A lil' TOML writer
Project description
Tomli-W
A lil' TOML writer
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Intro
Tomli-W is a Python library for writing TOML. It is a write-only counterpart to Tomli, which is a read-only TOML parser. Tomli-W is fully compatible with TOML v1.0.0.
Installation
pip install tomli-w
Usage
Write to string
import tomli_w
doc = {"table": {"nested": {}, "val3": 3}, "val2": 2, "val1": 1}
expected_toml = """\
val2 = 2
val1 = 1
[table]
val3 = 3
[table.nested]
"""
assert tomli_w.dumps(doc) == expected_toml
Write to file
import tomli_w
doc = {"one": 1, "two": 2, "pi": 3}
with open("path_to_file/conf.toml", "wb") as f:
tomli_w.dump(doc, f)
FAQ
Does Tomli-W sort the document?
No, but it respects sort order of the input data,
so one could sort the content of the dict
(recursively) before calling tomli_w.dumps
.
Does Tomli-W support writing documents with comments?
No.
Can I customize insignificant whitespace?
Indent width of array content can be configured via the indent
keyword argument.
indent
takes a non-negative integer, defaulting to 4.
import tomli_w
doc = {"fruits": ["orange", "kiwi", "papaya"]}
expected_toml = """\
fruits = [
"orange",
"kiwi",
"papaya",
]
"""
assert tomli_w.dumps(doc, indent=1) == expected_toml
Why does Tomli-W not write a multi-line string if the string value contains newlines?
This default was chosen to achieve lossless parse/write round-trips.
TOML strings can contain newlines where exact bytes matter, e.g.
s = "here's a newline\r\n"
TOML strings also can contain newlines where exact byte representation is not relevant, e.g.
s = """here's a newline
"""
A parse/write round-trip that converts the former example to the latter does not preserve the original newline byte sequence. This is why Tomli-W avoids writing multi-line strings.
A keyword argument is provided for users who do not need newline bytes to be preserved:
import tomli_w
doc = {"s": "here's a newline\r\n"}
expected_toml = '''\
s = """
here's a newline
"""
'''
assert tomli_w.dumps(doc, multiline_strings=True) == expected_toml
Is Tomli-W output guaranteed to be valid TOML?
No.
If there's a chance that your input data is bad and you need output validation,
parse the output string once with tomli.loads
.
If the parse is successful (does not raise tomli.TOMLDecodeError
) then the string is valid TOML.
Examples of bad input data that can lead to writing invalid TOML without an error being raised include:
- A mapping where keys behave very much like strings, but aren't. E.g. a tuple of strings of length 1.
- A mapping where a value is a subclass of a supported type, but which overrides the
__str__
method.
Given proper input (a mapping consisting of non-subclassed types returned by Tomli) the output should be valid TOML.
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