On 03/28/2012 06:17 AM, Yan, Xianming wrote: > Hello, > Without a meaningful title, it's unclear just what your question is. When you do a reply on the digest, delete all the parts that aren't relevant to your post, and change the subject line to something appropriate.
> I'm new to studying python, > > Seems you don't have to import the argument module. > The standard library has no module called argument. If you want to import a module, you need to write it, and save it to a file with a .py extension. Or perhaps you've installed such a module from some internet site. > You can simply open the two files and write then to another file. By using > file("xxxx.xx",r) can open a file with read, by using file("xxxx",w) can open > a file with write. > The standard way to open a file is with the built-in open() function. Otherwise your syntax is missing the quotes around the r and w. To open a text file, use: infile = open("xxxx", "r") outfile = open("yyyy", "w") > And then you can using xx.readline() to read a line from file, then > xx.writeline() to write into another file. > Again, assuming the data is text. > Hope this helps you. > > Thanks > Xianming -- DaveA _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor