There seem to be a couple of issues in the code:
Indentation / Syntax Errors - It seems that you are using Python, which follows strict indentation and whitespace rules. An indent is inserted when you enter a new local scope / new control flow / enter an if/elif/else statement or a while or for loop, to separate it from the current scope.
You'd need to remove the space on the left side on line 3 and line 6.
Also, on line 8 there should be a colon(:) after the if x==30.
The mode used (w+) isn't going to work as expected.
This mode overwrites a file if it already exists and allows you to read and write to that file. Instead, you would need the r+ mode.
There's a great explanation & flowchart in this answer explaining the various file modes - https://stackoverflow.com/a/30566011/13307211
The for loop can't iterate over myDoc.
The open function gives a file object (TextIOWrapper), which can't be iterated over. You could use the myDoc.readfiles() method, which returns a list of lines present in the file and loop over that - for line in myDoc.readfiles().
printing myDoc and using .append() with myDoc wouldn't work as expected. It's representing a file object, which doesn't have an append method. Also, I feel like there might have been some mixed logic here - were you trying to iterate over myDoc like an array and hence pushing value to it?
I'd suggest removing the append part as the past value of x isn't going to be needed for what you want to do.
After applying the above, you should end up with code that looks like this -
x = 0
myDoc = open("./newfile.txt", "r+")
for line in myDoc.readlines():
myDoc.write("I see" + str(x) + "sheep\n")
x = x + 1
if x == 30:
break
Now, this doesn't exactly do what you want it to do...
The first thing we should do is update the for loop - a for loop should be structured in a way where it has a start, an end, and an increment, or it should iterate over a range of values. Python has a neat range function that allows you to iterate between values.
for x in range(1, 10):
print(x)
the above would print values from 1 to 10, excluding 10.
updating our for loop, we can change the code to -
myDoc = open("./newfile.txt", "r+")
for x in range(1, 30):
myDoc.write("I see" + str(x) + "sheep")
we could also use a while loop here -
myDoc = open("./newfile.txt", "r+")
i = 1
while (i <= 30):
myDoc.write("I see" + str(x) + "sheep")
i += 1
this makes the file but without the lines and without the right formatting. "I see " + str(x) + " sheep" should fix the sentence, but to print the string on multiple lines instead of the same line, you would need to use the newline character(\n) and add it at the end of the string -
myDoc = open("./newfile.txt", "r+")
for x in range(1, 30):
myDoc.write("I see" + str(x) + "sheep\n")
for line in myDoc:will not do anything!