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pickle.py
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pickle.py
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# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function, division
# standard library dependencies
from petl.compat import pickle, next
# internal dependencies
from petl.util.base import Table
from petl.io.sources import read_source_from_arg, write_source_from_arg
def frompickle(source=None):
"""
Extract a table From data pickled in the given file. The rows in the
table should have been pickled to the file one at a time. E.g.::
>>> import petl as etl
>>> import pickle
>>> # set up a file to demonstrate with
... with open('example.p', 'wb') as f:
... pickle.dump(['foo', 'bar'], f)
... pickle.dump(['a', 1], f)
... pickle.dump(['b', 2], f)
... pickle.dump(['c', 2.5], f)
...
>>> # now demonstrate the use of frompickle()
... table1 = etl.frompickle('example.p')
>>> table1
+-----+-----+
| foo | bar |
+=====+=====+
| 'a' | 1 |
+-----+-----+
| 'b' | 2 |
+-----+-----+
| 'c' | 2.5 |
+-----+-----+
"""
source = read_source_from_arg(source)
return PickleView(source)
class PickleView(Table):
def __init__(self, source):
self.source = source
def __iter__(self):
with self.source.open('rb') as f:
try:
while True:
yield tuple(pickle.load(f))
except EOFError:
pass
def topickle(table, source=None, protocol=-1, write_header=True):
"""
Write the table to a pickle file. E.g.::
>>> import petl as etl
>>> table1 = [['foo', 'bar'],
... ['a', 1],
... ['b', 2],
... ['c', 2]]
>>> etl.topickle(table1, 'example.p')
>>> # look what it did
... table2 = etl.frompickle('example.p')
>>> table2
+-----+-----+
| foo | bar |
+=====+=====+
| 'a' | 1 |
+-----+-----+
| 'b' | 2 |
+-----+-----+
| 'c' | 2 |
+-----+-----+
Note that if a file already exists at the given location, it will be
overwritten.
The pickle file format preserves type information, i.e., reading and writing
is round-trippable for tables with non-string data values.
"""
_writepickle(table, source=source, mode='wb', protocol=protocol,
write_header=write_header)
Table.topickle = topickle
def appendpickle(table, source=None, protocol=-1, write_header=False):
"""
Append data to an existing pickle file. I.e.,
as :func:`petl.io.pickle.topickle` but the file is opened in append mode.
Note that no attempt is made to check that the fields or row lengths are
consistent with the existing data, the data rows from the table are simply
appended to the file.
"""
_writepickle(table, source=source, mode='ab', protocol=protocol,
write_header=write_header)
Table.appendpickle = appendpickle
def _writepickle(table, source, mode, protocol, write_header):
source = write_source_from_arg(source, mode)
with source.open(mode) as f:
it = iter(table)
hdr = next(it)
if write_header:
pickle.dump(hdr, f, protocol)
for row in it:
pickle.dump(row, f, protocol)
def teepickle(table, source=None, protocol=-1, write_header=True):
"""
Return a table that writes rows to a pickle file as they are iterated
over.
"""
return TeePickleView(table, source=source, protocol=protocol,
write_header=write_header)
Table.teepickle = teepickle
class TeePickleView(Table):
def __init__(self, table, source=None, protocol=-1, write_header=True):
self.table = table
self.source = source
self.protocol = protocol
self.write_header = write_header
def __iter__(self):
protocol = self.protocol
source = write_source_from_arg(self.source)
with source.open('wb') as f:
it = iter(self.table)
hdr = next(it)
if self.write_header:
pickle.dump(hdr, f, protocol)
yield tuple(hdr)
for row in it:
pickle.dump(row, f, protocol)
yield tuple(row)