I run a script with the code to open a file and it returns SyntaxError. The script is an open source script that I want to test.
with open(f"/home/mine/myfoldr/myapp.yml", "r") as file:
The line above returns the following error:
File "./startup.py", line 28
with open(f"/home/mine/myfoldr/myapp.yml", 'r') as file:
^
I just don't understand what does it mean with f" here, after open(f"...). Because normally it will be write something like below, without f.
with open("/home/mine/myfoldr/myapp.yml", "r") as file:
I think its not a typo because other line code in the script also..have the same style f, for example:
print(f"Which section do you want to change?"
f"[Application/Controller/Database]")
The f at the start of strings is called f-string, introduced with PEP 489 starting at Python 3.6.
It is used for string formatting, similar to .format(). There are a lot of tutorials on it you can read. The basic example:
x = 22
print('this is {}'.format(x))
print(f'this is {x}')
Here, both lines will output the same resulting string this is 22.
You probably get the error because you are using a version older than Python 3.6, some version where f-strings are not supported.
To test the third-party code you will have to use a newer Python version or modify the code yourself (but this last options may be a lot of work and may introduce some unintentional errors).
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