I don't know what is wrong with your code yet, but first you should clean it up. Either replace those backslashes with forward slashes, or put r before the first quote in the path string. This prevents special characters from being evaluated as such.
Second, you should debug a little. Feel free to put print statements in! correct_settings = open(r"C:\Python25\Scripts\Output\correct_settings.txt","r") current_settings = open(r"C:\Python25\Scripts\Output\output.txt","r") for line in correct_settings: print "line=", line for val in current_settings: print "val=", val if val == line: print line, "found." ## please don't concatenate strings in the print statement! separate them with commas! break ## You have already found that the same line is in both files: you don't need to keep searching correct_settings.close() current_settings.close() On 5 Apr 2007 11:01:09 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
What I am trying to do is compare two files to each other. If the 2nd file contains the same line the first file contains, I want to print it. I wrote up the following code: correct_settings = open("C:\Python25\Scripts\Output \correct_settings.txt","r") current_settings = open("C:\Python25\Scripts\Output\output.txt","r") for line in correct_settings: for val in current_settings: if val == line: print line + " found." correct_settings.close() current_settings.close() For some reason this only looks at the first line of the correct_settings.txt file. Any ideas as to how i can loop through each line of the correct_settings file instead of just looking at the first? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
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