http://wiki.python.org/moin/Powerful%20Python%20One-Liners
This is a page that is devoted to short programs that can perform powerful operations. The ability to write short programs that are just as powerful as a program written in another language designed to do the same thing. However, it is sometimes fun to try and write a program in Python that is only one line. In other languages this would be nearly impossible, but in Python it is a lot easier to do. The trick is to think up something that will "do a lot with a little." I, personally, would love to see this page expanded to the point where it needs some sort of organization system.
Thanks for Your Code, JAM
Of course, there is debate on whether one-liners are even Pythonic.
JAM/Code/PlatformFinder - This program tells you what platform you are using.
JAM/Code/ComPYiler - This program compiles every .py file in the Python directory.
Powerful Python One-Liners/Hostname - This programs tells you what your hostname is.
Some thoughts by ewo:
import pprint;pprint.pprint(zip(('Byte', 'KByte', 'MByte', 'GByte', 'TByte'), (1 << 10*i for i in xrange(5))))
print '\n'.join("%i Byte = %i Bit = largest number: %i" % (j, j*8, 256**j-1) for j in (1 << i for i in xrange(8)))
Cute, isn't it?
f = lambda x: [[y for j, y in enumerate(set(x)) if (i >> j) & 1] for i in range(2**len(set(x)))]
>>>f([10,9,1,10,9,1,1,1,10,9,7]) [[], [9], [10], [9, 10], [7], [9, 7], [10, 7], [9, 10, 7], [1], [9, 1], [10, 1], [9, 10, 1], [7, 1], [9, 7, 1], [10, 7, 1], [9, 10, 7, 1]]
-RJW
Alternately (shorter, more functional version):
f = lambda l: reduce(lambda z, x: z + [y + [x] for y in z], l, [[]])
import base64, sys; base64.decode(open(sys.argv[1], "rb"), open(sys.argv[2], "wb"))
I came up with this one-liner in response to an article that said it couldn't be done as an one-liner in Python.
What this does is replace the substring "at" by "op" on all lines of all files (in place) under the path specified (here, the current path).
Caution: Don't run this on your home directory or you're going to get all your text files edited.
1 import sys,os,re,fileinput;a=[i[2] for i in os.walk('.') if i[2]] [0];[sys.stdout.write(re.sub('at','op',j)) for j in fileinput.input(a,inplace=1)]
Clearer is: import os.path; a=[f for f in os.listdir('.') if not os.path.isdir(f)]
Print every line from an input file but remove the first two fields.
python -c "import sys;[sys.stdout.write(' '.join(line.split(' ')[2:])) for line in sys.stdin]" < input.txt
A related issue is embedding Python into a Makefile. I had a really long script that I was trying to cram into a makefile so I automated the process:
import sys,re def main(): fh = open(sys.argv[1],'r') lines = fh.readlines() print '\tpython2.2 -c "`printf \\"if 1:\\n\\' for line in lines: line = re.sub('[\\\'\"()]','\\\g<0>',line) # grab leading white space (should be multiples of 4) and makes them into # tabs wh_spc_len = len(re.match('\s*',line).group()) sys.stdout.write('\t') sys.stdout.write(wh_spc_len/4*'\\t'+line.rstrip().lstrip()) sys.stdout.write('\\n\\\n') print '\t\\"`"' if __name__=='__main__': main()
This script generates a "one-liner" from make's point of view.
python -c "print unichr(234)"
This script echos "ê"
[another command] | python -c "import sys,re;[sys.stdout.write(re.sub('PATTERN', 'SUBSTITUTION', line)) for line in sys.stdin]"
python -c "import sys; tmp = lambda x: sys.stdout.write(x.split()[0]+'\t'+str(int(x.split()[1])+1)+'\n'); map(tmp, sys.stdin);"
print '\n'.join(line.split(":",1)[0] for line in open("/etc/passwd"))
python -c 'import re,sys;print re.sub("\s*([{};,:])\s*", "\\1", re.sub("/\*.*?\*/", "", re.sub("\s+", " ", sys.stdin.read())))'
python -c "print ''.join(chr(int(''.join(i), 16)) for i in zip(*[iter('474e552773204e6f7420556e6978')]*2))"
python -c "import sys; print sys.stdin.read().replace('\r','').split('\n\n',2)[1]";
print '~/python/one-liners.py'.split('.')[-1]
This can be used to convert a string into a "url safe" string
python -c "import urllib, sys ; print urllib.quote_plus(sys.stdin.read())";
python -c "import sys; print '\n'.join(reversed(sys.stdin.read().split('\n')))"
python -c "import sys; sys.stdout.write(''.join(sys.stdin.readlines()[:10]))" < /path/to/your/file
They call it "The Pyed Piper" or pyp. It's pretty similar to the -c way of executing python, but it imports common modules and has it's own preset variable that help with splitting/joining, line counter, etc. You use pipes to pass information forward instead of nested parentheses, and then use your normal python string and list methods. Here is an example from the homepage:
Here, we take a linux long listing, capture every other of the 5th through the 10th lines, keep username and file name fields, replace "hello" with "goodbye", capitalize the first letter of every word, and then add the text "is splendid" to the end:
ls -l | pyp "pp[5:11:2] | whitespace[2], w[-1] | p.replace('hello','goodbye') | p.title(),'is splendid'"
and the explanation:
This uses pyp's built-in string and list variables (p and pp), as well as the variable whitespace and it's shortcut w, which both represent a list based on splitting each line on whitespace (whitespace = w = p.split()). The other functions and selection techniques are all standard python. Notice the pipes ("|") are inside the pyp command.
http://code.google.com/p/pyp/ http://opensource.imageworks.com/?p=pyp