.writerow()
requires a sequence (''
, ()
, []
) and places each index in it's own column of the row, sequentially. If your desired string is not an item in a sequence, writerow()
will iterate over each letter in your string and each will be written to your CSV in a separate cell.
after you import csv
If this is your list:
myList = ['Diamond', 'Sierra', 'Crystal', 'Bridget', 'Chastity', 'Jasmyn', 'Misty', 'Angel', 'Dakota', 'Asia', 'Desiree', 'Monique', 'Tatiana']
listFile = open('Names.csv', 'wb')
writer = csv.writer(listFile)
for item in myList:
writer.writerow(item)
The above script will produce the following CSV:
Names.csv
D,i,a,m,o,n,d
S,i,e,r,r,a
C,r,y,s,t,a,l
B,r,i,d,g,e,t
C,h,a,s,t,i,t,y
J,a,s,m,y,n
M,i,s,t,y
A,n,g,e,l
D,a,k,o,t,a
A,s,i,a
D,e,s,i,r,e,e
M,o,n,i,q,u,e
T,a,t,i,a,n,a
If you want each name in it's own cell, the solution is to simply place your string (item
) in a sequence. Here I use square brackets []
. :
listFile2 = open('Names2.csv', 'wb')
writer2 = csv.writer(listFile2)
for item in myList:
writer2.writerow([item])
The script with .writerow([item])
produces the desired results:
Names2.csv
Diamond
Sierra
Crystal
Bridget
Chastity
Jasmyn
Misty
Angel
Dakota
Asia
Desiree
Monique
Tatiana