@JGreenwell Definitely! Fortunately, we don't get a lot of choppers around here. But some of those low-flying jets are pretty noisy.
Yamming chameleon questions... I answered a Tkinter question a while ago. The OP accepted it. But then he mangled my code "to make it easier to understand" and then asked me to fix it. So I wrote a new version, which I expect he'll find even harder to understand. stackoverflow.com/questions/52018496/…
I'm was trying to figure out how someone could make a Tk app without understanding dictionaries or lists but then I realized "oh, this person learned either by copying or pasting code or with the many lesson structures which only code (instead of teaching data structures and basic logic first)"
@PM2Ring if this is the case, then I cannot improve your code (without damage to OP)
Yes. Probably too much copy & paste / trial & error coding, and not enough learning the basics first. And of course the Tkinter docs and tutorials assume you are already familiar with the basics of core Python, so they don't try to teach you that stuff.
Ok. But the csv module is a standard module, & it's pretty efficient. So it's probably a Good Idea to use it if you have a lot of data in that format. OTOH, it's good to know how to parse stuff like that manually.
First, read the csv documentation, and look at how to set a delimiter (what separates elements) and the escape character (what tells it that the following character isn't a delimiter), for a reader instance.
I recommend csv as well but note if you just use thestring.split(" ; ") it would give a list like ['a', 'b', 'c \\; d']. Requiring you to alter the list to remove the extra backslashes (i.e. splitting and rejoining manually)