On Tue, 05 Jul 2016 19:29:21 -0400, Seymore4Head <Seymore4Head@Hotmail.invalid> wrote:
>On Tue, 5 Jul 2016 19:15:23 -0400, Joel Goldstick ><joel.goldst...@gmail.com> wrote: > >>On Tue, Jul 5, 2016 at 7:03 PM, MRAB <pyt...@mrabarnett.plus.com> wrote: >>> On 2016-07-05 23:05, Seymore4Head wrote: >>>> >>>> import os >>>> >>>> f_in = open('win.txt', 'r') >>>> f_out = open('win_new.txt', 'w') >>>> >>>> for line in f_in.read().splitlines(): >>>> f_out.write(line + " *\n") >>>> >>>> f_in.close() >>>> f_out.close() >>>> >>>> os.rename('win.txt', 'win_old.txt') >>>> os.rename('win_new.txt', 'win.txt') >>>> >>>> >>>> I just tried to reuse this program that was posted several months ago. >>>> I am using a text flie that is about 200 lines long and have named it >>>> win.txt. The file it creates when I run the program is win_new.txt >>>> but it's empty. >>>> >>> Although it creates a file called "win_new.txt", it then renames it to >>> "win.txt", so "win_new.txt" shouldn't exist. >>> >>> Of course, if there's already a file called "win_old.txt", then the first >>> rename will raise an exception, and you'll have "win_new.txt" and the >>> original "win.txt". >>> >>> -- >>> https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list >> >>Why don't you comment out the renames, and see what happens? > >I really don't care if the filename gets renamed or not. I commented >out the renames, but I still get a new file called win_new.txt and it >is empty. > >The original is unchanged. I just tried this on a 3 line text file and it works. I am looking through the text file and have found at least two suspicious characters. One is a German letter and the other is a characters that has been replaced by a square symbol. -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list