I have a comma delimited file where each line in the file is something
like:
PNumber,3056,Contractor,XYZ Contracting,Architect,ABC Architects,...
So each line is intended to be: key1,value1,key2,value2,key3,value3...
and each line is to be variable in length (although it will have to be
an even number of records so that each key has a value).
I want to read in this csv file and parse it into a list of
dictionaries. So each record in the list is a dictionary:
{"PNumber":"3056","Contractor":"XYZ Contracting", ... }
I have no problem reading in the CSV file to a list and splitting each
line in the file into its comma separated values. But I can't figure
out how to parse each resulting list into a dictionary.
Any help on this?
> I have a comma delimited file where each line in the file is something
> like:
>
> PNumber,3056,Contractor,XYZ Contracting,Architect,ABC Architects,...
>
> So each line is intended to be: key1,value1,key2,value2,key3,value3...
> and each line is to be variable in length (although it will have to be
> an even number of records so that each key has a value).
>
> I want to read in this csv file and parse it into a list of
> dictionaries. So each record in the list is a dictionary:
>
> {"PNumber":"3056","Contractor":"XYZ Contracting", ... }
>>> row
['PNumber', '3056', 'Contractor', 'XYZ Contracting', 'Architect', 'ABC']
>>> dict(zip(row[::2], row[1::2]))
{'Architect': 'ABC', 'PNumber': '3056', 'Contractor': 'XYZ Contracting'}
A bit more elegant:
>>> irow = iter(row)
>>> dict(zip(irow, irow))
{'Architect': 'ABC', 'PNumber': '3056', 'Contractor': 'XYZ Contracting'}
Peter
First, don't process the CSV stuff yourself. Use the csv module.
In [9]:import csv
In [10]:f = open('foo.csv')
In [11]:cr = csv.reader(f)
In [12]:for row in cr:
....: print dict(zip(row[::2], row[1::2]))
....:
{'Architect': 'ABC Architects', 'PNumber': '3056', 'Contractor': 'XYZ
Contracting'}
{'Architect': 'ABC Architects', 'PNumber': '3056', 'Contractor': 'XYZ
Contracting'}
[etc.]
--
Robert Kern
rk...@ucsd.edu
"In the fields of hell where the grass grows high
Are the graves of dreams allowed to die."
-- Richard Harter
http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/modules.shtml#configobj
-dave
"RFQ" <rfqu...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1118078038....@f14g2000cwb.googlegroups.com...
> Hi, I'm struggling here to do the following with any success:
>
> I have a comma delimited file where each line in the file is something
> like:
>
> PNumber,3056,Contractor,XYZ Contracting,Architect,ABC Architects,...
This is NOT a CSV file. A CSV file would be :
PNumber,Contractor,Architect,...
2056,XYZ Contracting,ABC Architects,...
Then, you could use the built-in CSV module of recent python versions.
>
> So each line is intended to be: key1,value1,key2,value2,key3,value3...
> and each line is to be variable in length (although it will have to be
> an even number of records so that each key has a value).
>
> I want to read in this csv file and parse it into a list of
> dictionaries. So each record in the list is a dictionary:
>
> {"PNumber":"3056","Contractor":"XYZ Contracting", ... }
>
> I have no problem reading in the CSV file to a list and splitting each
> line in the file into its comma separated values. But I can't figure
> out how to parse each resulting list into a dictionary.
>
> Any help on this?
By,
CSV is an acronym for "Comma-Separated Values". It does not imply
anything about the contents of the fields. The OP's file *is* a CSV
file. Yes, the contents do represent an unusual application of the CSV
format -- however a bus full of parcels instead of people is still a bus.
> Then, you could use the built-in CSV module of recent python versions.
Python is a case-sensitive language. The name of the module is "csv".
The OP could use the csv module with his data.
> Laurent RAHUEL wrote:
>> RFQ wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Hi, I'm struggling here to do the following with any success:
>>>
>>>I have a comma delimited file where each line in the file is something
>>>like:
>>>
>>>PNumber,3056,Contractor,XYZ Contracting,Architect,ABC Architects,...
>>
>>
>> This is NOT a CSV file. A CSV file would be :
>>
>> PNumber,Contractor,Architect,...
>> 2056,XYZ Contracting,ABC Architects,...
>>
>
> CSV is an acronym for "Comma-Separated Values". It does not imply
> anything about the contents of the fields. The OP's file *is* a CSV
> file. Yes, the contents do represent an unusual application of the CSV
> format -- however a bus full of parcels instead of people is still a bus.
I thought you knew the number of cols and what you should expect in each.
Then it sounded pretty easy to build a list of dictionaries. If you don't
know what you're supposed to find in your file and how this file is
structured I guess you don't know what you are doing.
>
>> Then, you could use the built-in CSV module of recent python versions.
>
> Python is a case-sensitive language. The name of the module is "csv".
> The OP could use the csv module with his data.
Damn, that's why I always see those annoynig import errors.
I just wanted to help, maybe you're to much case-sensitive.
Regards,
Laurent.
> I thought you knew the number of cols and what you should expect in each.
> Then it sounded pretty easy to build a list of dictionaries. If you don't
> know what you're supposed to find in your file and how this file is
> structured I guess you don't know what you are doing.
That's not what the OP asked about.
[RFQ:]
"""So each line is intended to be: key1,value1,key2,value2,key3,value3...
and each line is to be variable in length (although it will have to be
an even number of records so that each key has a value)."""
The rows are not all of the same format. The OP *does* know the
structure, and he (?) *does* know what he's doing. It's just not the
structure usually used in CSV files.
The csv module, of course, still reads these rows just fine; they just
need to be processed a bit to get the correct dictionaries.