On Mon, Mar 29, 2010 at 9:01 PM, Gryff <gareth.s...@googlemail.com> wrote: > Hi > > Its been 20 years since I programmed, so I'm stepping back in via > Python. However I'm beating my brains on tuples/lists (what I used to > know as arrays). I've fooled around with small code snippets and tried > a few things, but I can't figure out how to grab elements of > tuples ... > > For example, I'm reading in a small csv file like this: > > import csv > > csvfile = open("example.csv") > > #sniff the dialect > dialect = csv.Sniffer().sniff(csvfile.read(1024)) > csvfile.seek(0) > > # get file in using reader method > > mylist=[] > reader = csv.reader(csvfile, dialect) > > # grab the lines into a reader and pass to mylist > > for row in reader: > > mylist.append(row) > > # now print something out to prove this worked > > print mylist[:3] > > and the output I get is: > > ['Date', 'Open', 'High', 'Low', 'Close', 'Volume', 'Adj Close'] > ['2010-03-05', '224.20', '230.70', '223.80', '228.30', '5051500', > '228.30'] > ['2010-03-04', '223.00', '228.50', '220.50', '224.50', '4040500', > '224.50'] > > So far so good but not useful. My "mylist" has all the data in there, > but I can only figure out how to get each line out!?! > -> I want to get access to the individual items in each line. In my > bad old days I'd have used an array and grabbed "mylist > [row,item]" ...job done. Try as I like and after *lots* of reading > around, I can't figure out whether: >
mylist is a list of lists. mylist[0] gives you the first list (the row with the column headings, in your case). You can get the first item in that list by mylist[0][0]. > a) I'm missing something...really...simple > b) "You can't do that" (and I should just use numpy and arrays?) > c) errrr.... > > Like I said, basic/newbie question from a programmer who spent 20 > years away from it. > -- regards, kushal -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list