D.*.F
..1..
I have to read this data line by line, and convert it into list of
lists, of individual strings.
(("D" "." *" "." "F") ("." "." "1" "." "."))
Can someone help me out with this please?
LOOP, READ-LINE, and STRING are your friends. It's almost a "one-liner".
[O.k., depending on how fanatical you are about formatting, it's
actually a 2- or 3-liner. But it still took less than 40 seconds
by the stopwatch to write & test a solution that works with your
sample input data set.]
Note: It's considered polite in this list to first show us us your
best efforts so far [the code you wrote], and the problems you have
experienced [the exact error messages]. rather than just starting off
with "Do my homework for me!".
-Rob
-----
Rob Warnock <rp...@rpw3.org>
627 26th Avenue <URL:http://rpw3.org/>
San Mateo, CA 94403 (650)572-2607
(let ((in (open "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil))
(main-list nil))
(when in
(loop for line = (read-line in nil)
while line do (let ((line-string line)
(string-form nil))
(loop for i from 1 to (length line-string)
do
(push (subseq line-string (1- i) i) string-form))
(push string-form main-list)))
(close in)) (return main-list))
But this is just returning true, even after I am explicitly returning
main-list before the end of let block.
I changed the (return main-list) to simply return-list, and prefaced
your push statements with nreverse, and the code works as expected.
(let ((in (open "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil))
(main-list nil))
(when in
(loop for line = (read-line in nil)
while line do (let ((line-string line)
(string-form nil))
(loop for i from 1 to (length line-string)
do
(push (subseq line-string (1- i) i)
string-form))
(push (nreverse string-form) main-list)))
(close in))
(nreverse main-list))
-Jason
Carla, now that Jason has debugged the proximate problem, we can
start working on style and using common CL idioms, especially
within the LOOPs.
First, there's a standard CL macro that takes care of opening and
closing a file for you, so instead of:
(let ((in (open "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil)))
(let ((main-list nil))
(when in
...{body which PUSHes onto MAIN-LIST}...)
(close in))
main-list)
you can write this:
(with-open-file (in "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil)
(let ((main-list nil))
...{body}...
main-list))
Next, you can eliminate the LINE-STRING variable -- just use LINE,
it's still in scope.
Your LOOPs just *cry* out for using the COLLECT feature of the
LOOP macro instead of setting up results variables (MAIN-LIST,
STRING-FORM) and PUSH'ing stuff onto them. Plus, COLLECT keeps
things in forward order so you don't have to REVERSE (or NREVERSE)
them. First let's do the outer LOOP:
(with-open-file (in "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil)
(loop for line = (read-line in nil)
while line
collect (let ((string-form nil))
(loop for i from 1 to (length line) do
(push (subseq line (1- i) i) string-form))
string-form)))
and now the inner:
(with-open-file (in "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil)
(loop for line = (read-line in nil)
while line
collect (loop for i from 1 to (length line)
collect (subseq line (1- i) i))))
Finally, you can use the FOR...ACROSS array scanning feature
of LOOP to walk each LINE character by character, with STRING
to turn each character back into a string:
(with-open-file (in "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil)
(loop for line = (read-line in nil)
while line
collect (loop for c across line collect (string c))))
And there's the 3-line solution I mentioned before
[well, 4 lines, with the addition of the WITH-OPEN-FILE].
-Rob
p.s. People differ it how much they like to compress vertical
whitespace. You can crunch the above to 3 lines this way:
(with-open-file (in "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil)
(loop for line = (read-line in nil) while line
collect (loop for c across line collect (string c))))
though many people prefer a looser layout that's more easily
parsable by eye [and looks like the other LOOPs you're likely
to find in CL code]:
(with-open-file (in "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil)
(loop for line = (read-line in nil)
while line
collect (loop for c across line
collect (string c))))
That was a good lesson in refactoring for me, and I'm sure Carla would
appreciate it too!
Rob Warnock wrote:
> Jason <jem...@gmail.com> wrote:
> +---------------
> | Carla <crashoverride...@gmail.com> wrote:
> | > I am trying with this version of my function.
> ....[trimmed]...
or even simpler:
(with-open-file (in "file1.txt" :if-does-not-exist nil)
(loop for line = (read-line in nil) while line
collect (map 'list #'string line)))
--
Stelian Ionescu a.k.a. fe[nl]ix
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum videtur.
Ruby:
IO.readlines("junk0").map{|line| line.strip.split("") }
(defun process-file (file)
(mapcar (lambda (line) (split-sequence line)) (readlines file)))
(compile 'process-file)
Now, which part of the Ruby code is not rendered in CL?
Cheers
--
Marco
No, which part of CL code is not rendered in Ruby?
;-)
--
__Pascal Bourguignon__
http://www.informatimago.com
COMPILE, of course! ;-}
-Rob