Write a program that first reads in the name of an input file and then reads the input file using the file.readlines() method. The input file contains an unsorted list of number of seasons followed by the corresponding TV show. Your program should put the contents of the input file into a dictionary where the number of seasons are the keys, and a list of TV shows are the values (since multiple shows could have the same number of seasons).
Sort the dictionary by key (least to greatest) and output the results to a file named output_keys.txt, separating multiple TV shows associated with the same key with a semicolon (;). Next, sort the dictionary by values (alphabetical order), and output the results to a file named output_titles.txt.
Ex: If the input is:
file1.txt
and the contents of file1.txt are:
20
Gunsmoke
30
The Simpsons
10
Will & Grace
14
Dallas
20
Law & Order
12
Murder, She Wrote
the file output_keys.txt should contain:
10: Will & Grace
12: Murder, She Wrote
14: Dallas
20: Gunsmoke; Law & Order
30: The Simpsons
and the file output_titles.txt should contain:
Dallas
Gunsmoke
Law & Order
Murder, She Wrote
The Simpsons
Will & Grace
Note: There is a newline at the end of each output file, and file1.txt is available to download.
currently, my code is:
def readFile(filename):
dict = {}
with open(filename, 'r') as infile:
lines = infile.readlines()
for index in range(0, len(lines) - 1, 2):
if lines[index].strip()=='':continue
count = int(lines[index].strip())
name = lines[index + 1].strip()
if count in dict.keys():
name_list = dict.get(count)
name_list.append(name)
name_list.sort()
else:
dict[count] = [name]
return dict
def output_keys(dict, filename):
with open(filename,'w+') as outfile:
for key in sorted(dict.keys()):
outfile.write('{}: {}\n'.format(key,';'.join(dict.get(key))))
print('{}: {}\n'.format(key,';'.join(dict.get(key))))
def output_titles(dict, filename):
titles = []
for title in dict.values():
titles.extend(title)
with open(filename,'w+') as outfile:
for title in sorted(titles):
outfile.write('{}\n'.format(title))
print(title)
def main():
filename = input()
dict = readFile(filename)
if dict is None:
print('Error: Invalid file name provided: {}'.format(filename))
return
output_filename_1 ='output_keys.txt'
output_filename_2 ='output_titles.txt'
output_keys(dict,output_filename_1)
print()
output_titles(dict,output_filename_2)
main()
The problem is that when I go to submit and the input changes, my output differs.
Output differs. See highlights below. Special character legend Input file2.txt Your output 7: Lux Video Theatre; Medium; Rules of Engagement 8: Barney Miller;Castle; Mama 10: Friends; Modern Family; Smallville;Will & Grace 11: Cheers;The Jeffersons 12: Murder, She Wrote;NYPD Blue 14: Bonanza;Dallas 15: ER 20: Gunsmoke; Law & Order; Law & Order: Special Victims Unit 30: The Simpsons Expected output 7: Rules of Engagement; Medium; Lux Video Theatre 8: Mama; Barney Miller; Castle 10: Will & Grace; Smallville; Modern Family; Friends 11: Cheers; The Jeffersons 12: Murder, She Wrote; NYPD Blue 14: Dallas; Bonanza 15: ER 20: Gunsmoke; Law & Order; Law & Order: Special Victims Unit 30: The Simpsons

Respuesta :

Answer:

Explanation:

The following is written in Python. It creates the dictionary as requested and prints it out to the output file as requested using the correct format for various shows with the same number of seasons.The output can be seen in the attached picture below.

mydict = {}

with open("file1.txt", "r") as showFile:

 for line in showFile:

   cleanString = line.strip()

   seasons = 0

   try:

       seasons = int(cleanString)

       print(type(seasons))

   except:

       pass

   if seasons != 0:

       showName = showFile.readline()

       if seasons in mydict:

           mydict[seasons].append(showName.strip())

       else:

           mydict[seasons] = [showName.strip()]

f = open("output.txt", "a")

finalString = ''

for seasons in mydict:

   finalString += str(seasons) + ": "

   for show in mydict[seasons]:

       finalString += show + '; '

   f.write(finalString[:-2] + '\n')

   finalString = ''

f.close()

Ver imagen sandlee09