<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > I guess there is no way to check if the file opened fine? What if the > filesystem or file is locked for this user/session. Pretty puny > language if it cannot tell you that it cannot do what you tell it to. > .......... > Same for the close. Is there no way check a good close?
An exception (IOError) is raised when a file operation fails. The open() and and close() statements should be enclosed in a try-except statement. Please, take Xah Lee's postings with more than just a grain of salt. As a matter of fact, you are better off ignoring them than trying to learn from them. He is an egomaniac who is learning python and who thinks that he can already teach others. Personally I doubt he will ever learn python well enough to teach others. Just look at his English. He has a similar list with a-word-a-day just like the perl-python a-lesson-a-day and he seems indeed to know a lot of words. But his grammar is horrendous (there's a word for you, Xah Lee!). And according to his own website he's been living in North America for more than 15 years! English is a second language for me too but you won't see me writing something like "this groups is for Perlers who wants to learn Python". It may be unfair to pick on his English, but it is the best way I can make the point to someone who does not know python that Xah Lee does not know what he's talking about. I find Xah Lee annoying and I could just ignore him, but I am concerned that some people may actually take his statements seriously and learn from them. I can't imagine why or how, but there are actually 26 members in the perl-python Yahoo! group who have registered to get these bogus lessons sent to them daily! Dan -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list