On 21/07/12 20:08, Lipska the Kat wrote:
Greetings Pythoners
A short while back I posted a message that described a task I had set
myself. I wanted to implement the following bash shell script in Python
Here's the script
sort -nr $1 | head -${2:-10}
this script takes a filename and an optional number of lines to display
and sorts the lines in numerical order, printing them to standard out.
if no optional number of lines are input the script prints 10 lines
Here's the file.
50 Parrots
12 Storage Jars
6 Lemon Currys
2 Pythons
14 Spam Fritters
23 Flying Circuses
1 Meaning Of Life
123 Holy Grails
76 Secret Policemans Balls
8 Something Completely Differents
12 Lives of Brian
49 Spatulas
... and here's my very first attempt at a Python program
I'd be interested to know what you think, you can't hurt my feelings
just be brutal (but fair). There is very little error checking as you
can see and I'm sure you can crash the program easily.
'Better' implementations most welcome
#! /usr/bin/env python3.2
import fileinput
from sys import argv
from operator import itemgetter
l=[]
t = tuple
What is this line supposed to do? If you're trying to make an empty
tuple, you can write:
t = ()
But I don't think this is needed at all.
filename=argv[1]
lineCount=10
with fileinput.input(files=(filename)) as f:
for line in f:
t=(line.split('\t'))
t[0]=int(t[0])
l.append(t)
l=sorted(l, key=itemgetter(0))
try:
inCount = int(argv[2])
lineCount = inCount
I don't think you need to split this into two lines here.
try:
lineCount = int(argv[2])
should work.
except IndexError:
#just catch the error and continue
None
I would use pass instead of None here - I want to "do nothing" rather
than create a None object.
for c in range(lineCount):
t=l[c]
print(t[0], t[1], sep='\t', end='')
Thanks
Lipska
My only other point is that you might find it helpful to use slightly
more verbose names than l or t - its not immediately obvious to the
reader what these are intended to represent.
Regards,
Ian
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