> >I have the following code: > > > >>>> web_page = urllib.urlopen("http://www.python.org") > >>>> file = open("temp.html", "w") > >>>> web_page_contents = web_page.read() > >>>> file.write(web_page_contents) > >>>> file.close > > <built-in method close of file object at 0xb7cc76e0> > >>>> > > > > The file "temp.html" is created, but it doesn't look like the page at > > www.python.org. I'm guessing there are multiple frames and my code did > > not get everything. Can anyone point me to a tutorial or other > > reference on how to "get" all of the html contents at a particular > > page? > > > > Why did Python print the line after "file.close"? > > > > Thanks, > > Pete > > > > A. You didn't actually invoke the close method, you simply referenced it, > which is why you got the output line after file.close. Python is not VB. > To call close, you have to follow it with ()'s, as in: > > file.close()
Ahhhh. Thank you very much! > This will have the added benefit of flushing the output to temp.html, > probably containing the missing content you were looking for. > > B. Don't name variables "file", or "list", "str", "dict", "int", etc. Doing > so masks global names of builtin data types. Try "tempFile" instead. Oh. Thanks again! The file "temp.html" is definitely different than the first run, but still not anything close to www.python.org . Any other suggestions? Thanks, Pete > -- Paul -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list