Dan Sommers wrote: > On 27 Sep 2005 19:01:38 -0700, > [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > >>with the binary stuff out of the way, what i have is this string data: > > >>20050922 # date line >>mike >>mike's message... >>20040825 # date line >>jeremy >>jeremy's message... >>... > > >>what i want to do is to use the date line as the first data in a tuple >>and the succeeding lines goes into the tuple, like: > > >>(20050922, mike, mike's message) > > >>then when it matches another date line it makes another new tuple with >>that date line as the header data and the succeeding data, etc.. > > >>(20050922, mike, mike's message) >>(20040825, jeremy, jeremy's message) >>... > > >>then i would sort the tuples according to the date. > > >>is there an easier/proper way of doing this without generating alot of >>tuples? > > > You want a dictionary. Python dictionaries map keys to values (in other > languages, these data structures are known as hashes, maps, or > associative arrays). The keys will be the dates; the values will depend > on whether or not you have multiple messages for one date. > > If the dates are unique (which, looking at your data, is probably not > true), then each item in the dictionary can be just one (who, message) > tuple. > > If the dates are not unique, then you'll have to manage each item of the > dictionary as a list of (who, message) tuples. > > And before you ask: no, dictionaries are *not* sorted; you'll have to > sort a separate list of the keys or the items at the appropriate time. > I'm not sure this advice is entirely helpful, since it introduces complexities not really required by the simplistic tuple notation the OP seems to be struggling for.
Following the old adage "First, make it work; then (if it doesn't work fast enough) make it faster)", and making the *dangerous* assumption that each message genuinely is exactly three lines, we might write: msglist = [] f = open("theDataFile.txt", "r") for date in f: who = f.next() # pulls a line from the file msg = f.next() # pulls a line from the file msglist,append((date, who, msg)) # now have list of messages as tuples msglist.sort() After this, msglist should be date-sorted list of messages. Though who knows what needs to happen to them next ... regards Steve -- Steve Holden +44 150 684 7255 +1 800 494 3119 Holden Web LLC www.holdenweb.com PyCon TX 2006 www.pycon.org -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list