> Challenge: > A valid response will be either a solution to the problem below, or a > link to some code of which you > are particularly proud. > > Problem: In the dynamic language of your choice, write a short program > that will: > 1. define a list of the following user ids 42346, 77290, 729 (you can > hardcode these, but it should > still work with more or less ids) > 2. retrieve an xml document related to each user at this url "http:// > api.etsy.com/feeds/xml_user_details.php?id=" > 3. retrieve the data contained in the city element from each xml > document > 4. keep a running total of how many users are found in each city > 5. display the total count of users living in each city > > You can assume user ids are valid and that the url is available. The > output should look something > like: > > Charlotte: 1 > New York: 2
i wanted to make it a one liner, but i had to import modules :( import sys, xml, urllib dummy = [sys.stdout.write(city + ': ' + str(num) + '\n') for city, num in set([[(a, o.count(a)) for a in p] for o, p in [2*tuple([[city for city in ((xml.dom.minidom.parseString(urllib.urlopen('http://api.etsy.com/feeds/xml_user_details.php?id=' + str(id)).read()).getElementsByTagName('city')[0].childNodes + [(lambda t: (setattr(t, 'data', 'no city'), t))(xml.dom.minidom.Text())[1]])[0].data.lower().replace(' ', ' ') for id in [71234, 71234, 71234, 71234, 71234, 71234, 42792])]])]][0])] -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list