David wrote: > Martin Walsh wrote: > >> Welcome! > > thanks
welcome (uh oh, infinite loop warning) > This "podcast_file.write('%s: %s' % (entry.updated, entry.link))" > writes it in one very long string Copy and paste gets me every time. Try this, and note the presence of the newline ('\n'): podcast_file.write('%s: %s\n' % (entry.updated, entry.link)) > > The Latest Link > http://linuxcrazy.com/podcasts/LC-44-arne.ogghttp://linuxcrazy.com/podcas=>> > > > and sys.stdout prints to the file one line at a time The primary issue is not that you're writing to sys.stdout, it's that you're using the print statement which implicitly adds a newline. Technically you can also do the following (python <= 2.5, and maybe 2.6) which should demonstrate the concept... podcastfile = file(somepath, 'a') print >> podcastfile, '%s: %s' (entry.updated, entry.link) ... however, I would recommend against using the above print statement syntax for anything other than experimentation because 1) it's not common practice IMHO, and 2) it's gone starting with python 3.0. 'print' will be a builtin function instead of a statement going forward. I second Alan's recommendation to read a tutorial or two to solidify your understanding of the basic concepts. Alan's tutorial is very good, and covers everything we have discussed so far, particularly the "Handling Files" section. Check the link in his email sig. HTH, Marty _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor