loh...@tuta.io wrote: > hey everyone. this is my first time trying this -- actually, I've been > studying python only for some days now, and I'm afraid my questions are > going to be reeeeally simple, but I can't seem to understand this piece of > code and thus can't move on.
You seem to be talking about http://learnpythonthehardway.org/book/ex15.html """ from sys import argv script, filename = argv txt = open(filename) print "Here's your file %r:" % filename print txt.read() print "Type the filename again:" file_again = raw_input("> ") txt_again = open(file_again) print txt_again.read() """ As others said, always provide the code you are asking about, or if that is not possible at least provide a link. > you probably know the book, so you know that zed always makes us write > code so that then we can understand how it works, and it's great, but in > this exercise there are just too many new functions and without > explanation they are a bit hard to understand... so I'm having trouble > with most of the lines here. > > it's not that I want the full explanation to that code, but since I'm > unfamiliar with some of its concepts, I'm just going to tell you all the > things that I don't understand (sorry for it being a lot): > 1. the need to put script into an estipulation for argv (line 3) Write a script tmp.py containing from sys import argv print argv then call it with with one parameter, e. g. $ python tmp.py somefile.txt ['tmp.py', 'somefile.txt'] As you can see argv is a list with two items, the first being "tmp.py", the name of the script you are invoking. You are only interested in the second one, the filename. The easy way to get that is filename = argv[1] the hard way is to use "unpacking" script, filename = argv where python will assign one item from the list on the right to every name on the left: >>> items = ["foo", "bar"] >>> one, two = items >>> one 'foo' >>> two 'bar' What happens if the number of names on the left doesn't match the number of items in the list? >>> one, two, three = items Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> ValueError: need more than 2 values to unpack You get an exception. That is why you have to provide the name "script" in Zed's example even though you are not actually interested in the script name. > 2. the what is txt and why it has to be used there (line 4) txt is a file object and > 3. txt.read() -- which are all new functions(? I dont even know what they > are) (line 7) read() is a method that here reads the whole file into a string. You use the open() function to open a file and usually assign the file object that is returned by open to a name. You can freely choose that name. The structure is the same for every object, be it a number: x = 42 # assign a number to x y = x + x # do some arithmetic with x and assign the result to y print y # print the result a list: mynumbers = list() # create a list mynumbers.append(42) # append a number to the list print mynumbers # print the list or a file: myfile = open("example.txt") # open the file example.txt in the current # working directory. If the file doesn't exist # you get an error print "first line:", myfile.readline() # read the first line and print it print "rest of the file:" print myfile.read() # read the rest of the file and print it myfile.close() # close the file > 4. file_again (line 10) > 5. txt_again (line 12) > and line 14. 4. and 5. are just a repetition of the first part, with the variation that the filename, assigned to file_again is read interactively with raw_input() instead of passing it as a commandline argument to the script. The names used can be freely chosen by the programmer, a script from sys import argv red_apple, my_hat = argv blue_suede_shoes = open(my_hat) print blue_suede_shoes.read() blue_suede_shoes.close() would work exactly like the first part of the hard-way example. However, picking descriptive names and using them consistently makes it much easier for a human reader to understand what's going on. _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor