Easily save & retrieve your application's settings.
Project description
EasySettings
EasySettings allows you to easily save and retrieve simple application settings. Handles non-string types like boolean, integer, long, list, as well as normal string settings. No sections needed, just set(), get(), and save().
Bug Fixes
Version 1.8.7:
Code has been refactored a little, package layout has changed.
Instead of from easysettings.easysettings import easysettings, you can now just do from easysettings import EasySettings. The main class has been given a proper class name.
Version 1.8.6:
Fixed small error in setsave() where setsave(‘opt’, False) caused errors.
Now supports Python 3.3! The major difference was in the pickle library. pickle used strings in python 2.7, and bytes in python 3. All pickled objects are now using a string format in EasySettings, with the help of 3 little conversion functions. You will never have to use these functions, they’re really internal used only. But if you want to see how to return a string from pickle.dumps() in python 3, look at the safe_pickle_str() function. To load from a string, instead of bytes, in python 3’s pickle.loads(), look at safe_pickle_obj().
The non-string saving method has been enhanced so debug printing will be ‘prettier’. Example of ‘debug printing’ settings:
from easysettings import EasySettings settings = EasySettings('myconfigfile.conf') settings.set('option', True) settings.set('option2', ['cjw', 'amy', 'joseph']) print settings # this will now print as: # {'option': True, 'option2', ['cjw', 'amy', 'joseph']} # instead of pickle's messed up looking strings like: # {'option': I01\n. (for a True boolean value), ... }
This fix also allows you to save values with the newline character in them. So code like this will work:
settings.set('mytext', 'this\nstring\n\has\nnewlines.') print settings.get('mytext') # this will result in: # this # string # has # newlines.
Examples
Example of Easy Settings basic usage:
#!/usr/bin/env python # --------------- Creation ---------------- from easysettings import EasySettings settings = EasySettings("myconfigfile.conf") # configfile_exists() checks for existing config, and creates one if needed. # ** this function is called automatically now when a filename is passed to easysettings. ** # if you wish to disable it, just do: settings = EasySettings() and set # settings.configfile later. # ------------- Basic Functions ----------- # set without saving settings.set("username", "cjw") settings.set("firstrun", False) print settings.get("username") # this results in "cjw" # check if file is saved if not settings.is_saved(): print "you haven't saved the settings to disk yet." # ...settings are still available even if they haven't # been saved to disk # save settings.save() # you may also set & save in one line... settings.setsave("homedir", "/myuserdir")
Other Features:
# check if setting exists if you want if settings.has_option('username'): print "Yes, settings has 'username'" # list settings/options/values mysettings = settings.list_settings() myoptions = settings.list_options() myvalues = settings.list_values() # remove setting settings.remove('homedir') # clear all option names and values settings.clear() # clear all values, leave option names. settings.clear_values()
Comparison:
# compare two settings objects settings2 = EasySettings('myconfigfile2.conf') if settings.compare_opts(settings2): print "these have the same exact options, values may differ" if settings.compare_vals(settings2): print "these have the exact same values, options may differ" if settings == settings2: print "these have the exact same settings/values" # can also be written as settings.compare_settings(settings2) # if you like typing.. :) if settings > settings2: print "settings has more options than settings2" # all of them work ==, !=, <=, >= , > , < # ... the < > features are based on amount of options. # the = features are based on option names and values.
Features
Easy Settings has the basic features you would expect out of a settings module, and it’s very easy to use. If your project needs to save simple settings without the overhead and complication of other modules then this is for you. Save, load, set, & get are very easy to grasp. The more advanced features are there for you to use, but don’t get in the way. Settings, options, & values can be listed, searched, detected, removed, & cleared.
Easy Settings uses a dictionary to store settings before writing to disk, so you can also access settings like a dictionary object using mysettings.settings. The setsave() function will save every time you set an option, and is_saved() will tell you whether or not the file has been saved to disk yet. Code is documented for a newbie, so a help('EasySettings') in the python console will get you started.
The search_query argument in the list functions lets you find settings, options, and values by search string:
mydebugoptions = settings.list_options('debug') # clear all debug values.. settings.clear_values(mydebugoptions)
Non-string types were added, so any type that can be pickled can be used as an option’s value. This includes all the major types like int, long, float, boolean, and list. All of these values will be retrieved as the same type that was set:
es = EasySettings('myconfigfile.conf) # Boolean es.set("newuser", True) if es.get('newuser'): print "now you can use get() as a boolean." # Integer es.set('maxwidth', 560) halfwidth = es.get('maxwidth') / 2 # this math works. # Float es.set('soda', 1.59) f_withtax = es.get('soda') * 1.08 # List es.set('users', ['cjw', 'joseph', 'amy']) # lists as settings, very convenient for suser in es.get('users'): print "retrieved user name: " + suser # i won't do them all, but if you can pickle it, you can use it with easysettings.
Errors are more descriptive and can be caught using their proper names:
try: es.get('option_with_a_possibly_illegal_value') except easysettings.esGetError as exErr: print "Error getting option!" except Exception as exEx: print "General Error!"
Automatic Creation:
If you pass a file name to EasySettings(), the configfile_exists() function is called. This function will create a blank config file if the file doesn’t exist, otherwise it will return True. To use the ‘automatic creation’ do this:
settings = EasySettings('myconfigfile.conf') # if file exists, all settings were loaded. # if file did not exist, it was created. # No permissions, disk-full, and other errors are still possible of course # depending on the machine, or the current directory permissions.
You can disable the ‘automatic creation’ features by not passing a file name, and loading seperately like this:
settings = EasySettings() settings.configfile = 'myconfigfile.conf' # file has not been created or loaded. # file must exist before calling 'load_file' if settings.load_file(): # all settings were loaded. else: # unable to load file for some reason.
This will work in the same way to disable the automatic creation:
settings = EasySettings() # file has not been created or loaded. # file 'myconfigfile.conf' must exist before calling load_file() if settings.load_file('myconfigfile.conf'): # file was loaded. # settings.configfile was set by the load_file() function else: # file could not be loaded.
To check if the file exists without creating it automatically you can do this:
if not settings.configfile_exists(False): print 'config file does not exist, and was not created.' # I actually prefer the os.path.isfile() method if you're not going to automatically # create the file. import os.path if not os.path.isfile(settings.configfile): print 'config file does not exist, and was not created.'
PyPi Package
Full PyPi package available at: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/EasySettings
Use pip to install Easy Settings to be used globally. Ubuntu instructions to install pip:
sudo apt-get install python-pip
After that you should be able to install Easy Settings by typing:
sudo pip install easysettings
Website
Be sure to visit http://welbornprod.com for more projects and information from Welborn Productions.
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
File details
Details for the file EasySettings-1.8.7.tar.gz
.
File metadata
- Download URL: EasySettings-1.8.7.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 25.1 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | d4b023303a37f86353f8fb60b0929a41c07b603d47a7bcf02eaa2468d5b676e3 |
|
MD5 | 9f6a0051141477807544de74b01abea1 |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | a5967e95e1b1ce7041fbae7bc0e6a7a59afeba2d06d1dcfe73daf062334bae80 |