Hi Vanam, I'm a wee bit confused by your email.
> i want to know the difference between 'r' mode and 'r+' mode r+ allows you to both read and write to the file without having to close in between. But its up to you to control where the "cursor" is within the file so that you write in the correct places. >>>>>>>>>>> 1.i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','w')-------->for writiing i.write('hai')--------->written some content in text file i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','r')---->for reading print i.read()---->for printing the contents in that text file i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','w')---------->for writing i.write('how')-----------?Rewrite the contents print i.read() [MY QUESTION]:i want to read the text file contents cant it be done by giving (print i.read())? >>>>>>>>>>> Yes you can print i.read() But in the sequence above you never close the file which may result in strangeness. For example your writes may not actually get sent to disk... It is always good practice to close a file before trying to reopen it. In the examples above, what are you expecting to see? I asume 'hai' the first time and 'how' the second? But on the second you don't even open i for reading following the write.... >>>>>>>>>>>> 2.i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','r+')-----For reading and writing i.write('hai')--------->written some content to text file print i.read()--------->{؆('c:\python25\integer.txt','w') i write('') print i.read()how') i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','r') print i.read() i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','w') i.write() i = open('c:\python25\integer.txt','r') print i.read() } --->Thats what i saw on interpreter(In curly braces) when i ran the script >>>>>>>>>>>> > [MY QUESTION]:1.from where the above in curly braces > is printed?and i have written only 'hai' to the text file I have no idea! What I would expect to happen is that you write 'hai' to the start of the file then the read will read in the contents of the file, except for the hai which you have written. But you may need to use flush() to force the write first. But whether the stuff above is the file contents I don't know. - what happens if you open the file in a text editor? > 2.Should i recall again the opening of the file in > 'r' mode to read the file? r+ should allow you to read but depending on what you need you may need to position the cursor using seek() first. In general I don't encourage the use of r+ because it does require careful control of exactly where you are in the file, which can be difficult. HTH, -- Alan Gauld Author of the Learn to Program web site http://www.freenetpages.co.uk/hp/alan.gauld _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor