vox wrote:
On Jul 10, 2:04 pm, Peter Otten <__pete...@web.de> wrote:
You are probably misinterpreting len(s3). s3 contains lines occuring in
"file1" but not in "file2". Duplicate lines are only counted once, and the
order doesn't matter.

So there are 119 lines that occur at least once in "file2", but not in
"file1".

If that is not what you want you have to tell us what exactly you are
looking for.

Peter

Hi,
Thanks for the answer.

I am looking for a script that compares file1 and file2, for each line
in file1, check if line is present in file2. If the line from file1 is
not present in file2, print that line/write it to file3, because I
have to know what lines to add to file2.

BR,
Andy


There's no more detail in that response. To the level of detail you provide, the program works perfectly. Just loop through the set and write the members to the file.

But you have some unspecified assumptions:
   1) order doesn't matter
2) duplicates are impossible in the input file, or at least not meaningful. So the correct output file could very well be smaller than either of the input files.

And a few others that might matter:
3) the two files are both text files, with identical line endings matching your OS default 4) the two files are ASCII, or at least 8 bit encoded, using the same encoding (such as both UTF-8)
   5) the last line of each file DOES have a trailing newline sequence



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