I have a bunch of files. Some are Unix line endings, many are DOS. I'd like to test each file to see if if is dos formatted, before I switch the line endings.
How would I do this? Is there a flag I can test for? Something similar?
I have a bunch of files. Some are Unix line endings, many are DOS. I'd like to test each file to see if if is dos formatted, before I switch the line endings.
How would I do this? Is there a flag I can test for? Something similar?
Python can automatically detect what newline convention is used in a file, thanks to the "universal newline mode", and you can access Python's guess through the newlines
attribute of file objects:
f = open('myfile.txt', newline=None)
# Python 2: f = open('myfile.txt', 'U')
f.readline() # Reads a line
# The following now contains the newline ending of the first line:
# It can be "\r\n" (Windows), "\n" (Unix), "\r" (Mac OS pre-OS X).
# If no newline is found, it contains None.
print repr(f.newlines)
This gives the newline ending of the first line (Unix, DOS, etc.), if any.
As John M. pointed out, if by any chance you have a pathological file that uses more than one newline coding, f.newlines
is a tuple with all the newline codings found so far, after reading many lines.
Reference: http://docs.python.org/2/library/functions.html#open
If you just want to convert a file, you can simply do:
with open('myfile.txt', newline=None) as infile:
text = infile.read() # Automatic ("Universal read") conversion of newlines to "\n"
with open('myfile.txt', 'w') as outfile:
outfile.write(text) # Writes newlines for the platform running the program
newlines
(plural) and it's not an encoding. What you have shown is how to find what (if anything) terminates the first line (if any). Your comment is incorrect: it doesn't include the case where the first line and only line is not terminated (and so newlines
refers to None
). Further, it assumes that all lines are terminated the same way. Concatenations of files of different line endings are not unknown. In the OP's application of standardising on one line ending, he will need to read ALL the input file (and ALL the docs, especially where it mentions tuple
).
May 10, 2010 at 12:18
newlines
, but only with a typo? Or for pathological files concatenated from files with different newline conventions? The original poster mentioned "files from Unix or DOS", not such strange files!
May 10, 2010 at 15:51
DeprecationWarning: 'U' mode is deprecated
. I wonder which version started that?
Sep 8, 2022 at 22:09
You could search the string for \r\n
. That's DOS style line ending.
EDIT: Take a look at this
"\r\x0A"
. Most compilers use line feed for '\n'
, but it's not required to have that particular value.
May 10, 2010 at 16:07
As a complete Python newbie & just for fun, I tried to find some minimalistic way of checking this for one file. This seems to work:
if "\r\n" in open("/path/file.txt","rb").read():
print "DOS line endings found"
Edit: simplified as per John Machin's comment (no need to use regular expressions).
re.search()
is not minimalist; it's OVERKILL; use "\r\n" in open(...).read()
. There's no "maybe" about using "rb"
; it's a must.
May 9, 2010 at 22:20
(Python 2 only:) If you just want to read text files, either DOS or Unix-formatted, this works:
print open('myfile.txt', 'U').read()
That is, Python's "universal" file reader will automatically use all the different end of line markers, translating them to "\n".
http://docs.python.org/library/functions.html#open
(Thanks handle!)
You can use the following function (which should work in Python 2 and Python 3) to get the newline representation used in an existing text file. All three possible kinds are recognized. The function reads the file only up to the first newline to decide. This is faster and less memory consuming when you have larger text files, but it does not detect mixed newline endings.
In Python 3, you can then pass the output of this function to the newline
parameter of the open
function when writing the file. This way you can alter the context of a text file without changing its newline representation.
def get_newline(filename):
with open(filename, "rb") as f:
while True:
c = f.read(1)
if not c or c == b'\n':
break
if c == b'\r':
if f.read(1) == b'\n':
return '\r\n'
return '\r'
return '\n'
Using grep & bash:
grep -c -m 1 $'\r$' file
echo $'\r\n\r\n' | grep -c $'\r$' # test
echo $'\r\n\r\n' | grep -c -m 1 $'\r$'