Newlines in Python text files - python

Why do Python text files always end with a new line during compilation in python3?
I have severally to remove the newlines but it seems it is even a requirement of pycodestyle.

Related

Strange behavior when trying to create and write to a text file on macOS [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Convert UTF-8 with BOM to UTF-8 with no BOM in Python
(7 answers)
Closed last year.
I'm opening a plain text file, parsing it, and adding different lines to existing, empty string variables. I add these variables into a new variable that is a multi-line fstring. Trying to write the data to a new text file is not behaving as expected.
Reading the original file works fine. Text is properly parsed, variables populated.
The multi-line fstring variable seems fine. Prints normally. Even tried formatting it different ways which I show below.
When writing to a new file, that's where the strangeness starts. I've tried 2 ways:
Straight coding the open function with w or w+
Adding the above to a function and using that inside main()
The file is saved to disk with the correct name. Trying to double-click open in Finder produces nothing. Right-click to open produces nothing. Trying to move to trash with command+delete gives an error:
It sounds like the file goes to trash, but as the file disappears from the folder a new one is created with the same name in its place.
If I try to open in TextMate via File > Open, it opens as a blank file with no errors.
Since I can't get rid of the file, I have to delete the directory and create the directory again with the same name, or force delete in Terminal using rm. Restarting the system does not help. Relaunching Finder does nothing. Saving text files from other apps works fine. Directory is chmod 755.
If I copy an existing text file into the output directory, rename it to what the file is expected to be named, and let python overwrite the contents, it doesn't work either. The file modification date changes (and I see the file "blink" in Finder) but the contents remain the same. However, the file is not corrupted and opens normally.
If I do the same but delete the text inside of the copied file first, then run the script, python writes no data to the file, I can't open it by double-clicking on it, and I get error -43 again with the odd non-trashing behavior.
The strangest thing is this: if I add another with open() at the end of the script, and open the file that was just created and supposedly written to, and print its contents, the contents print. It's like when the script ends the file contents are being removed or its being corrupted somehow. Tried to close the file inside the script even though it's not needed, but same behavior persists.
Code:
Here's the code for writing:
FORMAT='utf-8'
OUTPUT_DIR = '/Path/To/SaveFolder'
# as a function
def write_to_file(content, fpath, name):
the_file = os.path.join(fpath, name)
with open(the_file, 'w+', encoding=FORMAT) as t:
t.write(content)
def main():
print(f" Writing File...\n")
filename = f"{pcode}_{author}_{title}_text.txt"
write_to_file(multiline_var, OUTPUT_DIR, filename)
# or hard coded in main()
def main():
print(f" Writing File...\n")
filename = f"{pcode}_{author}_{title}_text.txt"
the_file = os.path.join(OUTPUT_DIR, filename)
with open(the_file, 'w+', encoding=FORMAT) as t:
t.write(multiline_var)
I have tried using w w+ wt and wt+ and with and without encoding='utf-8'
Here is an example of multi-line fstring variable:
# using triple quotes
multiline_var = f"""
[PROJ-{pcode}] {full_title} by {author}
{description}
{URL}
{DIVIDER_1}
{TEXT_BLURB}
Some text here and then {SOME_MORE_TEXT}"
{DIVIDER_1}
{SOME_LINK}
"""
# or inside parens
multiline_var = (
f"[PROJ-{pcode}] {full_title} by {author}\n"
f"{description}\n\n"
f"{URL}\n"
f"{DIVIDER_1}\n"
f"{TEXT_BLURB}\n\n"
f"Some text here and then {SOME_MORE_TEXT}\n"
f"{DIVIDER_1}\n\n"
f"{SOME_LINK}"
)
Using exiftool on the text file shows the following, so it looks the data is there but must be corrupted:
File Size : 1797 bytes
File Modification Date/Time : 2021:12:31 15:55:39-05:00
File Access Date/Time : 2021:12:31 15:58:13-05:00
File Inode Change Date/Time : 2021:12:31 15:55:39-05:00
File Permissions : -rw-r--r--
File Type : TXT
File Type Extension : txt
MIME Type : text/plain
MIME Encoding : utf-8
Byte Order Mark : No
Newlines : Unix LF
Line Count : 55
Word Count : 181
Not sure what I'm doing wrong. VScode shows no syntax errors in the script. There are no errors in Terminal when running the script. Have I made some simple mistake in the above code? Maybe the fstring variable is causing a problem?
Thanks to #bnaecker for leading me to the solution to this problem.
It appeared that when creating/writing to a text file with a long name, Python can corrupt it. Not sure why, as I save long names for images with Python image libraries all the time. Using a short name like "MyFile.txt" it worked just fine, but that was a red herring.
I have updated this post with my journey to the final solution for using the long names that are needed for my project, though I'm not sure why the problem exists.
First Attempts:
So far creating using a short name and then renaming to a long one.... attempts have failed. I did notice that python is locking the file it creates and never unlocks it. Not sure if this is the problem. Setting chflags with os.system('chflags nouchg') command does not work, not even with sudo, and not even in the Terminal doing it manually.
Using os.rename() in Python corrupts the file
Using os.system('mv oldFile.txt newFile.txt') corrupts the file
Manually using mv command in Terminal corrupts the file
Manually changing the filename in the Finder does not (wtf?)
I kept looking for workarounds but nothing did the job.
Round 2:
Progress!
After much tinkering, I discovered a hidden character inside the file. I ran cat /path/longfilename.txt in Terminal, selected and copied the output and pasted into VScode. Here is what I saw:
Somehow a hidden character is getting into the project code number.
Pasting it into a Unicode search engine it came up as a ZERO WIDTH NO-BREAK SPACE also known in Unicode as EF BB BF. However, when pasting this symbol into TextMate it shows up as <U+FEFF> which is?...
The Byte Order Mark!
Opening a normal utf-8 text file in a hex editor also shows the files starting with EFBBBF for the BOM.
Now, the text file being read and parsed at first has no blank lines to start the file, so I added a line break, and also tried adding some spaces. This time when writing the file I could open it, however, after sending it to the trash, the same behavior occurred and the file was broken again. It seems that because other corrupted versions were in the trash, it added the symbol back to the file name for some reason.
So what appears to be happening, for whatever reason, when Python opens the text file I'm parsing that has no line break at the top, it seems to be grabbing the BOM from the file and adding that to the first variable which is grabbing the first line of the text file. Since that text is a number code that starts the file name, the BOM symbol is being added to the file name as well as the code inside the text file.
Just... wow
The Current Solution:
I have to leave a blank line at the start of the text file that I'm opening and parsing and a simple line break won't do it. I have no idea why this is. I added some spaces for good measure because randomly the BOM would be added to the variable and filename again. So far (knock on wood) as long as the first line of that initial file has some spaces and then a line break, and previous corrupted files have been deleted from the trash, a long file name can be used for all the files I'm creating and writing to without any problems.
This corruption even persists if I remove the encoding flag from both of the open functions I'm using (one to read and parse, the other to create and write).
If anyone knows why this is happening, please share. I've never seen it mentioned before. I'm not sure if it's a python 3.8 bug, a mac OS bug, the way TextMate wrote the original file, or a combination of these.
Correct Solution:
Thanks to #tripleee for the proper way to handle this, as I don't remember seeing this before, though I haven't been using python for very long.
In order to ignore the BOM, reading in the text file to be parsed with an encoding='utf-8-sig' does the job. Seems to be why it exists. :)
Problem solved.

RobotFramework complaining consecutive whitespace issue

I am using robotframework 3.1.2 and its automatically parsing a txt file and complaining the error "Collapsing consecutive whitespace during parsing is deprecated" for every line in the file as the txt file has consecutive whitespaces all across the file.
I cannot cleanup the whitespaces in the file since its used by other team members.
How can I configure the robotframework to ignore the whitespaces or ignore that file?
I coudnt find any relevant help on google.
P.S: If I rename the file extension to something else other than txt( like .bin) robotframework stops complaining as it seems to be ignoring the file.

invalid argument C:\Users\Dar laptops\face_recognition\face_mask_detector_4\Keras-FaceMask-Detection-System\data\with_mask\1.jpg

I have a text file which has some paths in it. The problem is that my windows User name is space separated and when i run my python file to read it. It only read till space and ignores everything else.
C:\Users\Dar
laptops\face_recognition\face_mask_detector_4\Keras-FaceMask-Detection-System\data\with_mask\1.jpg
how can i read the space and all the path.

Which newline character is in my CSV?

We receive a .tar.gz file from a client every day and I am rewriting our import process using SSIS. One of the first steps in my process is to unzip the .tar.gz file which I achieve via a Python script.
After unzipping we are left with a number of CSV files which I then import into SQL Server. As an aside, I am loading using the CozyRoc DataFlow Task Plus.
Most of my CSV files load without issue but I have five files which fail. By reading the log I can see that the process is reading the Header and First line as though there is no HeaderRow Delimiter (i.e. it is trying to import the column header as ColumnHeader1ColumnValue1
I took one of these CSVs, copied the top 5 rows into Excel, used Text-To-Columns to delimit the data then saved that as a new CSV file.
This version imported successfully.
That makes me think that somehow the original CSV isn't using {CR}{LF} as the row delimiter but I don't know how to check. Any suggestions?
I ended up using the suggestion commented by #vahdet because I already had notepad++ installed. I can't find the same option in EmEditor but it may exist
For those who are curious, the files are using {LF} which is consistent with the other files. My investigation continues...
Seeing that you have EmEditor, you can use EmEditor to find the eol character in two ways:
Use View > Character Code Value... at the end of a line to display a dialog box showing information about the character at the current position.
Go to View > Marks and turn on Newline Characters and CR and LF with Different Marks to show the eol while editing. LF is displayed with a down arrow while CRLF is a right angle.
Some other things you could try checking for are: file encoding, wrong type of data for a field and an inconsistent number of columns.

How to delete  character from file a file with no extension - Python 2.7

So I have an assignment (Python 2.7) to process a file with no extension. It has a date in its first line :
2016.03.22.
But when I read it from file, and print it out, I get: 2016.03.22.
This does not happen when the extension is .txt, but I cant use that. I've tried this regex:
def checkDate(line):
return re.search('(\d{4}\.\d{2}\.\d{2}\.)', line)
For some reason it does not find it, returns None. I've tried http://www.pyregex.com/ and it sees the pattern without the odd character.
Is there any method to cut it down, without writing the whole file?

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