On Jun 11, 11:44 am, Chris Rebert <c...@rebertia.com> wrote: > On Wed, Jun 10, 2009 at 8:11 PM, higer<higerinbeij...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I just want to compare two files,one from windows and the other from > > unix. But I do not want to compare them through reading them line by > > line. Then I found there is a filecmp module which is used as file and > > directory comparisons. However,when I use two same files (one from > > unix,one from windows,the content of them is the same) to test its cmp > > function, filecmp.cmp told me false. > > > Later, I found that windows use '\n\r' as new line flag but unix use > > '\n', so filecmp.cmp think that they are different,then return false. > > So, can anyone tell me that is there any method like IgnoreNewline > > which can ignore the difference of new line flag in diffrent > > platforms? If not,I think filecmp may be not a good file comparison > > Nope, there's no such flag. You could run the files through either > `dos2unix` or `unix2dos` beforehand though, which would solve the > problem. > Or you could write the trivial line comparison code yourself and just > make sure to open the files in Universal Newline mode (add 'U' to the > `mode` argument to `open()`). > You could also file a bug (a patch to add newline insensitivity would > probably be welcome). > > Cheers, > Chris > --http://blog.rebertia.com
Thank you very much. Adding 'U' argument can perfectly work, and I think it is definitely to report this as a bug to Python.org as you say. Cheers, higer -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list