The fluentfs
library provides a functional and fluent interface for filesystem interactions.
This library is usable and tested, but the API is currently not stable, a lot of features are still missing etc.
In summary - try it out, but (obviously) don't use it for anything in production.
You need Python >= 3.9
for this library.
You can install fluentfs using the pip
package manager:
pip install fluentfs
Let's say you need to get the total number of lines of all txt
files in the current directory (including its subdirectories).
The fluentfs
library allows you to express this functionally as following:
- Filter the files by the "txt" extension
- Map the files to their line counts
- Reduce the line counts to their sum
This is how it looks in code:
import fluentfs as fs
total_txt_line_count = (
fs.Dir(".") # get the current directory
.files # get an iterator for the (regular) files in the current directory
.filter_extension("txt") # filter the files by the txt extension
.text_file_iterator() # all the files should now be text files -> obtain a text file iterator to enable text file functions
.map_line_count() # map every file to its line count
.sum() # sum the line count
)
print(total_txt_line_count)
The library is very flexible, allowing you to write both short and long forms for most properties:
import fluentfs as fs
# Short form (for when you quickly need to prototype something)
fs.Dir(".").files.filter_ext("txt").t().map_lc().sum()
# Long form (for when you need to use the library in a codebase)
(
fs.Dir(".")
.files
.filter_extension("txt")
.text_file_iterator()
.map_line_count()
.sum()
)
The fluentfs
library is very general.
If you need to perform an operation that is currently not present, simply call the respective higher-order functions with your own callables.
For example here is how we could perform our task by explicitly calling the respective higher-order functions:
import fluentfs as fs
(
fs.Dir(".")
.files
.filter(lambda f: f.extension == "txt")
.text_file_iterator()
.map_self(lambda f: f.line_count)
.reduce(lambda x, y: x + y, 0)
)
You can have a look at the basics if this is the first time you are using this library.
You can have a look at the guide if you wish to go more in-depth.
You can have a look at the recipes if you have a specific task you want to accomplish and want to look at some fluent chains that accomplish this or a similar task.
You can also have a look at the API documentation.