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I have a large pipe delimited file I need to split into pieces based on week_number in field 12. I've written the following script to see if each line matches and if it does write it to another csv file and compress it using gzip. The problem comes when I try to delete the uncompressed csv file and I get this message:

C:\data\weeks_files\week_01.csv
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\src\python\20150309_laptop_gbm_v1.py", line 45, in <module>
    os.remove(outFileName)
WindowsError: [Error 32] The process cannot access the file because it is being used by another process: 'C:\\data\\weeks_files\\week_01.csv'
[Finished in 0.2s with exit code 1]

Here's the code:

import csv
import re
import gzip
import os

input_file = "C:\\data\\20150226_train_mini.txt"

i_f = open( input_file, 'r' )
reader = csv.reader( i_f , delimiter = '|' )
# reader.next()

for i in range(101,153):

    trainWeek = i
    testWeek = i + 1

    trainPat =  str(trainWeek)[-2:] 
    testPat =  str(testWeek)[-2:] 
    print "trainPat: " , trainPat

    outFileName = "C:\\data\\weeks_files\\week_" + trainPat + ".csv"
    print outFileName

    outFile = open(outFileName, 'wb') 
    mywriter = csv.writer(outFile, delimiter = '|')

# for line in reader:
    for q in range(1,1000):
        line = next(reader)
    # print line
        # print "line[12]:" ,line[12]
        if trainPat in str(line[12]):
            # print "Success!"
            mywriter.writerow(line)
        else:
            line

    # import gzip
    f_in = open(outFileName, 'rb')
    f_out = gzip.open(outFileName+'.gz', 'wb')
    f_out.writelines(f_in)
    f_out.close()
    f_in.close()

    os.remove(outFileName)

Any suggestions for fixing this?

2
  • 3
    outFile = open(outFileName, 'wb') Where do you close it?
    – u_mulder
    Mar 9, 2015 at 16:56
  • @u_mulder: ouch, you're right! Thanks.
    – screechOwl
    Mar 9, 2015 at 16:58

1 Answer 1

3

As u_mulder hinted you must close a file before deleting it. So add

outFile.close()

just before your

# import gzip

comment

5
  • It's idiomatic to use with which will automatically close the file at the end of scope.
    – Peter Wood
    Mar 9, 2015 at 17:08
  • Yes my answer aims for minimal changes to answer the question,not re-writing the whole example code so that it is robust, idiomatic, etc. I would likely wrap each commented block in function and add some graceful failures, but the question is not how to clean up the example code. Mar 9, 2015 at 17:15
  • Well, there is also the understanding of why the error was made and how to avoid it in future.
    – Peter Wood
    Mar 9, 2015 at 18:40
  • Yes well the best way to avoid bugs is to use an IDE or pylint. Mar 9, 2015 at 19:03
  • Following idioms and using built-in language support comes before tools.
    – Peter Wood
    Mar 9, 2015 at 19:47

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