On 10 Αύγ, 01:43, MRAB <pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com> wrote: > Íßêïò wrote: > > D:\>convert.py > > File "D:\convert.py", line 34 > > SyntaxError: Non-ASCII character '\xce' in file D:\convert.py on line > > 34, but no > > encoding declared; seehttp://www.python.org/peps/pep-0263.htmlfor > > details > > > D:\> > > > What does it refering too? what character cannot be identified? > > > Line 34 is: > > > src_data = src_data.replace( '</body>', '<br><br><center><h4><font > > color=green> Áñéèìüò Åðéóêåðôþí: %(counter)d </body>' ) > > Didn't you say that you're using Python 2.7 now? The default file > encoding will be ASCII, but your file isn't ASCII, it contains Greek > letters. Add the encoding line: > > # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- > > and check that the file is saved as UTF-8. > > > Also, > > > for currdir, files, dirs in os.walk('test'): > > > for f in files: > > > if f.lower().endswith("php"): > > > in the above lines > > > should i state os.walk('test') or os.walk('d:\test') ? > > The path 'test' is relative to the current working directory. Is that > D:\ for your script? If not, then it won't find the (correct) folder. > > It might be better to use an absolute path instead. You could use > either: > > r'd:\test' > > (note that I've made it a raw string because it contains a backslash > which I want treated as a literal backslash) or: > > 'd:/test' > > (Windows should accept a slash as well as of a backslash.)
I will try it as soon as i make another change that i missed: The ID number of each php page was contained in the old php code within this string PageID = some_number So instead of create a new ID number for eaqch page i have to pull out this number to store to the beginnign to the file as comment line, because it has direct relationship with the mysql database as in tracking the number of each webpage and finding the counter of it. # Grab the PageID contained within the php code and store it in id variable id = re.search( 'PageID = ', src_data ) How to tell Python to Grab that number after 'PageID = ' string and to store it in var id that a later use in the program? also i made another changewould something like this work: =============================== # open same php file for storing modified data print ( 'writing to %s' % dest_f ) f = open(src_f, 'w') f.write(src_data) f.close() # rename edited .php file to .html extension dst_f = src_f.replace('.php', '.html') os.rename( src_f, dst_f ) =============================== Because instead of creating a new .html file and inserting the desired data of the old php thus having two files(old php, and new html) i decided to open the same php file for writing that data and then rename it to html. Would the above code work? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list