On 11/28/2011 11:25 PM, bob gailer wrote:
On 11/28/2011 12:47 PM, James Reynolds wrote:
On Mon, Nov 28, 2011 at 12:32 PM, Mayo Adams <mayoad...@gmail.com
<mailto:mayoad...@gmail.com>> wrote:
I am trying to pass a set of tuple strings from a file to a
function I
have defined. Each tuple is on a separate line, and looks something
like this:
('note',2048)
As already pointed out - this is a string (a representation of a
tuple), not a tuple.
Your code must parse the string to extract the string representations
of the values, then convert as needed to the desired Python values.
Tasks like this are not trivial.
Using eval as already noted is the easiest but not the best solution.
Perhaps we should back up and ask the overall objective of the
program. Where did this file come from? Could we store the data in
some other (easier to parse) manner?
This file came from the OP's other thread, "Re: [Tutor] write list of
tuples to file (beginner)" At that point, he didn't say what the file
was for.
If each line will always contain a string literal and an integer
literal then the simplest encoding is:
note 2048
the program then is:
for line in file(path):
val1, val2 = line.split)
findindex(val1, int(val2))
Well, this also assumes the string has no whitespace in its internals.
As i said in my last response, the first thing that's needed is a
complete spec on what these arguments might be. We have an example of
1, that happens not to have any quotes, commas, spaces or anything else
interesting in the string. And the number happens to be an integer.
can we assume much? Not really.
--
DaveA
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