Roberto Bonvallet wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > import csv > > output = csv.writer(open('/Python25/working/output.csv', 'a')) > > a = ["apple", "cranberry", "tart"] > > for elem in range(len(a)): > > output.writerow(a[elem]) > > output.writerow expects a sequence as an argument. You are passing a > string, which is a sequence of characters. By the way, what output are you > expecting to get? Do you want a file with only one line (apple, > cranberry, tart), or each fruit in a different line?
I want it to print everything on one line and then create a new line where it will print some more stuff. In my real program I am iterating and it will eventually print the list a couple hundred times. But it would be useful to understand how to tell it to do either. > BTW, iterating over range(len(a)) is an anti-pattern in Python. You should > do it like this: > > for item in a: > output.writerow([item]) I can try that. Is using range(len(a)) a bad solution in the sense that its likely to create an unexpected error? Or because there is a more efficient way to accomplish the same thing? thanks! Lisa -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list