Folks, thanks for the many responses! Specifying the full file name (and not using parentheses when inappropriate, thanks Jack :)) I am now happily reading/writing files.
My next question: what is the best way for me to write an array I generated to a file? And what is the best way for me to load that array again, the next time I start up my computer? Basically I am doing very large computations and want to store the results. Thanks a lot guys! Jon On Fri, Mar 18, 2011 at 4:18 PM, Dan Stromberg <drsali...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Are you on windows? > > You probably should use / as your directory separator in Python, not \. In > Python, and most other programming languages, \ starts an escape sequence, > so to introduce a literal \, you either need to prefix your string with r > (r"\foo\bar") or double your backslashes ("\\foo\\bar"). > > / works fine on windows, and doesn't require escaping ("/foo/bar"). > > On Fri, Mar 18, 2011 at 2:56 PM, Jon Herman <jfc.her...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Jack, >> >> thanks. >> >> Alright, so what I did is create a file called hello.txt with a single >> line of text in there. I then did the following: >> >> f="fulldirectory\hello.txt" (where fulldirectory is of course the actual >> full directory on my computer) >> open("f", "w") >> >> And I get the following error: IOError: [Errno 13] Permission denied: 'f' >> If I open to read, I get: IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: >> 'f' >> >> Can anyone explain to me why this happens? >> >> >> >> >> >> On Fri, Mar 18, 2011 at 3:50 PM, Jack Trades >> <jacktradespub...@gmail.com>wrote: >> >>> >>> On Fri, Mar 18, 2011 at 4:33 PM, Jon Herman <jfc.her...@gmail.com>wrote: >>> >>>> Hello all, >>>> >>>> I am pretty new to Python and am trying to write data to a file. >>>> However, I seem to be misunderstanding how to do so. For starters, I'm not >>>> even sure where Python is looking for these files or storing them. The >>>> directories I have added to my PYTHONPATH variable (where I import modules >>>> from succesfully) does not appear to be it. >>>> >>>> So my question is: How do I tell Python where to look for opening files, >>>> and where to store new files? >>>> >>>> Thanks, >>>> >>>> Jon >>>> >>>> >>> By default Python will read and write files from the directory that your >>> program is run from. This cannot always be relied upon though (for instance >>> if your program was imported as a module from another program). >>> >>> To find out what directory your program is currently in use os.getcwd(). >>> Here's an example I just ran... >>> >>> >>> import os >>> >>> os.getcwd() >>> '/media/DATA/code/lispy/liSpy' >>> >>> The folder that is returned from os.getcwd() is the folder that "open" >>> will use. You can specify another folder by giving the full path. >>> >>> open("/full/path/to/file.txt", "w") >>> >>> PYTHONPATH is for importing modules, which is a separate concern. >>> >>> -- >>> Jack Trades >>> Pointless Programming Blog <http://pointlessprogramming.wordpress.com> >>> >>> >> >> -- >> >> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >> >> >
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