What is the preferred/ usual way of storing data that is entered by the user when running a Python script, if I need the data again the next time the script runs?
For example, my script performs calculations based on what the user enters and then when the user runs the script again, it fetches the result from the last run.
For now, I write the data to a text file and read it from there. I don't think that I would need to store very large records ( less than 100, I'd say).
I am targeting Windows 开发者_如何学Pythonand Linux users both with this script, so a cross platform solution would be good. My only apprehension with using a text file is that I feel it might not be the best and the usual way of doing it.
So my question is, if you ever need to store some data for your script, how do you do it?
you could use a slite database or a CSV file. They are both very easy to work with but lend themselves to rows with the same type of information.
The best option might be shelve module
import shelve
shelf = shelve.open(filename)
shelf['key1'] = value1
shelf['key2'] = value2
shelf.close()
# next run
shelf.open(filename)
value1 = shelf['key1']
#etc
For small amounts of data, Python's pickle module is great for stashing away data you want easy access to later--just pickle the data objects from memory and write to a (hidden) file in the user's home folder (good for Linux etc.) or Application Data (on Windows).
Of, as @aaronnasterling mentioned, a sqlite3 file-based database is small, fast and easy that it's no wonder that so many popular programs like Firefox and Pidgin use it.
For 100 lines, plain text is fine with either the standard ConfigParser or csv modules.
Assuming your data structure is simple, text affords opportunities (e.g. grep, vi, notepad) that more complex formats preclude.
Since you only need the last result, just store the result in a file.
Example
write('something', wb)
It will only store the last result. Then when you re-run the script, do a open
and read
the previous result.
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