On 04/10/2017 14:44, john polo wrote:
In Python Programming Fundamentals 2nd ed., the author, Kent D. Lee,
brings up loop and a half in ch. 3, Repetitive Tasks (p. 82). He wrote:
"Whether you are writing code in Python or some other language, this
Reading
Records From a File pattern comes up over and over again. 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. 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."
while not eof(f):
# read next bit of the file
But you need an eof(f) function that tells you if you are at the end of
the file. Some people might be concerned that the status could change
between checking for eof, and doing a subsequent read (but I've never
had such problems).
This is suitable for reading perhaps binary files in uneven chunks,
which are dependent on the last bit read, so iterating over the file by
line or by byte won't work.
--
bartc
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