Steve Holden wrote: > r0g wrote: >> seafoid wrote: >>> Hi Guys, >>> >>> When python reads in a file, can lines be referred to via an index? >>> >>> Example: >>> >>> for line in file: >>> if line[0] == '0': >>> a.write(line) >>> >>> This works, however, I am unsure if line[0] refers only to the first line or >>> the first character in all lines. >>> >>> Is there an easy way to refer to a line with the first character being a >>> single letter that you know? >>> >>> Thanks in advance, >>> Seafoid. >> >> If you want to know the index number of an item in a sequence you are >> looping through (whether it be a file of lines or a list of characters, >> whatever) use enumerate... >> >>>>> for index, value in enumerate("ABCD"): >> print index, value >> ... >> 0 A >> 1 B >> 2 C >> 3 D >> >> >> If you want to extract an index number from the first part of of a given >> line use split( split_character, maximum_splits_to_do ) and then angle >> brackets to reference the first part (index 0)... >> >> >>>>> a = "20 GOTO 10" >>>>> int( a.split(' ',1)[0] ) >> 20 >> > <nit> > those are brackets, not angle brackets > </nit> > > regards > Steve
<nit++> They're actually square brackets, "brackets" on its own is more commonly used as a synonym for parentheses (round brackets). But yes, I did get that wrong in the above ;) </nit++> Cheers, Roger :) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list