Python File Handling/File I/0
Python
File I/O
In this article, you'll learn about Python
file operations. More specifically, opening a file, reading from it, writing
into it, closing it and various file methods you should be aware of.
Python file IO
File is a named location on disk to store
related information. It is used to permanently store data in a non-volatile
memory (e.g. hard disk).
Since, random access memory (RAM) is
volatile which loses its data when computer is turned off, we use files for
future use of the data.
When we want to read from or write to a
file we need to open it first. When we are done, it needs to be closed, so that
resources that are tied with the file are freed.
Hence, in Python, a file operation takes
place in the following order.
Open
a file
Read
or write (perform operation)
Close
the file
How to open a file?
Python has a built-in function open() to
open a file. This function returns a file object, also called a handle, as it
is used to read or modify the file accordingly.
>>> f =
open("test.txt") # open file
in current directory
>>> f =
open("C:/Python33/README.txt")
# specifying full path
We can specify the mode while opening a
file. In mode, we specify whether we want to read 'r', write 'w' or append 'a'
to the file. We also specify if we want to open the file in text mode or binary
mode.
The default is reading in text mode. In this
mode, we get strings when reading from the file.
On the other hand, binary mode returns
bytes and this is the mode to be used when dealing with non-text files like
image or exe files.
Python
File Modes
Mode Description
'r' Open
a file for reading. (default)
'w' Open
a file for writing. Creates a new file if it does not exist or truncates the
file if it exists.
'x' Open
a file for exclusive creation. If the file already exists, the operation fails.
'a' Open
for appending at the end of the file without truncating it. Creates a new file
if it does not exist.
't' Open
in text mode. (default)
'b' Open
in binary mode.
'+' Open
a file for updating (reading and writing)
f = open("test.txt") # equivalent to 'r' or 'rt'
f = open("test.txt",'w') # write in text mode
f = open("img.bmp",'r+b') # read
and write in binary mode
Unlike other languages, the character 'a'
does not imply the number 97 until it is encoded using ASCII (or other
equivalent encodings).
Moreover, the default encoding is platform
dependent. In windows, it is 'cp1252' but 'utf-8' in Linux.
So, we must not also rely on the default
encoding or else our code will behave differently in different platforms.
Hence, when working with files in text
mode, it is highly recommended to specify the encoding type.
f = open("test.txt",mode =
'r',encoding = 'utf-8')
How to close a file Using Python?
When we are done with operations to the
file, we need to properly close the file.
Closing a file will free up the resources
that were tied with the file and is done using Python close() method.
Python has a garbage collector to clean up
unreferenced objects but, we must not rely on it to close the file.
f = open("test.txt",encoding =
'utf-8')
# perform file operations
f.close()
This method is not entirely safe. If an
exception occurs when we are performing some operation with the file, the code
exits without closing the file.
A safer way is to use a try...finally
block.
try:
f
= open("test.txt",encoding = 'utf-8')
#
perform file operations
finally:
f.close()
This way, we are guaranteed that the file
is properly closed even if an exception is raised, causing program flow to
stop.
The best way to do this is using the with
statement. This ensures that the file is closed when the block inside with is
exited.
We don't need to explicitly call the
close() method. It is done internally.
with open("test.txt",encoding =
'utf-8') as f:
#
perform file operations
How
to write to File Using Python?
In order to write into a file in Python,
we need to open it in write 'w', append 'a' or exclusive creation 'x' mode.
We need to be careful with the 'w' mode as
it will overwrite into the file if it already exists. All previous data are
erased.
Writing a string or sequence of bytes (for
binary files) is done using write() method. This method returns the number of
characters written to the file.
with
open("test.txt",'w',encoding = 'utf-8') as f:
f.write("my first file\n")
f.write("This file\n\n")
f.write("contains three lines\n")
This program will create a new file named
'test.txt' if it does not exist. If it does exist, it is overwritten.
We must include the newline characters
ourselves to distinguish different lines.
How to read files in Python?
To read a file in Python, we must open the
file in reading mode.
There are various methods available for
this purpose. We can use the read(size) method to read in size number of data.
If size parameter is not specified, it reads and returns up to the end of the
file.
>>> f =
open("test.txt",'r',encoding = 'utf-8')
>>> f.read(4) # read the first 4 data
'This'
>>> f.read(4) # read the next 4 data
' is '
>>> f.read() # read in the rest till end of file
'my first file\nThis file\ncontains three
lines\n'
>>> f.read() # further reading returns empty sting
''
We can see that, the read() method returns
newline as '\n'. Once the end of file is reached, we get empty string on
further reading.
We can change our current file cursor
(position) using the seek() method. Similarly, the tell() method returns our current
position (in number of bytes).
>>> f.tell() # get the current file position
56
>>> f.seek(0) # bring file cursor to initial position
0
>>> print(f.read()) # read the entire file
This is my first file
This file
contains three lines
We can read a file line-by-line using a
for loop. This is both efficient and fast.
>>> for line in f:
...
print(line, end = '')
...
This is my first file
This file
contains three lines
The lines in file itself has a newline
character '\n'.
Moreover, the print() end parameter to
avoid two newlines when printing.
Alternately, we can use readline() method
to read individual lines of a file. This method reads a file till the newline,
including the newline character.
>>> f.readline()
'This is my first file\n'
>>> f.readline()
'This file\n'
>>> f.readline()
'contains three lines\n'
>>> f.readline()
''
Lastly, the readlines() method returns a
list of remaining lines of the entire file. All these reading method return
empty values when end of file (EOF) is reached.
>>> f.readlines()
['This is my first file\n', 'This file\n',
'contains three lines\n']
Python File Methods
There are various methods available with
the file object. Some of them have been used in above examples.
Here is the complete list of methods in
text mode with a brief description.
Python File Methods
Method Description
close() Close
an open file. It has no effect if the file is already closed.
detach() Separate
the underlying binary buffer from the TextIOBase and return it.
fileno() Return
an integer number (file descriptor) of the file.
flush() Flush
the write buffer of the file stream.
isatty() Return
True if the file stream is interactive.
read(n) Read
atmost n characters form the file. Reads till end of file if it is negative or
None.
readable() Returns
True if the file stream can be read from.
readline(n=-1) Read and return one line from the file. Reads in at most n
bytes if specified.
readlines(n=-1) Read and return a list of lines from the file. Reads in at most
n bytes/characters if specified.
seek(offset,from=SEEK_SET) Change the file position to offset bytes, in
reference to from (start, current, end).
seekable() Returns
True if the file stream supports random access.
tell() Returns
the current file location.
truncate(size=None) Resize the file stream to size bytes. If size is not
specified, resize to current location.
writable() Returns
True if the file stream can be written to.
write(s) Write
string s to the file and return the number of characters written.
writelines(lines) Write a list of lines to the file.
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