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Easy configuration of arguments in a python code!

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Configer

This is the repository for the package CONFIGER helps with easy configuration of arguments in a python code.

Introduction

When Python programs grow large, one would eventually need a way to load configurations through a file. The common answer to this would by Python's ConfigParser. But at least I find the result of using ConfigParse an ugly code:

import ConfigParser
Config = ConfigParser.ConfigParser()
Config.read("c:\\tomorrow.ini")
Config.get(section, option)

That's why I packaged my solution to this issue. Configer basically gives you a flattened ConfigParser with extra functionality:

  • dot-access of values in the settings file
  • dump settings to a file for later use
  • add different settings while choosing to overload previous one.

Dependencies

This package supports Python 2.7 and 3.5+.

Installation

You can install directly from the git repository

pip install git+https://github.com/MPI-IS/configer

Examples

Overall Configer will be a sleek way to disentangle settings away from the mechanics. An exact copy of the above code will be:

from configer import Configer
Config = Configer(default_ps_fname='c:\\tomorrow.ini')
Config.option

Note that you don't have sections anymore and you can access an option with a dot-access approach.

Other use cases would be:

  1. Loading default settings

    default_ps_fname = 'pyconfiger/Configer/test/sample_settings.ini'
    ps = Configer(default_ps_fname=default_ps_fname)
    print(ps.status) # None
    
  2. Loading default settings while adding new arguments

    ps = Configer(default_ps_fname=default_ps_fname, status=False)
    print(ps.status) # False
    ps.status = True
    print(ps.status) # True
    ps.new_status = True
    print(ps.new_status) # True
    
  3. Loading default settings while initializing with a dictionary of arguments

    ps = Configer(default_ps_fname=default_ps_fname, status=False,**{'somethings': [1.0, 2.0]})
    print(ps.somethings) # [1.0, 2.0]
    
  4. Adding and overloading with a second Configer instance

    ps1 = Configer(status=False)
    ps2 = Configer(status=True, othersetting = 'this')
    
    ps3 = ps1 + ps2
    print(ps3.status) # False
    print(ps3.othersetting) # 'this'
    
    ps4 = ps1.overload(ps2)
    print(ps4.status) # True
    
  5. Dumping current Configer instance as an .ini file

    ps = Configer(default_ps_fname=default_ps_fname, status=False)
    print(ps.status) # False
    ps.dump_settings(fname='~/settings.ini') # saves the settings to the specified file
    

Tests

To run the tests, type in in the root directory:

python -m unittest discover

License

See LICENSE.txt

Author

Nima Ghorbani, [email protected]

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Easy configuration of arguments in a python code!

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