Roman Rdgz
Roman Rdgz

Reputation: 13244

Parsing data from text file

I have a text file that has content like this:

******** ENTRY 01 ********
ID:                  01
Data1:               0.1834869385E-002
Data2:              10.9598489301
Data3:              -0.1091356549E+001
Data4:                715

And then an empty line, and repeats more similar blocks, all of them with the same data fields.

I am porting to Python a C++ code, and a certain part gets the file line by line, detects the text title and then detect each field text to extract the data. This doesn't look like a smart code at all, and I think Python must have some library to parse data like this easily. After all, it almost look like a CSV!

Any idea for this?

Upvotes: 9

Views: 35739

Answers (3)

Martijn Pieters
Martijn Pieters

Reputation: 1121256

It is very far from CSV, actually.

You can use the file as an iterator; the following generator function yields complete sections:

def load_sections(filename):
    with open(filename, 'r') as infile:
        line = ''
        while True:
            while not line.startswith('****'): 
                line = next(infile)  # raises StopIteration, ending the generator
                continue  # find next entry

            entry = {}
            for line in infile:
                line = line.strip()
                if not line: break

                key, value = map(str.strip, line.split(':', 1))
                entry[key] = value

            yield entry

This treats the file as an iterator, meaning that any looping advances the file to the next line. The outer loop only serves to move from section to section; the inner while and for loops do all the real work; first skip lines until a **** header section is found (otherwise discarded), then loop over all non-empty lines to create a section.

Use the function in a loop:

for section in load_sections(filename):
    print section

Repeating your sample data in a text file results in:

>>> for section in load_sections('/tmp/test.txt'):
...     print section
... 
{'Data4': '715', 'Data1': '0.1834869385E-002', 'ID': '01', 'Data3': '-0.1091356549E+001', 'Data2': '10.9598489301'}
{'Data4': '715', 'Data1': '0.1834869385E-002', 'ID': '01', 'Data3': '-0.1091356549E+001', 'Data2': '10.9598489301'}
{'Data4': '715', 'Data1': '0.1834869385E-002', 'ID': '01', 'Data3': '-0.1091356549E+001', 'Data2': '10.9598489301'}

You can add some data converters to that if you want to; a mapping of key to callable would do:

converters = {'ID': int, 'Data1': float, 'Data2': float, 'Data3': float, 'Data4': int}

then in the generator function, instead of entry[key] = value do entry[key] = converters.get(key, lambda v: v)(value).

Upvotes: 10

Peter Varo
Peter Varo

Reputation: 12150

my_file:

******** ENTRY 01 ********
ID:                  01
Data1:               0.1834869385E-002
Data2:              10.9598489301
Data3:              -0.1091356549E+001
Data4:                715

ID:                  02
Data1:               0.18348674325E-012
Data2:              10.9598489301
Data3:              0.0
Data4:                5748

ID:                  03
Data1:               20.1834869385E-002
Data2:              10.954576354
Data3:              10.13476858762435E+001
Data4:                7456

Python script:

import re

with open('my_file', 'r') as f:
    data  = list()
    group = dict()
    for key, value in re.findall(r'(.*):\s*([\dE+-.]+)', f.read()):
        if key in group:
            data.append(group)
            group = dict()
        group[key] = value
    data.append(group)

print data

Printed output:

[
    {
        'Data4': '715',
        'Data1': '0.1834869385E-002',
        'ID': '01',
        'Data3': '-0.1091356549E+001',
        'Data2': '10.9598489301'
    },
    {
        'Data4': '5748',
        'Data1': '0.18348674325E-012',
        'ID': '02',
        'Data3': '0.0',
        'Data2': '10.9598489301'
    },
    {
        'Data4': '7456',
        'Data1': '20.1834869385E-002',
        'ID': '03',
        'Data3': '10.13476858762435E+001',
        'Data2': '10.954576354'
    }
]

Upvotes: 4

6502
6502

Reputation: 114461

A very simple approach could be

all_objects = []

with open("datafile") as f:
    for L in f:
        if L[:3] == "***":
            # Line starts with asterisks, create a new object
            all_objects.append({})
        elif ":" in L:
            # Line is a key/value field, update current object
            k, v = map(str.strip, L.split(":", 1))
            all_objects[-1][k] = v

Upvotes: 0

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