Dang it! Why does the field calculator for Python reject standard strings with \t , \n, etc. characters? The only one it seems to accept is \r. e.g. f.write(!textfield1!+', '+!textfield2!+'\r') works but f.write(!textfield1!+',\t'+!textfield2!+'\t') doesn't work This bug severely limits the possibilities for writing output from a table to a file or an email. What is the point of castrating Python's string operators?
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