Hi Juanald, or Jon if you prefer, You're still replying to the digest, which means we're still getting six or eight pages of messages we've already seen.
My answer to your question is below: On Sat, Apr 25, 2015 at 11:02:56PM -0400, Juanald Reagan wrote: > Sorry for not providing all the relevant info, let me provide some > additional details: > > When I run this code: > > from ipwhois import IPWhois > file=open('ip.txt', 'r') > ipaddy=file.read() > obj = IPWhois(ipaddy) > results = [obj.lookup()] > print results [0] > > I receive this output: > > Jons-computer:whois-0.7 2 jon$ python pythonwhois.py > > {'asn_registry': 'arin', 'asn_date': '', 'asn_country_code': 'US', 'raw': > None, 'asn_cidr': '8.8.8.0/24', 'raw_referral': None, 'query': '8.8.8.8', [snip output] Awesome! That's the information we needed to see. IPWhois() returns a dictionary of {key: value} pairs. So we can extract the fields you want like this: obj = IPWhois(ipaddy) registry = obj['asn_registry'] description = obj['description'] If you insist on using a list with indexed values, you can do this: obj = IPWhois(ipaddy) results = [obj['asn_registry'], obj['description']] registry = results[0] description = results[1] but in my opinion that's silly since you already have the information in the obj dictionary, copying it into the results list is just a waste of time. Note that this will *not* work: obj = IPWhois(ipaddy) results = list(obj.values()) registry = results[ ???? ] # What index should I use? description = results[ ???? ] because dictionaries are unordered, and you don't know what order the values will be returned. Depending on the version of Python you are using, it might even be a different order every time you run the program. -- Steve _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor