On 12/09/06, Chris Hengge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I'm not sure what internal blanks means.. but I'll take a stab and say > "no", there are going to be NO blanks once I start reading the column > unless there are no more values to read... null or "" would be fine for > a stopping point.
Well, basically, I'm thinking you could say something like: for i in itertools.count(1): if xlSht.Cells(1, i).Value in (None, ''): maxCol = i break This should start at (1,1) (the top-left cell), and move right, until it hits a blank cell, at which point it aborts. You could do the same thing, but changing row instead of column, to find the maximum column. So, by "internal blanks", I meant blank cells with non-blank cells to the right, or below. Also, if the first row is not necessarily the longest, you would need a bit more trickery. > also, what is makepy.py? I'm still working through a couple books on > python, so I haven't got all the tricks yet :] makepy.py is a utility that comes with pythonwin. Basically it builds python libraries corresponding to COM objects. If you do this (one-time only), your code should run faster. Also, you will get meaningful help(), and you can look at the code it produces to get a quick list of all the available methods, and what arguments they expect. You can run it from the command line, or you can run it from the menu of the pythonwin IDE. -- John. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor