On 07/03/2019 16:58, jim.womeld...@gmail.com wrote: > On Thursday, March 7, 2019 at 8:55:31 AM UTC-6, tony wrote: >> On 07/03/2019 14:16, jim.womeld...@gmail.com wrote: >>> On Saturday, October 1, 2016 at 7:41:40 PM UTC-5, Ned Batchelder wrote: >>>> On Saturday, October 1, 2016 at 6:25:16 PM UTC-4, Thorsten Kampe wrote: >>>>> * Ben Finney (Sun, 02 Oct 2016 07:12:46 +1100) >>>>>> >>>>>> Thorsten Kampe <thors...@thorstenkampe.de> writes: >>>>>> >>>>>>> ConfigParser escapes `\n` in ini values as `\\n`. >>>>> >>>>> Indenting solves the problem. I'd rather keep it one line per value >>>>> but it solves the problem. >>>> >>>> If you want to have \n mean a newline in your config file, you can >>>> do the conversion after you read the value: >>>> >>>> >>> "a\\nb".decode("string-escape") >>>> 'a\nb' >>>> >>>> --Ned. >>> >>> Wow! Thanks so much Ned. I've been looking for the solution to this issue >>> for several days and had nearly given up. >>> Jim >>> >> How does that translate to Python3? > > I have no idea. I'm on 2.7.3 > I'd be interested in knowing if someone would try it on 3. > I do very little Python programming. I've written a messaging system for > Linuxcnc and could not get it to work using bash, so I tried Python and now, > thanks to you, I have it working. > I can provide you with the code if you want to play with it. When it is run > with an integer as a parameter it displays a message from an INI file. > Jim >
Python 3.5.3 (default, Sep 27 2018, 17:25:39) [GCC 6.3.0 20170516] on linux Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>> >>> "a\\nb".decode("string-escape") Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> AttributeError: 'str' object has no attribute 'decode' >>> -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list