13.6. plistlib
— Generate and parse Mac OS X .plist
files
Changed in version 2.6: This module was previously only available in the Mac-specific library, it is now available for all platforms.
Source code: Lib/plistlib.py
This module provides an interface for reading and writing the “property list” XML files used mainly by Mac OS X.
The property list (.plist
) file format is a simple XML pickle supporting
basic object types, like dictionaries, lists, numbers and strings. Usually the
top level object is a dictionary.
Values can be strings, integers, floats, booleans, tuples, lists, dictionaries
(but only with string keys), Data
or datetime.datetime
objects. String values (including dictionary keys) may be unicode strings –
they will be written out as UTF-8.
The <data>
plist type is supported through the Data
class. This is
a thin wrapper around a Python string. Use Data
if your strings
contain control characters.
See also
- PList manual page
- Apple’s documentation of the file format.
This module defines the following functions:
-
plistlib.
readPlist
(pathOrFile) Read a plist file. pathOrFile may either be a file name or a (readable) file object. Return the unpacked root object (which usually is a dictionary).
The XML data is parsed using the Expat parser from
xml.parsers.expat
– see its documentation for possible exceptions on ill-formed XML. Unknown elements will simply be ignored by the plist parser.
-
plistlib.
writePlist
(rootObject, pathOrFile) Write rootObject to a plist file. pathOrFile may either be a file name or a (writable) file object.
A
TypeError
will be raised if the object is of an unsupported type or a container that contains objects of unsupported types.
-
plistlib.
readPlistFromString
(data) Read a plist from a string. Return the root object.
-
plistlib.
writePlistToString
(rootObject) Return rootObject as a plist-formatted string.
-
plistlib.
readPlistFromResource
(path, restype='plst', resid=0) Read a plist from the resource with type restype from the resource fork of path. Availability: Mac OS X.
Note
In Python 3.x, this function has been removed.
-
plistlib.
writePlistToResource
(rootObject, path, restype='plst', resid=0) Write rootObject as a resource with type restype to the resource fork of path. Availability: Mac OS X.
Note
In Python 3.x, this function has been removed.
The following class is available:
-
class
plistlib.
Data
(data) Return a “data” wrapper object around the string data. This is used in functions converting from/to plists to represent the
<data>
type available in plists.It has one attribute,
data
, that can be used to retrieve the Python string stored in it.
13.6.1. Examples
Generating a plist:
pl = dict(
aString="Doodah",
aList=["A", "B", 12, 32.1, [1, 2, 3]],
aFloat = 0.1,
anInt = 728,
aDict=dict(
anotherString="<hello & hi there!>",
aUnicodeValue=u'M\xe4ssig, Ma\xdf',
aTrueValue=True,
aFalseValue=False,
),
someData = Data("<binary gunk>"),
someMoreData = Data("<lots of binary gunk>" * 10),
aDate = datetime.datetime.fromtimestamp(time.mktime(time.gmtime())),
)
# unicode keys are possible, but a little awkward to use:
pl[u'\xc5benraa'] = "That was a unicode key."
writePlist(pl, fileName)
Parsing a plist:
pl = readPlist(pathOrFile)
print pl["aKey"]