File Objects
Python’s built-in file objects are implemented entirely on the FILE*
support from the C standard library. This is an implementation detail and may
change in future releases of Python.
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PyFileObject
This subtype of
PyObject
represents a Python file object.
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PyTypeObject
PyFile_Type
This instance of
PyTypeObject
represents the Python file type. This is exposed to Python programs asfile
andtypes.FileType
.
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int
PyFile_Check
(PyObject *p) Return true if its argument is a
PyFileObject
or a subtype ofPyFileObject
.Changed in version 2.2: Allowed subtypes to be accepted.
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int
PyFile_CheckExact
(PyObject *p) Return true if its argument is a
PyFileObject
, but not a subtype ofPyFileObject
.New in version 2.2.
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PyObject*
PyFile_FromString
(char *filename, char *mode) - Return value: New reference.
On success, return a new file object that is opened on the file given by filename, with a file mode given by mode, where mode has the same semantics as the standard C routine
fopen()
. On failure, return NULL.
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PyObject*
PyFile_FromFile
(FILE *fp, char *name, char *mode, int (*close)(FILE*)) - Return value: New reference.
Create a new
PyFileObject
from the already-open standard C file pointer, fp. The function close will be called when the file should be closed. Return NULL and close the file using close on failure. close is optional and can be set to NULL.
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FILE*
PyFile_AsFile
(PyObject *p) Return the file object associated with p as a
FILE*
.If the caller will ever use the returned
FILE*
object while the GIL is released it must also call thePyFile_IncUseCount()
andPyFile_DecUseCount()
functions described below as appropriate.
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void
PyFile_IncUseCount
(PyFileObject *p) Increments the PyFileObject’s internal use count to indicate that the underlying
FILE*
is being used. This prevents Python from calling f_close() on it from another thread. Callers of this must callPyFile_DecUseCount()
when they are finished with theFILE*
. Otherwise the file object will never be closed by Python.The GIL must be held while calling this function.
The suggested use is to call this after
PyFile_AsFile()
and before you release the GIL:FILE *fp = PyFile_AsFile(p); PyFile_IncUseCount(p); /* ... */ Py_BEGIN_ALLOW_THREADS do_something(fp); Py_END_ALLOW_THREADS /* ... */ PyFile_DecUseCount(p);
New in version 2.6.
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void
PyFile_DecUseCount
(PyFileObject *p) Decrements the PyFileObject’s internal unlocked_count member to indicate that the caller is done with its own use of the
FILE*
. This may only be called to undo a prior call toPyFile_IncUseCount()
.The GIL must be held while calling this function (see the example above).
New in version 2.6.
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PyObject*
PyFile_GetLine
(PyObject *p, int n) - Return value: New reference.
Equivalent to
p.readline([n])
, this function reads one line from the object p. p may be a file object or any object with areadline()
method. If n is0
, exactly one line is read, regardless of the length of the line. If n is greater than0
, no more than n bytes will be read from the file; a partial line can be returned. In both cases, an empty string is returned if the end of the file is reached immediately. If n is less than0
, however, one line is read regardless of length, butEOFError
is raised if the end of the file is reached immediately.
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PyObject*
PyFile_Name
(PyObject *p) - Return value: Borrowed reference.
Return the name of the file specified by p as a string object.
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void
PyFile_SetBufSize
(PyFileObject *p, int n) Available on systems with
setvbuf()
only. This should only be called immediately after file object creation.
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int
PyFile_SetEncoding
(PyFileObject *p, const char *enc) Set the file’s encoding for Unicode output to enc. Return
1
on success and0
on failure.New in version 2.3.
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int
PyFile_SetEncodingAndErrors
(PyFileObject *p, const char *enc, *errors) Set the file’s encoding for Unicode output to enc, and its error mode to err. Return
1
on success and0
on failure.New in version 2.6.
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int
PyFile_SoftSpace
(PyObject *p, int newflag) This function exists for internal use by the interpreter. Set the
softspace
attribute of p to newflag and return the previous value. p does not have to be a file object for this function to work properly; any object is supported (thought its only interesting if thesoftspace
attribute can be set). This function clears any errors, and will return0
as the previous value if the attribute either does not exist or if there were errors in retrieving it. There is no way to detect errors from this function, but doing so should not be needed.
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int
PyFile_WriteObject
(PyObject *obj, PyObject *p, int flags) Write object obj to file object p. The only supported flag for flags is
Py_PRINT_RAW
; if given, thestr()
of the object is written instead of therepr()
. Return0
on success or-1
on failure; the appropriate exception will be set.
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int
PyFile_WriteString
(const char *s, PyObject *p) Write string s to file object p. Return
0
on success or-1
on failure; the appropriate exception will be set.