Excellent ideas...thanks to you all for the input. I will see what I can work out in the next few days and report back.
:) Scott On Sat, Jan 24, 2009 at 2:16 AM, spir <denis.s...@free.fr> wrote: > Le Fri, 23 Jan 2009 14:45:32 -0600, > W W <sri...@gmail.com> a écrit : > >> On Fri, Jan 23, 2009 at 1:11 PM, Scott Stueben <sidewalk...@gmail.com>wrote: >> >> > Thanks for the help so far - it seems easy enough. To clarify on the >> > points you have asked me about: >> > >> > A sqlite3 database on my machine would be an excellent idea for >> > personal use. I would like to be able to get a functional script for >> > others on my team to use, so maybe a script or compiled program >> > (Win32) eventually. >> >> >> As long as everyone on your team has python installed (or as long as python >> is installed on the machines they'll be using), a functional script would be >> fairly easy to get rolling. Sqlite is (AFAIK) included with the newer >> versions of python by default. Heck, it's on the version I have installed on >> my phone! (Cingular 8525). Simply zipping up the directory should provide an >> easy enough distribution method. Although, you *could* even write a python >> script that does the "install" for them. >> >> >> > As for output, I would probably like to return the entire lines that >> > contain any search results of those strings. Maybe just output to a >> > results.txt that would have the entire line of each line that contains >> > 'Bob', 'John', 'Joe', 'Jim', and or 'Fred'. >> >> >> The simplest method: >> >> In [5]: f = open('interculturalinterview2.txt', 'r') >> >> In [6]: searchstrings = ('holy', 'hand', 'grenade', 'potato') >> >> In [7]: for line in f.readlines(): >> ...: for word in searchstrings: >> ...: if word in line: >> ...: print line >> ...: >> ...: >> Hana: have a bonfire n candy apples n make potatoes on a car lol! >> >> Wayne: potatoes on a car? >> >> Hana .: yer lol its fun and they taste nicer lol, you wrap a potato in >> tinfoil a >> nd put in on the engine of a car and close the bonnet and have the engine >> run an >> d it cooks it in about 30 mins >> >> Speed isn't as important as ease of use, I suppose, since >> > non-technical people should be able to use it, ideally. > > I guess the easiest for your team would be to: > * let the script write the result lines into a text file > * let the script open the result in an editor (using module called subprocess) > * put a link to your script on the desk > > ### just an example > # write to file > target = open("target.txt",'w') > for line in lines: > target.write(line) > target.close() > > # open in editor > import subprocess > subprocess.call(["gedit","target.txt"]) > print "*** end ***" > > denis > > ------ > la vida e estranya > _______________________________________________ > Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor > -- "Shine on me baby, cause it's rainin' in my heart" --Elliott Smith _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor