Directing print output to a .txt file

Question:

Is there a way to save all of the print output to a txt file in python? Lets say I have the these two lines in my code and I want to save the print output to a file named output.txt.

print ("Hello stackoverflow!")
print ("I have a question.")

I want the output.txt file to to contain

Hello stackoverflow!
I have a question.
Asked By: Clone

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Answers:

Give print a file keyword argument, where the value of the argument is a file stream. The best practice is to open the file with the open function using a with block, which will ensure that the file gets closed for you at the end of the block:

with open("output.txt", "a") as f:
  print("Hello stackoverflow!", file=f)
  print("I have a question.", file=f)

From the Python documentation about print:

The file argument must be an object with a write(string) method; if it is not present or None, sys.stdout will be used.

And the documentation for open:

Open file and return a corresponding file object. If the file cannot be opened, an OSError is raised.

The "a" as the second argument of open means "append" – in other words, the existing contents of the file won’t be overwritten. If you want the file to be overwritten instead at the beginning of the with block, use "w".


The with block is useful because, otherwise, you’d need to remember to close the file yourself like this:

f = open("output.txt", "a")
print("Hello stackoverflow!", file=f)
print("I have a question.", file=f)
f.close()
Answered By: Aaron Christiansen

You can redirect stdout into a file “output.txt”:

import sys
sys.stdout = open('output.txt','wt')
print ("Hello stackoverflow!")
print ("I have a question.")
Answered By: Roman Bronshtein

Use the logging module

def init_logging():
    rootLogger = logging.getLogger('my_logger')

    LOG_DIR = os.getcwd() + '/' + 'logs'
    if not os.path.exists(LOG_DIR):
        os.makedirs(LOG_DIR)
    fileHandler = logging.FileHandler("{0}/{1}.log".format(LOG_DIR, "g2"))
    rootLogger.addHandler(fileHandler)

    rootLogger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)

    consoleHandler = logging.StreamHandler()
    rootLogger.addHandler(consoleHandler)

    return rootLogger

Get the logger:

logger = init_logging()

And start logging/output(ing):

logger.debug('Hi! :)')
Answered By: gies0r

One can directly append the returned output of a function to a file.

print(output statement, file=open("filename", "a"))
Answered By: Asiis Pradhan

Another Variation can be… Be sure to close the file afterwards

import sys
file = open('output.txt', 'a')
sys.stdout = file

print("Hello stackoverflow!") 
print("I have a question.")

file.close()
Answered By: vic

Another method without having to update your Python code at all, would be to redirect via the console.

Basically, have your Python script print() as usual, then call the script from the command line and use command line redirection. Like this:

$ python ./myscript.py > output.txt

Your output.txt file will now contain all output from your Python script.

Edit:
To address the comment; for Windows, change the forward-slash to a backslash.
(i.e. .myscript.py)

Answered By: S3DEV

Suppose my input file is "input.txt" and output file is "output.txt".

Let’s consider the input file has details to read:

5
1 2 3 4 5

Code:

import sys

sys.stdin = open("input", "r")
sys.stdout = open("output", "w")

print("Reading from input File : ")
n = int(input())
print("Value of n is :", n)

arr = list(map(int, input().split()))
print(arr)

So this will read from input file and output will be displayed in output file.

For more details please see https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/inputoutput-external-file-cc-java-python-competitive-programming/

Answered By: Chandra Shekhar

Be sure to import sys module. print whatever you want to write and want to save. In the sys module, we have stdout, which takes the output and stores it. Then close the sys.stdout . This will save the output.

import sys
print("Hello stackoverflow!" 
      "I have a question.")

sys.stdout = open("/home/scilab/Desktop/test.txt", "a")
sys.stdout.close()
Answered By: Ranjan Kumar Sahu
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