On Mar 14, 10:57 am, Marc 'BlackJack' Rintsch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Laurent Pointal wrote: > > > Steve Holden a écrit : > >> Regular expressions aren't really needed here. Untested code follows: > > >> for line in open('/proc/meminfo').readlines: > > for line in open('/proc/meminfo').readlines(): > > for line in open('/proc/meminfo'):
Yeah, that's nicer. > Of course it's cleaner to assign the file object to a name and close the > file explicitly after the loop. For certain definitions of "cleaner" (insert old argument about how ref-counting semantics or at least immediate gc of locally scoped variables when leaving scope _should be_ (not _are_) language- guaranteed because it makes for cleaner, more programmer-friendly code and often avoids ugly hacks like assigning a spurious name and/or using "with" constructs). But if you're going to do that, "with" is the better option IMO: from __future__ import with_statement ... with open('/proc/meminfo') as infile: for line in infile: Of course, that alternative requires Python 2.5 -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list