Hello, I am trying to read a csv file. I have the following functioning code:
---- BEGIN ---- import csv reader = csv.reader(open("test.csv", "rb"), delimiter=';') for row in reader: print row ---- END ---- This code will successfully parse my csv file formatted as such: "this";"is";"a";"test" Resulting in an output of: ['this', 'is', 'a', 'test'] However, if I modify the csv to: "t"h"is";"is";"a";"test" The output changes to: ['th"is"', 'is', 'a', 'test'] My question is, can you change the behavior of the parser to only remove quotes when they are next to the delimiter? I would like both quotes around the h in the example above to remain, however it is instead removing only the first two instances of quotes it runs across and leaves the others. The closest solution I have found is to add to the reader command "escapechar='\\'" then manually add a single \ character before the quotes I'd like to keep. But instead of writing something to add those slashes before csv parsing I was wondering if the parser can handle it instead. Thanks in advance for the help. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list