Skip to main content

Python 3 replacement for java.util.Properties.

Project description

================
pyjavaproperties3
================

* Project hosting: <https://github.com/tgates42/pyjavaproperties/>

.. contents::

About
------------------

This is a "fork" of the "python replacement for java.util.Properties" recipe
on ASPN: <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/496795/> and uploaded by
Anand Balachandran Pillai.

The project is maintained by Jesse Noller <jnoller@gmail.com>, Anand Pilla
<abpillai@gmail.com>.

License
------------------
As with all ASPN recipes not otherwise licensed prior to July 15, 2008 on
aspn.activestate.com, the original recipe is under PSF License. For more
information, see the ASPN terms of service here:

<http://code.activestate.com/help/terms/>

While the licensing under the PSF license is sub-optimal, it is what it is. See
<http://docs.python.org/license.html> for more information about the PSF
license.

What this is
------------------
This module is designed to be a python equivalent to the `java.util.Properties <http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.5.0/docs/api/java/util/Properties.html>`_ class.
Currently, the basic input/output methods are supported, and there are plans
to add the XML input/output methods found in J2SE 5.0.

Fundamentally, this module is designed so that users can easily parse and
manipulate Java Properties files - that's it. There's a fair number of us
pythonistas who work in multi-language shops, and constantly writing your own
parsing mechanism is just painful. Not to mention Java guys are notoriously
unwilling to use anything which is cross-language for configuration, unless
it's XML, which is a form of self-punishment. :)

Plans
------------------
Here is a rough plan of features:

- Keep/maintain blank lines and comments found in the original file
- Make the module compatible with the new methods in J2SE 5.0
- Switch to/add python property access rather than direct dictionary get/set
- Add unit tests
- Add unicode support
- When-Pigs-Fly: If running within Jython, switch to java.util.Properties
under the hood
- Coercion/conversion to python types for values

Usage
------------------
This is the easy part::

from pyjavaproperties3 import Properties
p = Properties()
p.load(open('test2.properties'))
p.list()
print p
print p.items()
print p['name3']
p['name3'] = 'changed = value'
print p['name3']
p['new key'] = 'new value'
p.store(open('test2.properties','w'))

See also the Properties.list() method, which will return an iterator over the
property keys

Changes & News
--------------
0.6:
- Fix license, whitespace.

0.4:
- Patch from Pepper Lebeck-Jobe for handling ! style comments.

0.3:
- Keys that are added which were not part of the original file
are simply appended to the index. Shenanigans.

0.2:
- Added an internal list (self._keyorder) to keep an ordered index of keys
as they are encountered, so the file can we written-back out in the
same order.

0.1:
- Initial release/fork.
- Added setup/packaging and doc
- added in {foo} style references for previous properties, thanks to N B
on ASPN.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

This version

0.6

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

pyjavaproperties3-0.6.tar.gz (7.6 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

pyjavaproperties3-0.6-py3-none-any.whl (7.4 kB view hashes)

Uploaded Python 3

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page