I've written a command line utility that uses getopt for parsing arguments given on the command line. I would also like to have a filename be an optional argument, such as it is in other utilities like grep, cut etc. So, I would like it to have the following usage
tool -d character -f integer [filename]
How can I implement the following?
- if a filename is given, read from the file.
- if a filename is not given, read from STDIN.
In the simplest terms:
import sys
# parse command line
if file_name_given:
inf = open(file_name_given)
else:
inf = sys.stdin
At this point you would use inf to read from the file. Depending on whether a filename was given, this would read from the given file or from stdin.
When you need to close the file, you can do this:
if inf is not sys.stdin:
inf.close()
However, in most cases it will be harmless to close sys.stdin if you're done with it.
The fileinput module may do what you want - assuming the non-option arguments are in args then:
import fileinput
for line in fileinput.input(args):
print line
If args is empty then fileinput.input() will read from stdin; otherwise it reads from each file in turn, in a similar manner to Perl's while(<>).
I like the general idiom of using a context manager, but the (too) trivial solution ends up closing sys.stdin when you are out of the with statement, which I want to avoid.
Borrowing from this answer, here is a workaround:
import sys
import contextlib
@contextlib.contextmanager
def _smart_open(filename, mode='Ur'):
if filename == '-':
if mode is None or mode == '' or 'r' in mode:
fh = sys.stdin
else:
fh = sys.stdout
else:
fh = open(filename, mode)
try:
yield fh
finally:
if filename is not '-':
fh.close()
if __name__ == '__main__':
args = sys.argv[1:]
if args == []:
args = ['-']
for filearg in args:
with _smart_open(filearg) as handle:
do_stuff(handle)
I suppose you could achieve something similar with os.dup() but the code I cooked up to do that turned out to be more complex and more magical, whereas the above is somewhat clunky but very straightforward.
To make use of python's with statement, one can use the following code:
import sys
with open(sys.argv[1], 'r') if len(sys.argv) > 1 else sys.stdin as f:
# read data using f
# ......
I prefer to use "-" as an indicator that you should read from stdin, it's more explicit:
import sys
with open(sys.argv[1], 'r') if sys.argv[1] is not "-" else sys.stdin as f:
pass # do something here
Not a direct answer but related.
Normally when you write a python script you could use the argparse package.
If this is the case you can use:
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('infile', nargs='?', type=argparse.FileType('r'), default=sys.stdin)
'?'. One argument will be consumed from the command line if possible, and produced as a single item. If no command-line argument is present, the value from default will be produced.
and here we set default to sys.stdin;
so If there is a file it will read it , and if not it will take the input from stdin "Note: that we are using positional argument in the example above"
for more visit: https://docs.python.org/2/library/argparse.html#nargs
Something like:
if input_from_file:
f = open(file_name, "rt")
else:
f = sys.stdin
inL = f.readline()
while inL:
print inL.rstrip()
inL = f.readline()
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1744989/read-from-file-or-stdin