To read some text file, in C or Pascal, I always use the following snippets to read the data until EOF:
while not eof do begin
readline(a);
do_something;
end;
Thus, I wonder how can I do this simple and fast in Python?
To read some text file, in C or Pascal, I always use the following snippets to read the data until EOF:
while not eof do begin
readline(a);
do_something;
end;
Thus, I wonder how can I do this simple and fast in Python?
Loop over the file to read lines:
with open('somefile') as openfileobject:
for line in openfileobject:
do_something()
File objects are iterable and yield lines until EOF. Using the file object as an iterable uses a buffer to ensure performant reads.
You can do the same with the stdin (no need to use raw_input()
:
import sys
for line in sys.stdin:
do_something()
To complete the picture, binary reads can be done with:
from functools import partial
with open('somefile', 'rb') as openfileobject:
for chunk in iter(partial(openfileobject.read, 1024), b''):
do_something()
where chunk
will contain up to 1024 bytes at a time from the file, and iteration stops when openfileobject.read(1024)
starts returning empty byte strings.
stdin
from a running process...so it doesn't ever have EOF until I kill the process. But then I reach the "end up to now" and I deadlock. How do I detect this and not deadlock? Like if there are no new lines, stop reading the files (even if there isn't an EOF, which in my case will never exist).
Feb 24, 2019 at 21:02
You can imitate the C idiom in Python.
To read a buffer up to max_size
(>0) number of bytes, you can do this:
with open(filename, 'rb') as f:
while True:
buf = f.read(max_size)
if buf == 0:
break
process(buf)
Or, a text file line by line:
# warning -- not idiomatic Python! See below...
with open(filename, 'rb') as f:
while True:
line = f.readline()
if not line:
break
process(line)
You need to use while True / break
construct since there is no eof test in Python other than the lack of bytes returned from a read.
In C, you might have:
while ((ch != '\n') && (ch != EOF)) {
// read the next ch and add to a buffer
// ..
}
However, you cannot have this in Python:
while (line = f.readline()):
# syntax error
because assignments are not allowed in expressions in Python (although recent versions of Python can mimic this using assignment expressions, see below).
It is certainly more idiomatic in Python to do this:
# THIS IS IDIOMATIC Python. Do this:
with open('somefile') as f:
for line in f:
process(line)
Update: Since Python 3.8 you may also use assignment expressions:
while line := f.readline():
process(line)
That works even if the line read is blank and continues until EOF.
readline()
way: you can do fine-grained error handling, like catching UnicodeDecodeError
, which you can't do with the idiomatic for
iteration.
.read
example is not correct: read
returns None
when a non-blocking buffer has no data to offer at the moment, and doesn't indicate having reached EOF. For that, a return value of 0
is used. I have proposed an edit to this respect. docs.python.org/3/library/io.html#io.RawIOBase.read
Oct 8, 2022 at 7:25
The Python idiom for opening a file and reading it line-by-line is:
with open('filename') as f:
for line in f:
do_something(line)
The file will be automatically closed at the end of the above code (the with
construct takes care of that).
Finally, it is worth noting that line
will preserve the trailing newline. This can be easily removed using:
line = line.rstrip()
for line in f.readlines(): ...
, a commonly suggested solution.
You can use below code snippet to read line by line, till end of file
line = obj.readline()
while(line != ''):
# Do Something
line = obj.readline()
While there are suggestions above for "doing it the python way", if one wants to really have a logic based on EOF, then I suppose using exception handling is the way to do it --
try:
line = raw_input()
... whatever needs to be done incase of no EOF ...
except EOFError:
... whatever needs to be done incase of EOF ...
Example:
$ echo test | python -c "while True: print raw_input()"
test
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
EOFError: EOF when reading a line
Or press Ctrl-Z at a raw_input()
prompt (Windows, Ctrl-Z Linux)
In addition to @dawg's great answer, the equivalent solution using walrus operator (Python >= 3.8):
with open(filename, 'rb') as f:
while buf := f.read(max_size):
process(buf)
You can use the following code snippet. readlines() reads in the whole file at once and splits it by line.
line = obj.readlines()
How about this! Make it simple!
for line in open('myfile.txt', 'r'):
print(line)
No need to waste extra lines. And no need to use with
keyword because the file will be automatically closed when there is no reference of the file object.
with
should always be used except for short-lived scripts that open only one or two files and then quit.