Den 06/01/13 16.12, chaouche yacine skrev:
I'm not confident this would run on gedit. It works on a python
interpreter if you have a file named data.txt in the same directory
containing your sample data.
It surely has to do with how gedit works then, because the "$" sign
isn't used in python, this business should be a gedit convention. And
sorry, I can't help on that, I'm not a user of gedit myself. Fortunately
others have answered and I beleive one of the solutions worked for you.
It does not seem to be the case :-(
Thank you for trying to help.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From:* Kurt Hansen <kurt@ugyldig.invalid>
*To:* python-list@python.org
*Sent:* Sunday, January 6, 2013 3:21 PM
*Subject:* Re: How to modify this script?
Den 06/01/13 15.01, chaouche yacine wrote:
> Well, I'm not answering your question since I am rewriting the script,
> because I prefer it this way :)
>
> def addline(line):
> return "<tr>%s</tr>\n" % line
[cut]
I surpose I shall put your code between $< and >?
> printed
>
> >>> <table>
> <tr><td colspan='3'>Price table</td></tr>
> <tr><td>1 </td><td> Green apple </td><td> $1</td></tr>
> <tr><td>5 </td><td> Green apples </td><td> $4</td></tr>
> <tr><td>10 </td><td> Green apples </td><td> $7</td></tr>
> </table>
> >>>
Aha, so you tested it yourself?
When running this in Gedit on four lines of tab-separated text the
output is:
%s</tr>\n" % line
def addcolumn(item,nb_columns):
if nb_columns != 3:
return "<td colspan='%s'>%s</td>" % (3 - nb_columns + 1, item)
return "<td>%s</td>" % item
output = "<table>\n"
for line in file("data.txt"):
items = line.strip().split("\t")
columns = ""
for item in items :
columns += addcolumn(item,len(items))
output += addline(columns)
output += "</table>"
print output
>
-- Venlig hilsen
Kurt Hansen
-- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
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Venlig hilsen
Kurt Hansen
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