A collection of tools, and helpers that I usually want for a handful of projects, so to avoid rewriting them every time, I decided to create this package.
Project description
Raccoon Tools
This is a collection of tools that I regularly use on several projects. To stop duplicating and to (hopefully) help someone, I decided to make them into a public package.
Functionalities
Decorators
retry
A decorator that retries a function call a specified number of times before giving up. It logs each attempt and the final failure if all retries are exhausted.
Parameters:
retries: Maximum number of retries before giving up (default: 3).delay: Delay in seconds between each retry (default: 1).delay_is_exponential: If True, the delay between retries will increase exponentially (default: False).only_exceptions_of_type: A list of exception types to catch and retry on. If None, all exceptions are caught.log_level: The log level used by the decorator (default: logging.ERROR).
Example:
from raccoontools.decorators.retry import retry
attempts = {"count": 0}
@retry(retries=4, delay=0.25)
def flaky_operation():
attempts["count"] += 1
if attempts["count"] < 3:
raise RuntimeError("Still failing...")
return "Success!"
print(flaky_operation())
retry_request
Like the previous decorator, but for HTTP requests. It logs each attempt and the final failure if all retries are exhausted. It also provides options to handle specific HTTP status codes.
Parameters:
retries: Maximum number of retries before giving up (default: 3).delay: Delay in seconds between each retry (default: 1).delay_is_exponential: If True, the delay between retries will increase exponentially (default: False).skip_retry_on_404: If True, the decorator will not retry on 404 responses (default: False).retry_only_on_status_codes: A list of HTTP status codes to retry on. If None, no retries will be made.get_new_token_on_401: An optional callable to execute and get a new token when a 401 response is received.get_new_token_on_403: An optional callable to execute and get a new token when a 403 response is received.log_level: The log level used by the decorator (default: logging.ERROR).
Example:
import requests
from raccoontools.decorators.retry import retry_request
@retry_request(retries=5, delay=1, skip_retry_on_404=True)
def call_service():
return requests.get("https://httpbin.org/status/500")
response = call_service()
print(response.status_code)
benchmark
A decorator that benchmarks the execution time of a function.
The results are logged using the logging module at the INFO level.
The decorated function can also provide benchmark information via the get_benchmark_info method.
Example:
import time
from raccoontools.decorators.benchmark import benchmark
@benchmark
def slow_function():
time.sleep(0.5)
return "done"
slow_function()
print(slow_function.get_benchmark_info())
Generators
infinite_iterator
Generates an infinite iterator from a list.
Parameters:
list_to_iterate_over: The list to iterate over.
Example:
from raccoontools.generators.misc_generators import infinite_iterator
rotating_status = infinite_iterator(["⏳", "⌛", "✅"])
for _ in range(6):
print(next(rotating_status), end=" ")
read_line
Reads a file line by line.
Parameters:
file: Path to the file.strip_line: Strip whitespace from the beginning and end of each line (default: True).encoding: File encoding (default: 'utf-8').buffer_size: Size of the read buffer in bytes. If None, the default system buffer is used.
Example:
from pathlib import Path
from raccoontools.generators.file_ops_generators import read_line
for line in read_line(Path("logs/app.log"), strip_line=True):
print(line)
read_csv
Reads a CSV file line by line, yielding each line as a dictionary + metadata.
Parameters:
file: Path to the CSV file.encoding: File encoding (default: 'utf-8').has_headers: If True, the first line of the CSV file is treated as a header.buffer_size: Size of the read buffer in bytes. If None, the default system buffer is used.
Example:
from raccoontools.generators.file_ops_generators import read_csv
for row, metadata in read_csv("data/report.csv", has_headers=True):
print(metadata.index, row)
id_guid_generator
Generates unique GUID (Globally Unique Identifier) strings.
Parameters:
ids_to_generate: The number of GUIDs to generate. If None, generates indefinitely.
Example:
from raccoontools.generators.sequence_generators import id_guid_generator
guid_gen = id_guid_generator(ids_to_generate=2)
print(list(guid_gen))
id_int_generator
Generates integer IDs with optional validation.
Parameters:
ids_to_generate: The number of IDs to generate. If None, generates indefinitely.start_at: The starting value for the ID sequence (default: 0).validate_id: A function to validate each ID. If None, all IDs are considered valid.
Example:
from raccoontools.generators.sequence_generators import id_int_generator
only_even_ids = id_int_generator(ids_to_generate=3, start_at=10, validate_id=lambda x: x % 2 == 0)
print(list(only_even_ids)) # [10, 12, 14]
timestamp_generator
Generates Unix timestamps.
Parameters:
timestamps_to_generate: The number of timestamps to generate. If None, generates indefinitely.
Example:
from raccoontools.generators.sequence_generators import timestamp_generator
timestamps = []
for ts in timestamp_generator(3):
timestamps.append(ts)
print(timestamps)
sentence_generator
Generates Lorem Ipsum sentences with lengths ranging from min_length to max_length.
Parameters:
sentences_to_generate: The number of sentences to generate. If None, generates indefinitely.min_length: The minimum length of each sentence (default: 1).max_length: The maximum length of each sentence. If None, a random value between 10 and 512 is used for each sentence.
Example:
from raccoontools.generators.sequence_generators import sentence_generator
for sentence in sentence_generator(2, min_length=40, max_length=80):
print(sentence)
Converters
timestamp_to_datetime
Converts a numeric timestamp to a timezone-aware datetime object. Uses integer arithmetic for int inputs to
preserve full microsecond precision without IEEE-754 float rounding.
Parameters:
timestamp: The numeric timestamp value (intorfloat).unit: Unit of the input:"s","ms","us", or"ns"(default:"ms").tz: Target timezone (default:timezone.utc). PassNoneto get a naive datetime.
Example:
from raccoontools.converters.datetime_converters import timestamp_to_datetime
# Milliseconds (default) — e.g. Nightscout, JavaScript Date.now()
dt = timestamp_to_datetime(1_700_000_000_000)
print(dt) # 2023-11-14 22:13:20+00:00
# Seconds
dt = timestamp_to_datetime(1_700_000_000, unit="s")
# Nanoseconds — sub-microsecond part is truncated
dt = timestamp_to_datetime(1_700_000_000_123_456_789, unit="ns")
print(dt.microsecond) # 123456
# Custom timezone
from datetime import timezone, timedelta
tz_ist = timezone(timedelta(hours=5, minutes=30))
dt = timestamp_to_datetime(1_700_000_000_000, tz=tz_ist)
print(dt) # 2023-11-15 03:43:20+05:30
timedelta_to_readable_elapsed_time
Converts a timedelta to a human-readable elapsed time string (e.g. "2 days and 5 hours ago").
Uses approximate 30-day months and 365-day years.
Parameters:
delta: Thetimedeltato format. Must be non-negative.suffix: Text appended after the time string (default:"ago"). Pass""orNoneto omit.zero_delta_label: Returned when the delta is belowzero_delta_threshold(default:"just now").zero_delta_threshold: Deltas below this value returnzero_delta_label(default:timedelta(seconds=60)). PassNoneto always show the real representation (e.g."30 seconds ago").
Example:
from datetime import timedelta
from raccoontools.converters.datetime_converters import timedelta_to_readable_elapsed_time
print(timedelta_to_readable_elapsed_time(timedelta(days=400)))
# '1 year, 1 month and 5 days ago'
print(timedelta_to_readable_elapsed_time(timedelta(hours=1, minutes=30)))
# '1 hour and 30 minutes ago'
print(timedelta_to_readable_elapsed_time(timedelta(seconds=10)))
# 'just now'
# Show seconds instead of "just now"
print(timedelta_to_readable_elapsed_time(timedelta(seconds=30), zero_delta_threshold=None))
# '30 seconds ago'
print(timedelta_to_readable_elapsed_time(timedelta(hours=2), suffix="elapsed"))
# '2 hours elapsed'
print(timedelta_to_readable_elapsed_time(timedelta(hours=2), suffix=None))
# '2 hours'
time_value_to_readable_elapsed_time
Convenience wrapper that converts a numeric value + unit into a timedelta and delegates
to timedelta_to_readable_elapsed_time.
Parameters:
value: The numeric amount (intorfloat). Must be non-negative and finite.time_piece: Unit — one of"milliseconds","seconds","minutes","hours","days","weeks"(default:"seconds").suffix: Text appended after the time string (default:"ago").zero_delta_label: Returned when the resulting delta is belowzero_delta_threshold(default:"just now").zero_delta_threshold: Deltas below this value returnzero_delta_label(default:timedelta(seconds=60)). PassNoneto always show the real representation.
Example:
from raccoontools.converters.datetime_converters import time_value_to_readable_elapsed_time
print(time_value_to_readable_elapsed_time(3600))
# '1 hour ago'
print(time_value_to_readable_elapsed_time(2, time_piece="days"))
# '2 days ago'
print(time_value_to_readable_elapsed_time(1.5, time_piece="hours"))
# '1 hour and 30 minutes ago'
Shared Utilities
file_ops
Provides functions to load and save JSON data to and from files.
load_json_from_file(file: Path | str, encoding: str = "utf-8", object_hook: Callable | None = obj_dump_deserializer) -> dict | list[dict]: Loads a JSON file and returns the data as a dictionary or list of dictionaries. Accepts aPathor a string path. By default, usesobj_dump_deserializerto reconstruct types (datetime, int, float, Path). Passobject_hook=Nonefor raw JSON parsing with no type coercion.save_json_to_file(data: dict | list[dict], target_file_or_folder: Path | str, dump_kwargs: dict | None = None, encoding: str = "utf-8") -> Path: Saves a dictionary or list of dictionaries to a JSON file. Accepts aPathor a string path (an empty string raisesValueError).
Example:
from pathlib import Path
from raccoontools.shared.file_ops import load_json_from_file, save_json_to_file
payload = {"status": "ok"}
target_dir = Path("artifacts")
target_dir.mkdir(exist_ok=True)
saved_file = save_json_to_file(payload, target_dir)
loaded_payload = load_json_from_file(saved_file)
print(saved_file, loaded_payload)
file_utils
Provides utility functions for file operations.
get_filename_for_new_file(file_extension: str, prefix: str | None = None, add_current_datetime_as_format: str = "%Y%m%d%H%M%S%f", use_utc: bool = True, unique_identifier: str | bool = True, part_separator: str = "-", suffix: str | None = None) -> str: Generates a unique filename for a new file.get_date_based_subfolder(ref_path: Path | str, use_utc: bool = True, date_ref: datetime | None = None, add_delta_days: int | None = None, date_format: str = "%Y-%m-%d", create_if_missing: bool = True) -> Path: Gets (or creates) a date-based subfolder under the given path. Accepts aPathor a string path. Ifref_pathpoints to a file (or has a file extension), uses its parent directory as the base.
Example:
from pathlib import Path
from raccoontools.shared.file_utils import get_filename_for_new_file, get_date_based_subfolder
filename = get_filename_for_new_file("json", prefix="snapshot", suffix="v1")
print(filename) # snapshot-20240201130501999999-...-v1.json
folder = get_date_based_subfolder(Path("output/data"), add_delta_days=-1)
print(folder) # output/data/2025-03-31
string_utils
Provides utility functions for string manipulation.
linefy(text: str) -> str: Collapses a multi-line string into a single line. Removes all linebreaks, merges multiple sequential whitespace characters (spaces, tabs, newlines, etc.) into a single space, and trims leading and trailing whitespace. RaisesTypeErroriftextis not astr.
Example:
from raccoontools.shared.string_utils import linefy
messy = " Hello\n\tworld \n again "
print(linefy(messy)) # Hello world again
http
Provides utility functions for HTTP headers.
get_headers(token: str | None = None, content_type: str = "application/json", user_agent: str | None = None, fake_browser_user_agent: bool = False, extra_args: dict[str, str] | None = None) -> dict[str, str]: Generates headers for an HTTP request.
Example:
from raccoontools.shared.http import get_headers
headers = get_headers(
token="abc123",
fake_browser_user_agent=True,
extra_args={"X-Trace-Id": "req-1"}
)
print(headers)
requests_with_retry
A wrapper around requests using the retry_request decorator. Can be used as a drop-in replacement for requests.
get(url, params=None, **kwargs) -> requests.Response: Sends a GET request with retry functionality.options(url, **kwargs) -> requests.Response: Sends an OPTIONS request with retry functionality.head(url, **kwargs) -> requests.Response: Sends a HEAD request with retry functionality.post(url, data=None, json=None, **kwargs) -> requests.Response: Sends a POST request with retry functionality.put(url, data=None, **kwargs) -> requests.Response: Sends a PUT request with retry functionality.patch(url, data=None, **kwargs) -> requests.Response: Sends a PATCH request with retry functionality.delete(url, **kwargs) -> requests.Response: Sends a DELETE request with retry functionality.
Example:
import raccoontools.shared.requests_with_retry as requests
response = requests.get("https://httpbin.org/status/500")
print(response.status_code)
serializer
Provides functions to serialize and deserialize objects.
serialize_to_dict(obj) -> dict | list[dict] | None: Serializes an object to a dictionary or list of dictionaries.parse_csv(csv_data: str) -> list[dict]: Parses a CSV string and returns a list of dictionaries.csv_string_to_dict_list(data: str | list[str] | dict | list[dict], no_data_return: str = "No data available") -> list[dict] | str: Converts a CSV string to a list of dictionaries.dataset_to_prompt_text(dataset: list[dict]) -> str: Converts a dataset to a prompt text.obj_dump_serializer(obj): Serializes objects for saving data to a file.obj_dump_deserializer(obj): Deserializes objects when loading data from a file.
Example:
from pydantic import BaseModel
from raccoontools.shared.serializer import serialize_to_dict, csv_string_to_dict_list
class User(BaseModel):
name: str
active: bool
payload = serialize_to_dict(User(name="Ada", active=True))
print(payload) # {'name': 'Ada', 'active': True}
rows = csv_string_to_dict_list("name,score\nAda,10\nBob,7\n")
print(rows)
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