A Python library to save your settings in a TOML file.
Note that there is still additional functionality planned to be added to this package, but the methodology is to keep the package simple to use and understand. Any additional functionality will be added in a way that is backward compatible and optional.
The package is considered stable and is being used in production in several non-trivial applications.
Please report any bugs you find on the issue tracker and feel free to make suggestions for improvements.
You should install this package into a virtual environment. You can use uv (recommended), or Poetry to do this:
$ uv add simple-toml-settings
or
$ poetry add simple-toml-settings
If you don't want to use Poetry, you can use pip from inside your virtual environment:
$ pip install simple-toml-settings
This is a library to save your settings in a TOML file. It is designed to be simple to use and to be able to save and load settings from a TOML file with a minimal of configuration.
The below is a minimal example, for full documentation and information on available options, see the documentation site. There are several flags you can set to change the location of the settings file, the name of the file, allowing to run without a settings file, and more.
Usage is simple:
from simple_toml_settings import TOMLSettings
class MySettings(TOMLSettings):
"""My settings class."""
# Define the settings you want to save
name: str = "My Name"
age: int = 42
favourite_colour: str = "blue"
favourite_number: int = 42
favourite_foods: list = ["pizza", "chocolate", "ice cream"]
settings = MySettings("test_app")
The above will automatically create a TOML file in the user's home directory
called config.toml
, in the subdirectory .test_app/
, and save the settings to
it. If the file already exists, the settings will be loaded from it.
The file contents for the above example would be:
[test_app]
age = 42
favourite_colour = "blue"
favourite_number = 42
name = "My Name"
schema_version = "none"
favourite_foods = ["pizza", "chocolate", "ice cream"]
Once you have created your settings class, you can use it like any other class:
settings = MySettings("test_app")
settings.favourite_colour = "red"
settings.save()
See the Contributing Guidelines for details of how to contribute to this project and set it up for development.
This project is released under the terms of the MIT license.
The original Python boilerplate for this package was created using Pymaker by Grant Ramsay (seapagan) (Me!! 😄).