En Tue, 03 Mar 2009 04:13:46 -0200, JohnV <loftmas...@gmail.com> escribió:
Thanks for your suggestion, but I am not able to get it to work for me. My original script was: f = open('C:\Users\Owner\Desktop\mydata.txt', 'r') read_data = f.read() f.close()
\ is the escape character in Python. You must double it when you want it to stand by itself:
'C:\\Users\\Owner\\Desktop\\mydata.txt' Alternatively, use a raw string: r'C:\Users\Owner\Desktop\mydata.txt' The same applies to the output file.
I imported urllib2 However, this the scriot does not seem to work for me for two reasons First the url that recieves the post is http://www.thenational.us/pages/start/test/getpost.html so I belive the "url line" should read: url = "http://www.thenational.us:80/pages/start/test/getpost.html"
Yes!
I do not know how to capture the text that is displayed in the interpreter window when I run the program, as the window closes after the script is run. How do I keep the window open so I can read what messages are printed there?
Open a command prompt first (Start > Run > type "CMD" and enter), go to the directory where your script is located (type: CD c:\some\directory) and then you're ready to execute it using: python scriptname.py
Finally, do I need conn.close() with the new code you suggested?
No, it should be response.close() instead. The whole script is now: <code> import httplib, urllib, urllib2 f = open(r'C:\Users\Owner\Desktop\mydata.txt', 'r') read_data = f.read() f.close() params = urllib.urlencode({'textarea1': read_data}) headers = {"Content-type": "application/x-www-form-urlencoded", "Accept": "text/plain"} url = "http://www.thenational.us:80/pages/start/test/getpost.html" req = urllib2.Request(url, params, headers) response = urllib2.urlopen(req) data = response.read() response.close() print data f = open(r'C:\Users\Owner\Desktop\pydata.txt', 'a') f.write(data) f.close() </code> -- Gabriel Genellina -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list