Re: [Tutor] lists and strings

2005-11-08 Thread Hugo González Monteverde
Hi Mike, Converting an (almost)arbitrary object into a string is what the Pickle module does. CPickle is faster. Take a look into into it in the docs. Here's an example: import cPickle lala = [1, 2, 3, 'four', 'V'] lala [1, 2, 3, 'four', 'V'] fileo = open('lala.pkl', 'w')

Re: [Tutor] lists and strings

2005-11-08 Thread Pujo Aji
yes it is... convert list to string: L = [1,2,3] L = [str(x) for x in L] s = string.join(L,' ') print len(s) convert list to a file myF = open(namaFile,w) for s in myList[:-1]: myF.write(str(s)+\n) myF.write(str(myList[len(myList)-1])) myF.close() Cheers, pujo On 11/8/05, Mike Haft [EMAIL

Re: [Tutor] lists and strings

2005-11-08 Thread Shantanoo Mahajan
+++ Hugo Gonz?lez Monteverde [08-11-05 13:13 -0600]: | Hi Mike, | | Converting an (almost)arbitrary object into a string is what the Pickle module does. CPickle is faster. Take | a look into into it in the docs. | Is there a way to dump the varialble in XML format and retrive it? e.g. a=this

Re: [Tutor] lists and strings

2005-11-08 Thread Christopher Arndt
Shantanoo Mahajan schrieb: +++ Hugo Gonz?lez Monteverde [08-11-05 13:13 -0600]: | Hi Mike, | | Converting an (almost)arbitrary object into a string is what the Pickle module does. CPickle is faster. Take | a look into into it in the docs. | Is there a way to dump the varialble in XML

Re: [Tutor] lists and strings

2005-11-08 Thread Kent Johnson
Mike Haft wrote: All the ways of writing data to a file I know keep telling me that lists can't be written to the file. I'm trying to convert data from one set of files into files of a different format. But the easiest way to get the data from the first set of files is in a list(s). So, is