- added two more convenience functions: readPlistFromString() and

writePlistToString()
- use these two in the resource functions.
- Tweaked module doc string.
This commit is contained in:
Just van Rossum 2004-10-26 06:50:50 +00:00
parent df8a0032a4
commit c6fdd1b398
1 changed files with 30 additions and 15 deletions

View File

@ -8,9 +8,12 @@ To write out a plist file, use the writePlist(rootObject, pathOrFile)
function. 'rootObject' is the top level object, 'pathOrFile' is a
filename or a (writable) file object.
To parse a plist from a file, use the readPlist(pathOrFile)
function, with a file name or a (readable) file object as the only
argument. It returns the top level object (usually a dictionary).
To parse a plist from a file, use the readPlist(pathOrFile) function,
with a file name or a (readable) file object as the only argument. It
returns the top level object (again, usually a dictionary).
To work with plist data in strings, you can use readPlistFromString()
and writePlistToString().
Values can be strings, integers, floats, booleans, tuples, lists,
dictionaries, Data or Date objects. String values (including dictionary
@ -19,13 +22,13 @@ keys) may be unicode strings -- they will be written out as UTF-8.
This module exports a class named Dict(), which allows you to easily
construct (nested) dicts using keyword arguments as well as accessing
values with attribute notation, where d.foo is equivalent to d["foo"].
Regular dictionaries work, too.
Regular dictionaries work, too. Dictionaries are always represented with
Dict instances when loading plist data.
The <data> plist type is supported through the Data class. This is a
thin wrapper around a Python string.
The <date> plist data has (limited) support through the Date class.
(Warning: Dates are only supported if the PyXML package is installed.)
The <date> plist data has support through the Date class.
Generate Plist example:
@ -58,13 +61,15 @@ Parse Plist example:
__all__ = [
"readPlist", "writePlist",
"readPlist", "writePlist", "readPlistFromString", "writePlistToString",
"readPlistFromResource", "writePlistToResource",
"Plist", "Data", "Date", "Dict"
]
# Note: the Plist class has been deprecated.
import base64, datetime
import base64
import datetime
from cStringIO import StringIO
def readPlist(pathOrFile):
@ -99,19 +104,32 @@ def writePlist(rootObject, pathOrFile):
pathOrFile.close()
def readPlistFromString(data):
"""Read a plist data from a string. Return the root object.
"""
return readPlist(StringIO(data))
def writePlistToString(rootObject):
"""Return 'rootObject' as a plist-formatted string.
"""
f = StringIO()
writePlist(rootObject, f)
return f.getvalue()
def readPlistFromResource(path, restype='plst', resid=0):
"""Read plst resource from the resource fork of path.
"""
from Carbon.File import FSRef, FSGetResourceForkName
from Carbon.Files import fsRdPerm
from Carbon import Res
from cStringIO import StringIO
fsRef = FSRef(path)
resNum = Res.FSOpenResourceFile(fsRef, FSGetResourceForkName(), fsRdPerm)
Res.UseResFile(resNum)
plistData = StringIO(Res.Get1Resource(restype, resid).data)
plistData = Res.Get1Resource(restype, resid).data
Res.CloseResFile(resNum)
return readPlist(plistData)
return readPlistFromString(plistData)
def writePlistToResource(rootObject, path, restype='plst', resid=0):
@ -120,10 +138,7 @@ def writePlistToResource(rootObject, path, restype='plst', resid=0):
from Carbon.File import FSRef, FSGetResourceForkName
from Carbon.Files import fsRdWrPerm
from Carbon import Res
from cStringIO import StringIO
plistData = StringIO()
writePlist(rootObject, plistData)
plistData = plistData.getvalue()
plistData = writePlistToString(rootObject)
fsRef = FSRef(path)
resNum = Res.FSOpenResourceFile(fsRef, FSGetResourceForkName(), fsRdWrPerm)
Res.UseResFile(resNum)