1

So I have a file with some lines of text:

here's a sentence
look! another one
here's a third one too
and another one
one more

and I have some code that takes the each line and puts it into a list and then reverses the order of the whole list but now I don't know how to write each line back to the file and delete the existing ones in the text file.

Also when I run this code:

file_lines = open(file_name).readlines()
print(file_lines)
file_lines.reverse()
print(file_lines)

everything works and the line order is reversed, but when I run this code:

text_file = open(file_name, "w")
file_lines = open(file_name).readlines()
print(file_lines)
file_lines.reverse()
print(file_lines)
for line in file_lines:
    text_file.write(line)

it prints empty lists for some reason.

5
  • 1
    Show us how you create the text_file variable. Nov 18, 2018 at 3:54
  • how did you open the text_file? use open(filename, "w")
    – Netwave
    Nov 18, 2018 at 3:54
  • 1
    Also can you please give us a sample of what's in file_lines?
    – slider
    Nov 18, 2018 at 3:55
  • Opening the file in w+ mode erases the existing contents. Nov 18, 2018 at 4:05
  • It prints empty list because you have used \w+ mode which erases the content of file if it exists (otherwise it creates the file). So no more lines in the file and [] is on your screen. I have updated it in my answer. Please have a look.
    – hygull
    Nov 18, 2018 at 4:34

2 Answers 2

0

You can fix it by doing just 2 little changes in your script.

  1. Use \r+ in place of \w+

  2. Before performing write operation, place file position indicator to the beginning

    text_file.seek(0)

» rw_file.txt - before operation

here's a sentence
look! another one
here's a third one too
and another one
one more

Below is your modified script to reverse the content of file (It worked).

def reverseFile(file_name):
    text_file = open(file_name, "r+") # Do not use 'w+', it will erase your file content 
    file_lines = [line.rstrip('\n') for line in text_file.readlines()]
    file_lines.reverse()
    print(file_lines)

    text_file.seek(0) # Place file position indicator at beginning

    for line_item in file_lines:
        text_file.write(line_item+"\n")


reverseFile("rw_file.txt")

» rw_file.txt - after operation

one more
and another one
here's a third one too
look! another one
here's a sentence
0

If you open the file in 'w' mode, the file is erased. From the docs:

'w' for only writing (an existing file with the same name will be erased)

You should also use the with keyword:

It is good practice to use the with keyword when dealing with file objects. The advantage is that the file is properly closed after its suite finishes...

I would recommend you read the contents of the file first, process that data, and then write:

def reverseFile(file_name):
    with open(file_name, 'r') as f:
        file_lines = [line.rstrip('\n') for line in f.readlines()]
    file_lines.reverse()
    with open(file_name, "w") as f:
        for line in file_lines:
            f.write(line + '\n')

reverseFile('text_lines.txt') 
1
  • This is the proper way of doing it. You can save a bunch of string copying by only stripping the first newline and appending only the last one. The ones in between take care of themselves. Nov 18, 2018 at 4:39

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