In the book I am using, they give the following function as an example: def copyFile(oldFile, newFile): f1 = open(oldFile, 'r') f2 = open(newFile, 'w') while True: text = f1.read(50) if text == "": break f2.write(text) f1.close() f2.close() return
My question is why does this function successfully copy a 200 character file, oldFile, to newFile? The line of code that reads, text = f1.read(50), does not seem to be iterative in any way to me. How is this fuction succeding in adding each additional set up 50 characters to the previous set of 50 characters read from oldFile? How does it even succeed in copying a 25 character file? If oldFile contains 25 characters, how does the program ever break out of the 'while True:' loop? I just don't see it. Again, much thanks to anyone who can clear this up. -Sean -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list