for i in range(len(fileList)):
#search files for product total sheet
result = fileList[i].find("Products Ordered Total Quantity")
if result >= 0:
#finds the index location of labor, which is the last item on the product sheet
endlocation = fileList[i].find("LABOR", result)
#adds all informationed betwen the last letter of Quantity and Labor
products = fileList[i][result+31:endlocation]
Hello, I was in here the other day and someone clued me in about, if string in list: which has been great. Is there a way to get the index from where it was found? Or do I need to just use the .find() method?
If I read down on that page you linked Andres, I would have seen the common issue "Indenting only the lines of your message that you intend to be code. This does not work. Every line must be indented; you can’t mix plaintext and code in a multi-line message." which is why my first attempt did not work.
yay, when you learn how to reduce code by 1 line lol. Old: test = string.find("asdf") if test >= 0: string found! new, if string.find("asdf") >= 0: etc, etc. woot! Sorry, wanted to share my small victory lol.
no he didn't... I noticed that in my first question because that was the line I copied, and I just thought it was my bad for not selecting it all. I trimmed it down to just the file() because that is what I was interested in.
got it, thanks. I was just making sure I wasn't missing something in my header that he had left out of his example. and header, that's the top part with all the "from tkinter import *" stuff right?
stackoverflow.com/questions/14978575/… he is using "with file()" but I generally use "with open()". I notice he is using Python 2.7, is this a difference between python 3+ and 2.7?
Because I want the largest amount from the the regex pull, and I was going to call .sort() on it but then I looked at my print statement again and was like, wait, those aren't ints, so I wasn't sure how Python would have sorted them, and I wanted a sanity check. Maybe there was some weird rule with dollar signs that made them floats. shrug
I get what you are saying now @AndrasDeak I just had to run it myself to figure it out. if a == True: is almost the same as if a: because path.exists makes a True/False, is what I think you are saying.
@AndrasDeak Gotcha, I would have gone a=path.exists() if a =='True': install in the path, else: then launch some sort of gui for the user to navigate to the install folder and assign that as the new install dir.
lol IDK what better way there would be. From my understanding Python keeps everything in memory until the code ends, once that happens it data dumps. Maybe there is a lib out there that I point all of my variables to and it saves the variables and information and later when I run the other program, I can use the lib to point to pull everything out in the same way I saved it.
The information used in the final website is some of the same information from the 1st set of process, so I want to reuse it, without rerunning the program a second time, but a little bit different. make sense? Right now I'm saving everything to a text file, just wondering if there was another way.
What is a good way to store data to be used later by Python? Right now my program reads a PDF, extracts text, uses the text to go to other websites and fill out forms and bring back more text. This is then brought to a final website to fill out 1 more form and then the user has to wait for another human to check the form and send it back. Once the form comes back, the user then has to go to another website and fill out more stuff with information from the first process.