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Re: Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv

Newsgroups comp.lang.python
Date 2016-04-19 07:18 -0700
References (2 earlier) <nf4ph0$6gh$1@ger.gmane.org> <mailman.3.1461053808.30862.python-list@python.org> <719abd0a-d3b4-483d-ab77-1989b06f062e@googlegroups.com> <nf5cpq$37a$1@ger.gmane.org> <mailman.14.1461073547.30862.python-list@python.org>
Message-ID <96dfb79a-697c-47cb-b9d9-690f4f937062@googlegroups.com> (permalink)
Subject Re: Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv
From Sayth Renshaw <flebber.crue@gmail.com>

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On Tuesday, 19 April 2016 23:46:01 UTC+10, Peter Otten  wrote:
> Sayth Renshaw wrote:
> 
> > Thanks for the insight, after doing a little reading I found this post
> > which uses both argparse and glob and attempts to cover the windows and
> > bash expansion of wildcards,
> > http://breathmintsforpenguins.blogspot.com.au/2013/09/python-crossplatform-handling-of.html
> 
> I hope you read the comment section of that page carefully.
> On Linux your script's behaviour will be surprising.

Yes I have gone your way now and am parsing the files, where my data is going will have to wait till after I sleep.

Thanks for the advice.

from pyquery import PyQuery as pq
import pandas as pd
import argparse
# from glob import glob


parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description=None)


def GetArgs(parser):
    """Parser function using argparse"""
    # parser.add_argument('directory', help='directory use',
    #                     action='store', nargs='*')
    parser.add_argument("files", nargs="+")
    return parser.parse_args()

fileList = GetArgs(parser)
print(fileList.files)
# d = pq(filename='20160319RHIL0_edit.xml')
data = []
attrs = ('id', 'horse')


for items in fileList.files:
    d = pq(filename=items)
    res = d('nomination')
    dataSets = [[res.eq(i).attr(x)
                 for x in attrs] for i in range(len(res))]
    resultList = data.append(dataSets)

frames = pd.DataFrame(resultList)
print(frames)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
(pyquery)sayth@sayth-E6410:~/Projects/pyquery$ python jqxml.py samples/*.xml
['samples/20160319RHIL0_edit.xml', 'samples/20160402RAND0.xml', 'samples/20160409RAND0.xml', 'samples/20160416RAND0.xml']
Empty DataFrame
Columns: []
Index: []
(pyquery)sayth@sayth-E6410:~/Projects/pyquery$ 

Thanks

Sayth

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Thread

Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv Sayth Renshaw <flebber.crue@gmail.com> - 2016-04-18 16:44 -0700
  Re: Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv Steven D'Aprano <steve@pearwood.info> - 2016-04-19 10:19 +1000
    Re: Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv Peter Otten <__peter__@web.de> - 2016-04-19 10:16 +0200
      Re: Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv Sayth Renshaw <flebber.crue@gmail.com> - 2016-04-19 06:21 -0700
        Re: Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv Sayth Renshaw <flebber.crue@gmail.com> - 2016-04-19 06:31 -0700
        Re: Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv Peter Otten <__peter__@web.de> - 2016-04-19 15:45 +0200
          Re: Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv Sayth Renshaw <flebber.crue@gmail.com> - 2016-04-19 07:18 -0700
  Re: Why are my files in in my list - os module used with sys argv MRAB <python@mrabarnett.plus.com> - 2016-04-19 02:17 +0100

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