> As I said before, process both files into lists, one that you treat as
> constant (and therefore capitalized) and the other containing the data
> you intend to modify.
>
> It'd be much cleaner if you did all that input file parsing stuff in one
> function, returning only the lists. Call it just
> Can you print ex_phone first. You are opening the files in text mode
> so I wonder if the line endings are causing you to read and extra
> "line" in between. Can you try reading the csv as "rb" instead of
> "rt"?
Yes I did this: use the global list PHONELIST and opening the CSV in
binary - it wo
On 11/29/2012 05:22 AM, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> Tried to document a little bit the script, but I'm not that good in that too
> :)
>
> The only problem I have is that I cant compare other field than the
> first one in
> for ex_phone in phones:
> telstr = ex_phone[0].lower()
>
Anatoli Hristov wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Tried to document a little bit the script, but I'm not that good in that too
> :)
>
> The only problem I have is that I cant compare other field than the
> first one in
> for ex_phone in phones:
> telstr = ex_phone[0].lower()
> When I use telstr = ex_p
Can you please cut the message you are responding to the relevant
parts?
On Thu, Nov 29, 2012 at 11:22:28AM +0100, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
> The only problem I have is that I cant compare other field than the
> first one in
> for ex_phone in phones:
> telstr = ex_phone[0].lower()
> When I u
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 9:41 PM, Neil Cerutti wrote:
> On 2012-11-27, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
>> Thank you all for the help, but I figured that out and the
>> program now works perfect. I would appreciate if you have some
>> notes about my script as I'm noob :) Here is the code:
>>
>> import csv
>
On 2012-11-27, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
> Thank you all for the help, but I figured that out and the
> program now works perfect. I would appreciate if you have some
> notes about my script as I'm noob :) Here is the code:
>
> import csv
>
> origf = open('c:/Working/Test_phonebook.csv', 'rt')
> secf
On 11/27/2012 01:57 PM, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
>
>
> Thank you all for the help, but I figured that out and the program now
> works perfect.
Wow!
> I would appreciate if you have some notes about my
> script as I'm noob :)
> Here is the code:
>
> import csv
>
> origf = open('c:/Working/Test_pho
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 4:05 PM, Neil Cerutti wrote:
> On 2012-11-27, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
>> Thanks for your help. I will do my best for the forum :)
>>
>> I advanced a little bit with the algorithm and at least I can
>> now extract and compare the fields :) For my beginner skills I
>> think t
On 2012-11-27, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
> Thanks for your help. I will do my best for the forum :)
>
> I advanced a little bit with the algorithm and at least I can
> now extract and compare the fields :) For my beginner skills I
> think this is too much for me. Now next step is to add the
> second
On Tue, Nov 27, 2012 at 4:23 AM, Dave Angel wrote:
> On 11/26/2012 05:27 PM, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
>> I understand, but in my case I have for sure the field "Name" in the
>> second file that contains at least the first or the last name on it...
>> So probably it should be possible:)
>> The Name "
On 11/26/2012 05:27 PM, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
> I understand, but in my case I have for sure the field "Name" in the
> second file that contains at least the first or the last name on it...
> So probably it should be possible:)
> The Name "Billgatesmicrosoft" contains the word "Gates" so logically
Anatoli Hristov wrote:
I understand, but in my case I have for sure the field "Name" in the
second file that contains at least the first or the last name on it...
So probably it should be possible:)
The Name "Billgatesmicrosoft" contains the word "Gates" so logically I
might find a solution for i
I understand, but in my case I have for sure the field "Name" in the
second file that contains at least the first or the last name on it...
So probably it should be possible:)
The Name "Billgatesmicrosoft" contains the word "Gates" so logically I
might find a solution for it.
Thanks
On Mon, Nov 2
On 11/26/2012 04:08 PM, Anatoli Hristov wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I'm trying to complete a namebook CSV file with missing phone numbers
> which are in another CSV file.
> the namebook file is structured:
> First name;Lastname; Address; City; Country; Phone number, where the
> phone number is missing.
>
>
On 15 Nov 2005 04:51:05 -0800, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>Simon Brunning wrote:
>> On 15/11/05, Ben Bush <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> > I found I named the following python file as sets.py, which brought the
>> > problem (is that right?). i changed it to other name and it w
Simon Brunning wrote:
> On 15/11/05, Ben Bush <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I found I named the following python file as sets.py, which brought the
> > problem (is that right?). i changed it to other name and it works.
> > But the logic output is wrong.
> > from sets import Set as set
> > lisA=[1
On 15/11/05, Ben Bush <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I found I named the following python file as sets.py, which brought the
> problem (is that right?). i changed it to other name and it works.
> But the logic output is wrong.
> from sets import Set as set
> lisA=[1,2,5,9]
> lisB=[9,5,0,2]
> lisC=[9,
Ben,
> But the logic output is wrong.
> from sets import Set as set
> lisA=[1,2,5,9]
> lisB=[9,5,0,2]
> lisC=[9,5,0,1]
> def two(sequence1, sequence2):
> set1, set2 = set(sequence1), set(sequence2)
> return len(set1.intersection(set2)) == 2
> print two(lisA,lisB)
> False(should be true!)
On 11/15/05, Simon Brunning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 15/11/05, Ben Bush <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> an error reported:
> Traceback (most recent call last):> File> "C:\Python23\lib\site-packages\Pythonwin\pywin\framework\scriptutils.py",> line 310, in RunScript> exec codeObject in __main
On 15/11/05, Ben Bush <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> an error reported:
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File
> "C:\Python23\lib\site-packages\Pythonwin\pywin\framework\scriptutils.py",
> line 310, in RunScript
> exec codeObject in __main__.__dict__
> File "C:\temp\try.py", line 8, in ?
On 11/15/05, Simon Brunning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 15/11/05, Shi Mu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yes, i am using python 2.3,> I have used from sets import *> but still report the same error:> > > Traceback (most recent call last):> > > File "", line 1, in ?
> > > NameError: name 'set' is
[Shi]
> Yes, i am using python 2.3,
> I have used from sets import *
> but still report the same error:
> > > Traceback (most recent call last):
> > > File "", line 1, in ?
> > > NameError: name 'set' is not defined
It's 'Set', not 'set'. Try this:
>>> import sets
>>> dir(sets)
--
Richie Hi
On 15/11/05, Shi Mu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Yes, i am using python 2.3,
> I have used from sets import *
> but still report the same error:
> > > Traceback (most recent call last):
> > > File "", line 1, in ?
> > > NameError: name 'set' is not defined
I said analogous, not identical. try (u
On 11/15/05, Simon Brunning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 15/11/05, Shi Mu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > it does not work.
> > >>> len(set(lisA).intersection(set(lisB))) == 2
> > Traceback (most recent call last):
> > File "", line 1, in ?
> > NameError: name 'set' is not defined
>
> 'set' is
On 15/11/05, Shi Mu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> it does not work.
> >>> len(set(lisA).intersection(set(lisB))) == 2
> Traceback (most recent call last):
> File "", line 1, in ?
> NameError: name 'set' is not defined
'set' is introduced as a built-in at Python 2.4. If you have 2.3,
there's an an
On 11/15/05, Brian van den Broek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Shi Mu said unto the world upon 2005-11-15 01:30:
> >>Hey Ben,
> >>
> >>first, as expected, the other two answers you received are better. :-)
> >>
> >>Sets are much better optimized for things like membership testing than
> >>are lists.
On 11/15/05, Brian van den Broek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Ben Bush said unto the world upon 2005-11-15 01:24:
>> Unfortunately, the indents got screwed up along the way. But the part>>>of my code you asked about was:for item in list1:>>if item in list2:>>if item + 1 in list1 and
Ben Bush said unto the world upon 2005-11-15 01:24:
>
> Unfortunately, the indents got screwed up along the way. But the part
>
>>of my code you asked about was:
>>
>>for item in list1:
>>if item in list2:
>>if item + 1 in list1 and item + 1 in list2:
>>return True
>>
Shi Mu said unto the world upon 2005-11-15 01:30:
>>Hey Ben,
>>
>>first, as expected, the other two answers you received are better. :-)
>>
>>Sets are much better optimized for things like membership testing than
>>are lists. I'm not competent to explain why; indeed, I keep
>>overlooking them mysel
On 11/14/05, Ben Bush <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hijacking Brian's response since my newsserver never god Ben's originalrequest...:I would program this at a reasonably high abstraction level, based on
sets -- since you say order doesn't matter, sets are more appropriatethan lists anyway. For e
> Hey Ben,
>
> first, as expected, the other two answers you received are better. :-)
>
> Sets are much better optimized for things like membership testing than
> are lists. I'm not competent to explain why; indeed, I keep
> overlooking them myself :-(
>
> Unfortunately, the indents got screwed up
Hi Brian,
regarding "if item + 1 in list1 and item + 1 in list2:",
my understanding is this will check whether the following item in each list is the same. How does the code permit the situation that the order does not matter?
For example, for lisA and lisB, the comparison is true and the two lis
Ben Bush said unto the world upon 2005-11-14 23:20:
>
> On 11/14/05, Brian van den Broek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>>Ben Bush said unto the world upon 2005-11-14 05:51:
>>
>>>I have four lists:
>>>lisA=[1,2,3,4,5,6,9]
>>>lisB=[1,6,5]
>>>lisC=[5,6,3]
>>>lisD=[11,14,12,15]
>>>how can I write
[snip]That's potentially very expensive for large lists, although simplyconverting the lists to sets should give a significant speed up. I
think the following is *possibly* as good a way as any.>>> def compare(list1, list2): intersection = sorted(list(set(list1) & set(list2))) for i i
Hijacking Brian's response since my newsserver never god Ben's originalrequest...:I would program this at a reasonably high abstraction level, based on
sets -- since you say order doesn't matter, sets are more appropriatethan lists anyway. For example:def two_cont_in_common(x, y): common = set(
what does the following code mean?
if item in list2: if item + 1 in list1 and item + 1 in list2:
On 11/14/05, Brian van den Broek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Ben Bush said unto the world upon 2005-11-14 05:51:> I have four lists:> lisA=[1,2,3,4,5,6,9]
> lisB=[1,6,5]> lisC=[5
Brian van den Broek wrote:
> Ben Bush said unto the world upon 2005-11-14 05:51:
>
>> I have four lists:
>> lisA=[1,2,3,4,5,6,9]
>> lisB=[1,6,5]
>> lisC=[5,6,3]
>> lisD=[11,14,12,15]
>> how can I write a function to compare lisB, lisC and lisD with lisA,
>> if they
>> share two continuous elements
Brian van den Broek <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ben Bush said unto the world upon 2005-11-14 05:51:
> > I have four lists:
> > lisA=[1,2,3,4,5,6,9]
> > lisB=[1,6,5]
> > lisC=[5,6,3]
> > lisD=[11,14,12,15]
> > how can I write a function to compare lisB, lisC and lisD with lisA, if they
> > share t
Ben Bush said unto the world upon 2005-11-14 05:51:
> I have four lists:
> lisA=[1,2,3,4,5,6,9]
> lisB=[1,6,5]
> lisC=[5,6,3]
> lisD=[11,14,12,15]
> how can I write a function to compare lisB, lisC and lisD with lisA, if they
> share two continuous elements (the order does not matter), then return
I have four lists:
lisA=[1,2,3,4,5,6,9]
lisB=[1,6,5]
lisC=[5,6,3]
lisD=[11,14,12,15]how can I write a function to compare lisB, lisC and lisD with lisA, if they share two continuous elements (the order does not matter), then return 1, otherwise return 0. For example, lisA, lisB and lisC have 5,6 or
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