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Help!!!

You have been asked to make a special book categorization program, which assigns each book a special code based on its title. The code is equal to the first letter of the book, followed by the number of characters in the title. For example, for the book "Harry Potter", the code would be: H12, as it contains 12 characters (including the space). You are provided a books.txt file, which includes the book titles, each one written on a separate line. Read the title one by one and output the code for each book on a separate line. For example, if the books.txt file contains: Some book Another book Your program should output: S9 A12

9th Jan 2022, 7:52 AM
Wijdene Madiouni
Wijdene Madiouni - avatar
8 Answers
+ 3
file = open("/usercode/files/books.txt", "r") lines=file.read().splitlines() for line in lines: c=str(len(line)) print(line[0]+c) file.close()
9th Jan 2022, 12:32 PM
**🇩đŸ‡Ș|🇩đŸ‡Ș**
**🇩đŸ‡Ș|🇩đŸ‡Ș** - avatar
+ 2
John it doesn't work
9th Jan 2022, 11:46 AM
Wijdene Madiouni
Wijdene Madiouni - avatar
+ 1
I have a problem with solving codes with files
9th Jan 2022, 7:59 AM
Wijdene Madiouni
Wijdene Madiouni - avatar
+ 1
Wijdene Madiouni Readlines method keeps "\n" as part of the line, hence the length is +1. One could use .strip() to avoid this, but the task asks to count the spaces (not sure about the trailing ones, though, but better safe, than sorry). I decided to go with plain checking, whether the "\n" char is in the line (the last line of the file might not have one). Since backslash cannot be included in the f-string, "\n" is substituted with its ascii number, so сhr(10) == "\n". The updated code: https://code.sololearn.com/c8CdWlB0GhtK/?ref=app
9th Jan 2022, 12:08 PM
John
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Just means you have to open the file with the provided file name and assign it to a variable. Then do some type of read(e.g. readline(), readlines()) method on that object.
9th Jan 2022, 9:39 AM
Python Trader
Python Trader - avatar
0
Wijdene Madiouni Open the file, read all the lines. Iterate over the read lines and produce the string in the desired formatting - first char, len of the string. Join will join all the produced strings with "\n", which is the newline character, so we'll have all the formatted strings on their own lines. https://code.sololearn.com/c8CdWlB0GhtK/?ref=app
9th Jan 2022, 11:27 AM
John
0
https://code.sololearn.com/c4A2385A0A4A/?ref=app
10th Jan 2022, 10:43 AM
jaehoo park
jaehoo park - avatar
0
with open('books.txt') as f: # remove leading and trailing newline characters from each title titles = list(map(lambda x: x.strip(), f.readlines())) for title in titles: print(title[0], len(title), sep='')
10th Jan 2022, 5:02 PM
John
John - avatar