Add first file I/O example for scooper
parent
30b919d602
commit
f7e3296b6c
@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
|
|||||||
|
# File I/O Examples
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
This directory will contain some examples of using Python for file I/O as
|
||||||
|
Spencer requested.
|
@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
|
|||||||
|
Spencer
|
||||||
|
Freena
|
||||||
|
Aaron
|
||||||
|
Toby
|
||||||
|
Thomas
|
||||||
|
Mulbah
|
||||||
|
Jeff
|
||||||
|
Shallon
|
||||||
|
Janet
|
||||||
|
Daniel
|
||||||
|
Jallah
|
||||||
|
Annie
|
@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
|
|||||||
|
# Load the people from the data file for reading
|
||||||
|
f = open('people.dat', 'r')
|
||||||
|
# read in names, one per line
|
||||||
|
names = f.readlines()
|
||||||
|
# we're done with the file, close it
|
||||||
|
f.close()
|
||||||
|
# each name still has a newline, '\n' on the end of it, let's remove that
|
||||||
|
cleaned_names = []
|
||||||
|
for name in names:
|
||||||
|
cleaned_names.append(name[:-1])
|
||||||
|
# now let's print out the names in alphabetical order
|
||||||
|
for name in sorted(cleaned_names):
|
||||||
|
print(name)
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue