Jaydip Chakrabarty wrote: > On Tue, 06 Oct 2015 01:34:17 +1100, Chris Angelico wrote: > >> On Tue, Oct 6, 2015 at 1:06 AM, Tim Chase >> <python.l...@tim.thechases.com> wrote: >>> That way, if you determine by line 3 that your million-row CSV file has >>> no blank columns, you can get away with not processing all million >>> rows. >> >> Sure, although that effectively means the entire job is moot. I kinda >> assume that the OP knows that there are some blank columns (maybe lots >> of them). The extra check is unnecessary unless it's actually plausible >> that there'll be no blanks whatsoever. >> >> Incidentally, you have an ordered_headers list which is the blank >> columns in order; I think the OP was looking for a list of the >> _non_blank columns. But that's a trivial difference, easy to tweak. >> >> ChrisA > > Thanks to you all. I got it this far. But while writing back to another > csv file, I got this error - "ValueError: dict contains fields not in > fieldnames: None". Here is my code. > > rdr = csv.DictReader(fin, delimiter=',') > header_set = set(rdr.fieldnames) > for r in rdr: > header_set = set(h for h in header_set if not r[h]) > if not header_set: > break > > for r in rdr: > data = list(r[i] for i in header_set) > > dw = csv.DictWriter(fout, header_set) > dw.writeheader() > dw.writerows(data)
Sorry, this is not the code you ran. I could guess what the missing parts might be, but it is easier for both sides if you provide a small script that actually can be executed and a small dataset that shows the behaviour you describe. Then post the session and especially the traceback. Example: $ cat my_data.csv 0 $ cat my_code.py print 1/int(open("my_data.csv").read()) $ python my_code.py Traceback (most recent call last): File "my_code.py", line 1, in <module> print 1/int(open("my_data.csv").read()) ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero Don't retype, use cut and paste. Thank you. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list