> fout = open('somefile','w') > for line in convertedData: > fout.write("%s\n" % line) > fout.close() > > -- or -- > > fout = open('somefile','w') > fout.write("%s" % '\n'.join(convertedData)) > fout.close()
I shouldn't think it matters too much which of these you use - time them and see what happens. > An issue that I'm probably most concerned with is scalabitiy, what if > the file was huge, like some sort of log file. Sucking in the entire file into a list won't scale well, as a huge log file could quickly eat all of your available memory. You'd be better off processing each line as you go, and writing it to a temp file, renaming the temp file once you have finished. Something like: in_f = "access.log" out_f = "access.log.tmp" infile = open(in_f) outfile = open(out_f) for line in infile: outfile.write(process(line)) infile.close() outfile.close() os.remove(in_f) os.rename(out_f, in_f) (Not tested, but you get the idea...) -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list