Tomasz, How about using the command prompt command FIND /C on each of your source files as follows:
FIND/C "#" <SourceFile.py >>NumbersOfLinesContainingPythonComments.dat FIND/C /V "#" <SourceFile.py >>NumbersOfLinesNotContainingPythonComments.dat You would end up with two files each with a column of line counts; Import these lines into an Excel Spreadsheet and calculate whatever you like with them. Stephen. On Sun, Oct 23, 2016 at 9:51 PM, Tomasz Rola <rto...@ceti.pl> wrote: > On Wed, Oct 05, 2016 at 01:56:59PM -0400, Malcolm Greene wrote: > > Looking for a quick way to calculate lines of code/comments in a > > collection of Python scripts. This isn't a LOC per day per developer > > type analysis - I'm looking for a metric to quickly judge the complexity > > of a set of scripts I'm inheriting. > > > > Thank you, > > Malcolm > > A bit more than what you asked for (and sorry for being late) but I > find sloccount quite good. Or at least interesting (computes sloc and > some stats about project, given project dir or a single file with > code): > > http://www.dwheeler.com/sloccount/ > > -- > Regards, > Tomasz Rola > > -- > ** A C programmer asked whether computer had Buddha's nature. ** > ** As the answer, master did "rm -rif" on the programmer's home ** > ** directory. And then the C programmer became enlightened... ** > ** ** > ** Tomasz Rola mailto:tomasz_r...@bigfoot.com ** > -- > https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list > -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list