[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > Hiya, > > The title says it all really, but im a newbie to python sort of. I can > read in files and write files no probs. > > But what I want to do is read in a couple of files and output them to > one single file, but then be able to take this one single file and > recreate the files I put into it. > > Im really at a loss as to how I go about recovering the files? > obviously if i scan for a string that specifys the start and end of > each file, theres the chance that the file might contain this term to > which would split the files into unwanted chucks of file, which wouldnt > be wanted. > > Any ideas? code snippets? > > Im very grateful! Ok, for the seperating of the records you could something like this. This function returns a generator that can iterate thru your records. Py> #Single file multi-record seperator ... def recordbreaker(record, seperator='#NextRecord#'): ... seplen = len(seperator) ... rec = open(record ,'rb') ... a =[] ... for line in rec: ... sep = line.find(seperator) ... if sep != -1: ... a.append(line[:sep]) ... out = ''.join(a) ... a =[] ... a.append(line[sep+seplen:].lstrip()) ... yield out ... else: ... a.append(line) ... if a: ... yield ''.join(a) ... rec.close() ... Py> # to use it directly Py> records = recordbreaker('myrecords.txt') Py> first_record = records.next() Py> second_record = records.next() Py> # or you can do this Py> for record in records: Py> print record
Getting them in a single file is easy, and will be an excercise left to the reader. The fileinput module is your friend it is in the standard library. Be sure to check it out if you haven't already. hth, M.E.Farmer -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list