From other posts, I've learned that '\n' signifies a new line when adding to a txt file. I'm trying to do just this, but I can't figure out the right syntax when an attribute is right before the new line.
My code I'm trying is like this:
for item in list:
with open("file.txt", "w") as att_file:
att_file.write(variable\n)
As you can probably see, I'm trying to add the variable for each item in the list to a new line in a txt file. What's the correct way to do this?
You just need to specify the newline character as a string:
Eg:
with open("file.txt", "w") as att_file:
for item in list:
att_file.write(attribute + "\n")
try this:
att_file.write(attribute+"\n")
note :attribute must be some variable and must be string type
your code will look like this:
with open("file.txt", "w") as att_file:
for item in list:
att_file.write(item+"\n")
with
should be before for
, else every time you are opening file with write mode, it will omit the
previous write
file7 = open('test_list7_file.txt','a')
file7.write(var7 + '\n')
will work fine, BUT IF YOU APPEND TO EXISTING txt file the MOUSE CURSOR
needs to be ONE SPACE AFTER THE LAST ENTRY when you save the file for use in your program.
~no space and it joins the last entry,
~on the next line already when you create you file to be added to, it adds an empty line first