I want to test againts multiple command line arguments in a loop
> python Read_xls_files.py group1 group2 group3
开发者_JAVA技巧No this code tests only for the first one (group1).
hlo = []
for i in range(len(sh.col_values(8))):
if sh.cell(i, 1).value == sys.argv[1]:
hlo.append(sh.cell(i, 8).value)
How should I modify this that I can test against one, two or all of these arguments? So, if there is group1 in one sh.cell(i, 1), the list is appended and if there is group1, group2 etc., the hlo is appended.
You can iterate over sys.argv[1:]
, e.g. via something like:
for grp in sys.argv[1:]:
for i in range(len(sh.col_values(8))):
if sh.cell(i, 1).value == grp:
hlo.append(sh.cell(i, 8).value)
outputList = [x for x in values if x in sys.argv[1:]]
Substitute the bits that are relevant for your (spreadsheet?) situation. This is a list comprehension. You can also investigate the optparse module which has been in the standard library since 2.3.
I would recommend taking a look at Python's optparse module. It's a nice helper to parse sys.argv
.
argparse is another powerful, easy to use module that parses sys.argv for you. Very useful for creating command line scripts.
I believe this would work, and would avoid iterating over sys.argv:
hlo = []
for i in range(len(sh.col_values(8))):
if sh.cell(i, 1).value in sys.argv[1:]:
hlo.append(sh.cell(i, 8).value)
# First thing is to get a set of your query strings.
queries = set(argv[1:])
# If using optparse or argparse, queries = set(something_else)
hlo = []
for i in range(len(sh.col_values(8))):
if sh.cell(i, 1).value in queries:
hlo.append(sh.cell(i, 8).value)
=== end of answer to question ===
Aside: the OP is using xlrd ... here are a couple of performance hints.
Doesn't matter too much with this simple example, but if you are going to do a lot of coordinate-based accessing of cell values, you can do better than that by using Sheet.cell_value(rowx, colx) instead of Sheet.cell(rowx, colx).value which builds a Cell object on the fly:
queries = set(argv[1:])
hlo = []
for i in range(len(sh.nrows)): # all columns have the same size
if sh.cell_value(i, 1) in queries:
hlo.append(sh.cell_value(i, 8))
or you could use a list comprehension along with the Sheet.col_values(colx) method:
hlo = [
v8
for v1, v8 in zip(sh.col_values(1), sh.col_values(8))
if v1 in queries
]
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