There are always two parts of a file in the computer system, the filename and its extension. Also, the files have two key properties – its name and the location or path, which specifies the location where the file exists. The filename has two parts, and they are separated by a dot (.) or period.
Figure – File and its path:
A built-in open method is used to create a Python file-object, which provides a connection to the file that is residing on programmer’s machine. After calling the function open, programmers can transfer strings of data to and from the external file that is residing in the machine.
File Opening In Python
open() function is used to open a file in Python. It’s mainly required two arguments, first the file name and then file opening mode.Syntax:
file_object = open(filename [,mode] [,buffering])
In the above syntax the parameters used are:
- filename: It is the name of the file.
- mode: It tells the program in which mode the file has to be open.
- buffering: Here, if the value is set to zero (0), no buffering will occur while accessing a file, if the value is set to top one (1), line buffering will be performed while accessing a file.
Modes Of Opening File In Python
The file can be opened in the following modes:
Mode | Description |
---|---|
r | Opens a file for reading only. (It’s a default mode.) |
w | Opens a file for writing. (If a file doesn’t exist already, then it creates a new file. Otherwise, it’s truncate a file.) |
x | Opens a file for exclusive creation. (Operation fails if a file does not exist in the location.) |
a | Opens a file for appending at the end of the file without truncating it. (Creates a new file if it does not exist in the location.) |
t | Opens a file in text mode. (It’s a default mode.) |
b | Opens a file in binary mode. |
+ | Opens a file for updating (reading and writing.) |
File Object Attributes
If an attempt to open a file fails then open returns a false value, otherwise it returns a file object that provides various information related to that file.Example:
# file opening example in Python fo = open("sample.txt", "wb") print ("File Name: ", fo.name) print ("Mode of Opening: ", fo.mode) print ("Is Closed: ", fo.closed) print ("Softspace flag : ", fo.softspace)
Output:
File Name: sample.txt Mode of Opening: wb Is Closed: False Softspace flag: 0
File Reading In Python
For reading and writing text data different text-encoding schemes are used such as ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange), UTF-8 (Unicode Transformation Format), UTF-16.
Once a file is opened using open() method then it can be read by a method called read().Example:
# read the entire file as one string with open('filename.txt') as f: data = f.read() # Iterate over the lines of the File with open('filename.txt') as f: for line in f : print(line, end=' ') # process the lines
File Writing In Python
Similarly, for writing data to files, we have to use open() with ‘wt‘ mode, clearing and overwriting the previous content. Also, we have to use write() function to write into a file.Example:
# Write text data to a file with open('filename.txt' , 'wt') as f: f.write ('hi there, this is a first line of file.\n') f.write ('and another line.\n')
Output:
hi there, this is a first line of file. and another line.
By default, in Python – using the system default text encoding files are read/written. Though Python can understand several hundred text-encodings but the most common encoding techniques used are ASCII, Latin-1, UTF-8, UTF-16, etc. The use of ‘with’ statement in the example establishes a context in which the file will be used. As the control leaves the ‘with’ block, the file gets closed automatically.
Writing A File That Does Not Exist
The problem can be easily solved by using another mode – technique, i.e., the ‘x‘ mode to open a file instead of ‘w‘ mode.
Let’s see two examples to differentiate between them.Example:
with open('filename' , 'wt') as f: f.write ('Hello, This is sample content.\n') # This will create an error that the file 'filename' doesn't exist. with open ('filename.txt' , 'xt') as f: f.write ('Hello, This is sample content.\n')
In binary mode, we should use ‘xb‘ instead of ‘xt‘.
Closing A File In Python
In Python, it is not system critical to close all your files after using them, because the file will auto close after Python code finishes execution. You can close a file by using close() method.
Syntax:
file_object.close();
Example:
try: # Open a file fo = open("sample.txt", "wb") # perform file operations finally: # Close opened file fo.close()