Usually to write a file, I would do the following:
the_file = open("somefile.txt","wb")
the_file.write("telperion")
but for some reason, iPython (Jupyter) is NOT writing the files. It's pretty weird, but the only way I could get it to work is if I write it this way:
with open('somefile.txt', "wb") as the_file:
the_file.write("durin's day\n")
with open('somefile.txt', "wb") as the_file:
the_file.write("legolas\n")
But obviously it's going to recreate the file object and rewrite it.
Why does the code in the first block not work? How could I make the second block work?
The w
flag means "open for writing and truncate the file"; you'd probably want to open the file with the a
flag which means "open the file for appending".
Also, it seems that you're using Python 2. You shouldn't be using the b
flag, except in case when you're writing binary as opposed to plain text content. In Python 3 your code would produce an error.
Thus:
with open('somefile.txt', 'a') as the_file:
the_file.write("durin's day\n")
with open('somefile.txt', 'a') as the_file:
the_file.write("legolas\n")
As for the input not showing in the file using the filehandle = open('file', 'w')
, it is because the file output is buffered - only a bigger chunk is written at a time. To ensure that the file is flushed at the end of a cell, you can use filehandle.flush()
as the last statement.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With