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Home/ Questions/Q 9195855
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T21:43:15+00:00 2026-06-17T21:43:15+00:00

from sys import stdout stdout = open(‘file’, ‘w’) print ‘test’ stdout.close() does create the

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from sys import stdout
stdout = open('file', 'w')
print 'test'
stdout.close()

does create the file, but it contains nothing.

I had to use

import sys
sys.stdout = open('file', 'w')
print 'test'
sys.stdout.close()

But wouldn’t the from ... import... automatically make the name available? Why do I still have to use sys.stdout instead of stdout?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T21:43:17+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 9:43 pm

    The problem is this: print is equivalent to sys.stdout.write().

    So when you do from sys import stdout, the variable stdout won’t be used by print.

    But when you do

    import sys
    print 'test'
    

    it actually writes to sys.stdout which is pointing to the file you opened.

    Analysis

    from sys import stdout
    stdout = open('file', 'w')
    print 'test' # calls sys.stdout.write('test'), which print to the terminal
    stdout.close()
    

    import sys
    sys.stdout = open('file', 'w')
    print 'test' # calls sys.stdout.write('test'), which print to the file
    sys.stdout.close()
    

    Conclusion

    This works…

    from sys import stdout
    stdout = open('file', 'w')
    stdout.write('test')
    stdout.close()
    
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