make a difference?

3

4 Answers 4

6

If you look at the documentation, this is how the reader is initialized:

spamReader = csv.reader(open('eggs.csv', 'r'), ...

Notice the open('eggs.csv, 'rb'). You aren't passing a file handle in line 9, so the str is being treated as a file handle and is throwing you the error.

Replace line 9 with this:

csv.reader(open('input.csv', 'r', newline = ''))
2
  • 1
    OP is using Python 3.2, which does not have the binary mode requirement. The docs say to open the file thusly: open('input.csv', 'r', newline=''). See docs.python.org/py3k/library/csv.html. Oct 21, 2011 at 19:07
  • Good point. Maybe the OP will stumble upon your comment, but for now, I'll just edit it into the code.
    – Blender
    Oct 21, 2011 at 19:08
2

The csv.reader can't open a file, it takes a file object. A better solution would be this:

import csv

lines = []
with open('output.txt', 'r') as f:
    for line in f.readlines():
        lines.append(line[:-1])

with open('corrected.csv','w') as correct:
    writer = csv.writer(correct, dialect = 'excel')
    with open('input.csv', 'r') as mycsv:
        reader = csv.reader(mycsv)
        for row in reader:
            if row[0] not in lines:
                writer.writerow(row)
11
  • Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Python32\Sample Program\csvParser.py", line 12, in <module> for row in reader: _csv.Error: iterator should return strings, not bytes (did you open the file in text mode?) Oct 21, 2011 at 18:32
  • @JamesRoseman erm, no. The open statement has 'rb' in it for read binary mode. I'm beginning to suspect your data file is corrupt in some way. As noted by Blender, the csv lib uses binary file handles. Oct 21, 2011 at 18:43
  • 1
    for line in f.readlines(): lines.append(line) is a wordy way to say lines = f.readlines(). Oct 21, 2011 at 18:55
  • @Spencer Rathbun That was the error message I got, it wasn't my criticism. I really appreciate the help on an issue I have little to no experience with, so thank you. I'm positive the data isn't corrupted, but might it be the way that it's formatted that would cause this type of error? Oct 21, 2011 at 18:55
  • 1
    @Spencer Rathbun: OP is using Python 3.2, which does not have the binary mode requirement. The docs say to open the file thusly: open('input.csv', 'r', newline=''). See docs.python.org/py3k/library/csv.html. Oct 21, 2011 at 19:06
0

Your latest problem:

    if row[0] not in lines:
IndexError: list index out of range

The error message mentions a list index.
There is only one list index that it could be talking about: 0
If 0 is out of range, then len(row) must be zero.
If len(row) is zero, then the corresponding line in the input file must be empty.
If a line in the input file is empty, what do you want to do:

(a) ignore the input line altogether?
(b) raise a (fatal) error?
(c) log an error message somewher and keep going?
(d) something else?

-2

Try this

import csv
import cStringIO

file = open('output.txt') 
while True:     
    line = file.readline()
    buf = cStringIO.StringIO()    
    writer = csv.writer(buf, dialect = 'excel')     
    for row in csv.reader(open('input.csv')):         
        if not row[0].startswith(line):             
            writer.writerow(row)     
    writer.close()
    output = open('corrected.csv', 'wb')
    output.write(buf.getvalue())    
    if not line:         
        break            
    pass

In my experience, using a cStringIO buffer for the whole process and then dumping the entire buffer into a file is faster.

1
  • -1. cStringIO is a pointless complication. The question wasn't about his code being too slow. Premature optimization like this is a waste of time. Oct 21, 2011 at 19:09

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