Write output file, collating groups of up to 7 input lines












1












$begingroup$


I have this code that reads a file and after processing a few lines writes the output to a second file:



num_reads = 7
with open('data.txt') as read_file:
with open('new_data.txt', 'w') as write_file:

while (True):
lines =
try: # expect errors if the number of lines in the file are not a multiplication of num_reads
for i in range(num_reads):
lines.append(next(read_file)) # when the file finishes an exception occurs here

#do sutff with the lines (exactly num_reads number of lines)
processed = " ".join(list(map(lambda x: x.replace("n", ''), lines)))
write_file.write(processed + 'n')

except StopIteration: # here we process the (possibly) insufficent last lines
#do stuff with the lines (less that num_reads)
processed = " ".join(list(map(lambda x: x.replace("n", ''), lines)))
write_file.write(processed + 'n')
break


Here is the input file (data.txt):



line1
line2
line3
line4
line5
line7
line8
line9


And this is the output file that has the desired state:



line1 line2 line3 line4 line5 line7
line8 line9


This works correctly but as I wish to do the same processing and writing procedure in both cases (when the number of elements is 7 and when the file finishes and the exception is raised) I think the above code violates DRY principle even if I define a new function and call it once in try block and once in except before break. Any other ordering that I could come up with was either causing an infinite loop or losing the final lines.
I appreciate any comments on handling this issue, as it is not limited to this case and I had faced it in other cases as well.










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    @200_success done! :)
    $endgroup$
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    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    (Welcom to Code Review!)
    $endgroup$
    – greybeard
    2 mins ago
















1












$begingroup$


I have this code that reads a file and after processing a few lines writes the output to a second file:



num_reads = 7
with open('data.txt') as read_file:
with open('new_data.txt', 'w') as write_file:

while (True):
lines =
try: # expect errors if the number of lines in the file are not a multiplication of num_reads
for i in range(num_reads):
lines.append(next(read_file)) # when the file finishes an exception occurs here

#do sutff with the lines (exactly num_reads number of lines)
processed = " ".join(list(map(lambda x: x.replace("n", ''), lines)))
write_file.write(processed + 'n')

except StopIteration: # here we process the (possibly) insufficent last lines
#do stuff with the lines (less that num_reads)
processed = " ".join(list(map(lambda x: x.replace("n", ''), lines)))
write_file.write(processed + 'n')
break


Here is the input file (data.txt):



line1
line2
line3
line4
line5
line7
line8
line9


And this is the output file that has the desired state:



line1 line2 line3 line4 line5 line7
line8 line9


This works correctly but as I wish to do the same processing and writing procedure in both cases (when the number of elements is 7 and when the file finishes and the exception is raised) I think the above code violates DRY principle even if I define a new function and call it once in try block and once in except before break. Any other ordering that I could come up with was either causing an infinite loop or losing the final lines.
I appreciate any comments on handling this issue, as it is not limited to this case and I had faced it in other cases as well.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Farzad Vertigo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$












  • $begingroup$
    @200_success done! :)
    $endgroup$
    – Farzad Vertigo
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    (Welcom to Code Review!)
    $endgroup$
    – greybeard
    2 mins ago














1












1








1





$begingroup$


I have this code that reads a file and after processing a few lines writes the output to a second file:



num_reads = 7
with open('data.txt') as read_file:
with open('new_data.txt', 'w') as write_file:

while (True):
lines =
try: # expect errors if the number of lines in the file are not a multiplication of num_reads
for i in range(num_reads):
lines.append(next(read_file)) # when the file finishes an exception occurs here

#do sutff with the lines (exactly num_reads number of lines)
processed = " ".join(list(map(lambda x: x.replace("n", ''), lines)))
write_file.write(processed + 'n')

except StopIteration: # here we process the (possibly) insufficent last lines
#do stuff with the lines (less that num_reads)
processed = " ".join(list(map(lambda x: x.replace("n", ''), lines)))
write_file.write(processed + 'n')
break


Here is the input file (data.txt):



line1
line2
line3
line4
line5
line7
line8
line9


And this is the output file that has the desired state:



line1 line2 line3 line4 line5 line7
line8 line9


This works correctly but as I wish to do the same processing and writing procedure in both cases (when the number of elements is 7 and when the file finishes and the exception is raised) I think the above code violates DRY principle even if I define a new function and call it once in try block and once in except before break. Any other ordering that I could come up with was either causing an infinite loop or losing the final lines.
I appreciate any comments on handling this issue, as it is not limited to this case and I had faced it in other cases as well.










share|improve this question









New contributor




Farzad Vertigo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







$endgroup$




I have this code that reads a file and after processing a few lines writes the output to a second file:



num_reads = 7
with open('data.txt') as read_file:
with open('new_data.txt', 'w') as write_file:

while (True):
lines =
try: # expect errors if the number of lines in the file are not a multiplication of num_reads
for i in range(num_reads):
lines.append(next(read_file)) # when the file finishes an exception occurs here

#do sutff with the lines (exactly num_reads number of lines)
processed = " ".join(list(map(lambda x: x.replace("n", ''), lines)))
write_file.write(processed + 'n')

except StopIteration: # here we process the (possibly) insufficent last lines
#do stuff with the lines (less that num_reads)
processed = " ".join(list(map(lambda x: x.replace("n", ''), lines)))
write_file.write(processed + 'n')
break


Here is the input file (data.txt):



line1
line2
line3
line4
line5
line7
line8
line9


And this is the output file that has the desired state:



line1 line2 line3 line4 line5 line7
line8 line9


This works correctly but as I wish to do the same processing and writing procedure in both cases (when the number of elements is 7 and when the file finishes and the exception is raised) I think the above code violates DRY principle even if I define a new function and call it once in try block and once in except before break. Any other ordering that I could come up with was either causing an infinite loop or losing the final lines.
I appreciate any comments on handling this issue, as it is not limited to this case and I had faced it in other cases as well.







python file






share|improve this question









New contributor




Farzad Vertigo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Farzad Vertigo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago









200_success

129k15152415




129k15152415






New contributor




Farzad Vertigo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 3 hours ago









Farzad VertigoFarzad Vertigo

1084




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New contributor




Farzad Vertigo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Farzad Vertigo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Farzad Vertigo is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • $begingroup$
    @200_success done! :)
    $endgroup$
    – Farzad Vertigo
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    (Welcom to Code Review!)
    $endgroup$
    – greybeard
    2 mins ago


















  • $begingroup$
    @200_success done! :)
    $endgroup$
    – Farzad Vertigo
    2 hours ago










  • $begingroup$
    (Welcom to Code Review!)
    $endgroup$
    – greybeard
    2 mins ago
















$begingroup$
@200_success done! :)
$endgroup$
– Farzad Vertigo
2 hours ago




$begingroup$
@200_success done! :)
$endgroup$
– Farzad Vertigo
2 hours ago












$begingroup$
(Welcom to Code Review!)
$endgroup$
– greybeard
2 mins ago




$begingroup$
(Welcom to Code Review!)
$endgroup$
– greybeard
2 mins ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2












$begingroup$

Disclaimer: This question belongs to Stack Overflow, and I voted to migrate it. Therefore, the answer is not a review.



Keep in mind that principles are there to guide you. They should be treated like guard rails, rather than roadblocks.



I would argue that



    while (....) {
foo(7);
}
foo(3);


does not violate DRY. Your situation is pretty much the same.



That said, your idea of defining function is valid. You just factoring out the wrong code. Factor out reading. Consider



    def read_n_lines(infile, n):
lines =
try:
for _ in range(n):
lines.append(next(infile))
except StopIteration:
pass
return lines


and use it as



    while True:
lines = read_n_lines(infile, 7)
if len(lines) == 0:
break
process_lines(lines)





share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













  • $begingroup$
    Thank you very much. Beautiful idea. I appreciate it.
    $endgroup$
    – Farzad Vertigo
    1 hour ago



















2












$begingroup$

You should avoid writing code with exception-handling altogether. Usually, when you want to write a fancy loop in Python, the itertools module is your friend. In this case, I would take advantage of itertools.groupby() to form groups of lines, assisted by itertools.count() to provide the line numbers.



import itertools

def chunks(iterable, n):
i = itertools.count()
for _, group in itertools.groupby(iterable, lambda _: next(i) // n):
yield group

with open('data.txt') as read_f, open('new_data.txt', 'w') as write_f:
for group in chunks(read_f, 7):
print(' '.join(line.rstrip() for line in group), file=write_f)


A few other minor changes:




  • You only need one with block to open both files.


  • line.rstrip() is more convenient than lambda x: x.replace("n", '')


  • print(…, file=write_file) is slightly more elegant than write_file.write(… + 'n').






share|improve this answer









$endgroup$













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    2 Answers
    2






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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2












    $begingroup$

    Disclaimer: This question belongs to Stack Overflow, and I voted to migrate it. Therefore, the answer is not a review.



    Keep in mind that principles are there to guide you. They should be treated like guard rails, rather than roadblocks.



    I would argue that



        while (....) {
    foo(7);
    }
    foo(3);


    does not violate DRY. Your situation is pretty much the same.



    That said, your idea of defining function is valid. You just factoring out the wrong code. Factor out reading. Consider



        def read_n_lines(infile, n):
    lines =
    try:
    for _ in range(n):
    lines.append(next(infile))
    except StopIteration:
    pass
    return lines


    and use it as



        while True:
    lines = read_n_lines(infile, 7)
    if len(lines) == 0:
    break
    process_lines(lines)





    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$













    • $begingroup$
      Thank you very much. Beautiful idea. I appreciate it.
      $endgroup$
      – Farzad Vertigo
      1 hour ago
















    2












    $begingroup$

    Disclaimer: This question belongs to Stack Overflow, and I voted to migrate it. Therefore, the answer is not a review.



    Keep in mind that principles are there to guide you. They should be treated like guard rails, rather than roadblocks.



    I would argue that



        while (....) {
    foo(7);
    }
    foo(3);


    does not violate DRY. Your situation is pretty much the same.



    That said, your idea of defining function is valid. You just factoring out the wrong code. Factor out reading. Consider



        def read_n_lines(infile, n):
    lines =
    try:
    for _ in range(n):
    lines.append(next(infile))
    except StopIteration:
    pass
    return lines


    and use it as



        while True:
    lines = read_n_lines(infile, 7)
    if len(lines) == 0:
    break
    process_lines(lines)





    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$













    • $begingroup$
      Thank you very much. Beautiful idea. I appreciate it.
      $endgroup$
      – Farzad Vertigo
      1 hour ago














    2












    2








    2





    $begingroup$

    Disclaimer: This question belongs to Stack Overflow, and I voted to migrate it. Therefore, the answer is not a review.



    Keep in mind that principles are there to guide you. They should be treated like guard rails, rather than roadblocks.



    I would argue that



        while (....) {
    foo(7);
    }
    foo(3);


    does not violate DRY. Your situation is pretty much the same.



    That said, your idea of defining function is valid. You just factoring out the wrong code. Factor out reading. Consider



        def read_n_lines(infile, n):
    lines =
    try:
    for _ in range(n):
    lines.append(next(infile))
    except StopIteration:
    pass
    return lines


    and use it as



        while True:
    lines = read_n_lines(infile, 7)
    if len(lines) == 0:
    break
    process_lines(lines)





    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$



    Disclaimer: This question belongs to Stack Overflow, and I voted to migrate it. Therefore, the answer is not a review.



    Keep in mind that principles are there to guide you. They should be treated like guard rails, rather than roadblocks.



    I would argue that



        while (....) {
    foo(7);
    }
    foo(3);


    does not violate DRY. Your situation is pretty much the same.



    That said, your idea of defining function is valid. You just factoring out the wrong code. Factor out reading. Consider



        def read_n_lines(infile, n):
    lines =
    try:
    for _ in range(n):
    lines.append(next(infile))
    except StopIteration:
    pass
    return lines


    and use it as



        while True:
    lines = read_n_lines(infile, 7)
    if len(lines) == 0:
    break
    process_lines(lines)






    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered 1 hour ago









    vnpvnp

    38.9k13098




    38.9k13098












    • $begingroup$
      Thank you very much. Beautiful idea. I appreciate it.
      $endgroup$
      – Farzad Vertigo
      1 hour ago


















    • $begingroup$
      Thank you very much. Beautiful idea. I appreciate it.
      $endgroup$
      – Farzad Vertigo
      1 hour ago
















    $begingroup$
    Thank you very much. Beautiful idea. I appreciate it.
    $endgroup$
    – Farzad Vertigo
    1 hour ago




    $begingroup$
    Thank you very much. Beautiful idea. I appreciate it.
    $endgroup$
    – Farzad Vertigo
    1 hour ago













    2












    $begingroup$

    You should avoid writing code with exception-handling altogether. Usually, when you want to write a fancy loop in Python, the itertools module is your friend. In this case, I would take advantage of itertools.groupby() to form groups of lines, assisted by itertools.count() to provide the line numbers.



    import itertools

    def chunks(iterable, n):
    i = itertools.count()
    for _, group in itertools.groupby(iterable, lambda _: next(i) // n):
    yield group

    with open('data.txt') as read_f, open('new_data.txt', 'w') as write_f:
    for group in chunks(read_f, 7):
    print(' '.join(line.rstrip() for line in group), file=write_f)


    A few other minor changes:




    • You only need one with block to open both files.


    • line.rstrip() is more convenient than lambda x: x.replace("n", '')


    • print(…, file=write_file) is slightly more elegant than write_file.write(… + 'n').






    share|improve this answer









    $endgroup$


















      2












      $begingroup$

      You should avoid writing code with exception-handling altogether. Usually, when you want to write a fancy loop in Python, the itertools module is your friend. In this case, I would take advantage of itertools.groupby() to form groups of lines, assisted by itertools.count() to provide the line numbers.



      import itertools

      def chunks(iterable, n):
      i = itertools.count()
      for _, group in itertools.groupby(iterable, lambda _: next(i) // n):
      yield group

      with open('data.txt') as read_f, open('new_data.txt', 'w') as write_f:
      for group in chunks(read_f, 7):
      print(' '.join(line.rstrip() for line in group), file=write_f)


      A few other minor changes:




      • You only need one with block to open both files.


      • line.rstrip() is more convenient than lambda x: x.replace("n", '')


      • print(…, file=write_file) is slightly more elegant than write_file.write(… + 'n').






      share|improve this answer









      $endgroup$
















        2












        2








        2





        $begingroup$

        You should avoid writing code with exception-handling altogether. Usually, when you want to write a fancy loop in Python, the itertools module is your friend. In this case, I would take advantage of itertools.groupby() to form groups of lines, assisted by itertools.count() to provide the line numbers.



        import itertools

        def chunks(iterable, n):
        i = itertools.count()
        for _, group in itertools.groupby(iterable, lambda _: next(i) // n):
        yield group

        with open('data.txt') as read_f, open('new_data.txt', 'w') as write_f:
        for group in chunks(read_f, 7):
        print(' '.join(line.rstrip() for line in group), file=write_f)


        A few other minor changes:




        • You only need one with block to open both files.


        • line.rstrip() is more convenient than lambda x: x.replace("n", '')


        • print(…, file=write_file) is slightly more elegant than write_file.write(… + 'n').






        share|improve this answer









        $endgroup$



        You should avoid writing code with exception-handling altogether. Usually, when you want to write a fancy loop in Python, the itertools module is your friend. In this case, I would take advantage of itertools.groupby() to form groups of lines, assisted by itertools.count() to provide the line numbers.



        import itertools

        def chunks(iterable, n):
        i = itertools.count()
        for _, group in itertools.groupby(iterable, lambda _: next(i) // n):
        yield group

        with open('data.txt') as read_f, open('new_data.txt', 'w') as write_f:
        for group in chunks(read_f, 7):
        print(' '.join(line.rstrip() for line in group), file=write_f)


        A few other minor changes:




        • You only need one with block to open both files.


        • line.rstrip() is more convenient than lambda x: x.replace("n", '')


        • print(…, file=write_file) is slightly more elegant than write_file.write(… + 'n').







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 39 mins ago









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