kj wrote:
In Dave Angel
writes:
[snippetty snip]
Why would you need a special hook when the os.walk() generator yields
exactly once per directory? So whatever work you do on the list of
files you get, you can then put the summary logic immediately after.
I think you're missing the p
Peter Otten wrote:
kj wrote:
In Dave Angel
writes:
kj wrote:
Perl's directory tree traversal facility is provided by the function
find of the File::Find module. This function accepts an optional
callback, called postprocess, that gets invoked "just before leaving
the curren
kj writes:
> I think you're missing the point. The hook in question has to be
> called *immediately after* all the subtrees that are rooted in
> subdirectories contained in the current directory have been visited
> by os.walk.
>
> I'd love to see your "5 lines" for *that*.
I'm having trouble un
kj wrote:
> In Dave Angel
> writes:
>
>>kj wrote:
>>> Perl's directory tree traversal facility is provided by the function
>>> find of the File::Find module. This function accepts an optional
>>> callback, called postprocess, that gets invoked "just before leaving
>>> the currently processed d
In Dave Angel
writes:
>kj wrote:
>> Perl's directory tree traversal facility is provided by the function
>> find of the File::Find module. This function accepts an optional
>> callback, called postprocess, that gets invoked "just before leaving
>> the currently processed directory." The docum
kj wrote:
Perl's directory tree traversal facility is provided by the function
find of the File::Find module. This function accepts an optional
callback, called postprocess, that gets invoked "just before leaving
the currently processed directory." The documentation goes on to
say "This hook is
Perl's directory tree traversal facility is provided by the function
find of the File::Find module. This function accepts an optional
callback, called postprocess, that gets invoked "just before leaving
the currently processed directory." The documentation goes on to
say "This hook is handy fo
Well, you could use the alternative os.path.walk instead. You can pass
a callback as a parameter, which will be invoked every time you
bump into a new directory. The signature is os.path.walk
(path,visit,arg). Take a look at the python library documentation.
On 11 Oct, 00:12, kj wrote:
> Perl's