On 2017-10-04, Steve D'Aprano <steve+pyt...@pearwood.info> wrote: >> It is sometimes called the loop and a half problem. The idea is >> that you must attempt to read a line from the file before you know >> whether you are at the end of file or not. > > Utter nonsense. There's no "must" here. I'll accept the remote > possibility that maybe one time in a million you have to do what he > says, but the other 999999 times you just read from the file in a > for-loop: > > for line in file: > process(line) > >> This can also be done if a boolean variable is introduced to help >> with the while loop. This boolean variable is the condition that >> gets you out of the while loop and the first time through it must be >> set to get your code to execute the while loop at least one." > > I've been programming in Python for twenty years, and I don't think I have > ever once read from a file using a while loop.
You're right, that construct isn't used for reading from files in Python. It _is_ commonly used for reading from things like sockets: mysock.connect(...) while True: data = mysock.recv(9999) if not data: break do_something_with(data) mysock.close() -- Grant Edwards grant.b.edwards Yow! Now I am depressed ... at gmail.com -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list