Separate Rows in reader

Jiewei Huang jiewei24 at gmail.com
Tue Mar 26 03:24:49 EDT 2013


On Tuesday, March 26, 2013 1:48:10 PM UTC+10, MRAB wrote:
> On 26/03/2013 03:33, Jiewei Huang wrote:
> 
> > On Tuesday, March 26, 2013 11:40:51 AM UTC+10, Dave Angel wrote:
> 
> >> On 03/25/2013 09:05 PM, Jiewei Huang wrote:
> 
> >>> On Monday, March 25, 2013 11:51:51 PM UTC+10, rusi wrote:
> 
> >>
> 
> >> If you insist on using GoogleGroups, then make sure you keep your quotes
> 
> >> small.  I'm about to stop reading messages that are double-spaced by
> 
> >> buggy software.
> 
> >>
> 
> >> >>> <SNIP>
> 
> >> >> Have you tried the split (and perhaps strip) methods from
> 
> >> >>
> 
> >> >> http://docs.python.org/2/library/stdtypes.html#string-methods
> 
> >> >>
> 
> >> >> ?
> 
> >>
> 
> >> You got lots of specific advice from your previous thread.  So which
> 
> >> version did you end up using?  It'd make a good starting place for this
> 
> >> "problem."
> 
> >>
> 
> >> > can show me one line of how to implement it base on my problem?
> 
> >> >
> 
> >>
> 
> >> As long as the input data is constrained not to have any embedded
> 
> >> commas, just use:
> 
> >>
> 
> >>      mylist = line.split(",")
> 
> >>
> 
> >> instead of print, send your output to a list.  Then for each line in the
> 
> >> list, fix the bracket problem to your strange specs.
> 
> >>
> 
> >>      outline = outline.replace("[", "(")
> 
> >
> 
> > Hi Dave thanks for the tips,
> 
> >
> 
> > I manage to code this:
> 
> > f = open('Book1.csv', 'rU')
> 
> > for row in f:
> 
> >      print zip([row for (row) in f])
> 
> >
> 
> > however my output is
> 
> > [('John Konon Ministry of Moon Walks 4567882 27-Feb\n',), ('Stacy Kisha Ministry of Man Power 1234567 17-Jan\n',)]
> 
> >
> 
> > is there any method to remove the \n ?
> 
> >
> 
> Use the .rstrip method:
> 
> 
> 
>      print zip(row.rstrip('\n') for row in f)

thanks ! got it working!



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