In Python 2.5, I am reading a structured text data file (~30 MB in size) using a file pointer:
fp = open('myfile.txt', 'r')
line = fp.readline()
# ... many other fp.readline() processing steps, which
# are used in different contexts to read the structures
But then, while parsing the file, I hit something interesting that I want to report the line number of, so I can investigate the file in a text editor. I can use fp.tell()
to tell me where the byte offset is (e.g. 16548974L
), but there is no "fp.tell_line_number()" to help me translate this to a line number.
Is there either a Python built-in or extension to easily track and "tell" what line number a text file pointer is on?
Note: I'm not asking to use a line_number += 1
style counter, as I call fp.readline()
in different contexts and that approach would require more debugging than it is worth to insert the counter in the right corners of the code.
A typical solution to this problem is to define a new class that wraps an existing instance of a file
, which automatically counts the numbers. Something like this (just off the top of my head, I haven't tested this):
class FileLineWrapper(object):
def __init__(self, f):
self.f = f
self.line = 0
def close(self):
return self.f.close()
def readline(self):
self.line += 1
return self.f.readline()
# to allow using in 'with' statements
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb):
self.close()
Use it like this:
f = FileLineWrapper(open("myfile.txt", "r"))
f.readline()
print(f.line)
It looks like the standard module fileinput
does much the same thing (and some other things as well); you could use that instead if you like.
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