On 2017-11-03 00:40, Stefan Ram wrote:
> I knew I reïnvented something. Maybe it was »map«.
Quite. If you really need that one-argument callable, you can curry
map() with functools.partial.
Also, that tréma is highly unorthodox.
--
Thomas Jollans
--
https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/py
On 11/2/2017 9:18 AM, ROGER GRAYDON CHRISTMAN wrote:
I have a partial answer to my own question:
This seems to work for me:
---
link = urllib.request.urlopen(urlpath)
data = link.read().decode('utf-8').split('\n')
reader = csv.DictReader(data)
for row in reader:
---
I think here my concern is
I have a partial answer to my own question:
This seems to work for me:
---
link = urllib.request.urlopen(urlpath)
data = link.read().decode('utf-8').split('\n')
reader = csv.DictReader(data)
for row in reader:
---
I think here my concern is that now 'data' is now a variable
in my program's memor
ROGER GRAYDON CHRISTMAN wrote:
> Just a quick question on how best to read a remote CSV file.
> So far, I tried:
>
> filelink = urllib.request.urlopen(path)
> dictread = csv.DictReader(filelink)
> for row in dictread:...
> But I'm running into the difference between strings and bytes.
> I'd
Just a quick question on how best to read a remote CSV file.
So far, I tried:
filelink = urllib.request.urlopen(path)
dictread = csv.DictReader(filelink)
for row in dictread:...
But I'm running into the difference between strings and bytes.
I'd like to squeeze a note that talks about the utf-