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Line-by-line reading and writing Python: Text Input/Output Fundamentals

In the previous lesson, we mentioned that consecutive calls to the write method append text to the end. Here we are going to continue with this topic and learn how to work with files line by line.

How to write text line-by-line

We often have an iterator that provides text line by line. Of course, you can write a loop, but there's a better way — the writelines method. Here's how it works:

f = open("foo.txt", "w")
f.writelines(["cat\n", "dog\n"])
f.close()
f = open("foo.txt", "r")
print(f.read())
# => cat
# => dog

f.close()

As you can see, we wrote all the lines in the correct order. This approach is preferable when you need to write a large amount of text that you receive and process line by line. It's possible to accumulate the entire text in a single string beforehand, but it may require much memory. We should write the lines as they become available, and writelines is perfect.

How to read text line-by-line

You can not only write to a file line by line but also read it in the same way:

f = open("foo.txt")
f.readline() # 'cat\n'
f.readline() # 'dog\n'
f.readline() # ''
f.close()

Python understands that we separate the text lines by the newline character. The readline call moves the position to the following line, and once the text is over, all subsequent calls will return an empty string.

Note that the text lines include the newline characters themselves.

The readline method is convenient when we want to control the reading process. However, we often want to read all the lines of text. For that, you need to iterate over the file object. You will get an iterator of lines that we can read in a loop:

f = open("foo.txt")
for l in f:
    print(l)

# => cat

# => dog

f.close()

If you don't specify a mode, as I did this time, the file will open in read mode. Convenient, right? Think about why we printed extra empty lines. The file line iterator, as expected, is lazy. It reads lines only as needed and stops when there is nothing more to read.

Laziness allows you, among other things, to not read the entire file:

f = open("foo.txt")
for l in f:
    print(l)
    break

# => cat

print(f.read())
# => dog

f.close()

If you want to get all the lines of text as a list, you can call the readlines method and get that very list.

How to use streaming for large files

Using iterators is very convenient for streaming processing of files. Streaming processing means you can process large files without storing the entire file in memory. Here's an example of a script that numbers the lines of an input file and writes them to an output file:

input_file = open("input.txt", "r")
output_file = open("output.txt", "w")
for i, line in enumerate(input_file, 1):
    output_file.write(f"{i}) {line}")
input_file.close()
output_file.close()

Save this script in a file and see how it works.


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