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Examples
Note: see Installing for basic setup instructions.
livejson
is intentionally easy to use. Using livejson
in its most basic form doesn't require much new knowledge, just use the same interface you're familiar with from list
s and dict
s.
To initialize a new file, just call livejson.File
.
import livejson
foo = livejson.File("test.json")
Now we have a new file, called test.json
. It's as empty as JSON files get, it just contains {}
.
You can open existing JSON files in exactly the same way, their contents will be preserved.
To read from and write to a livejson.File
, just pretend it's a dict
.
So, to write:
foo["key"] = "value"
and to read it back:
bar = foo["key"]
livejson
can be really slow sometimes. This comes as a consequence of its "live" nature; every single access to the database or change to a value involves opening, reading or writing, and closing the file. This works great for small files, but it can be an issue on larger files. Fortunately, livejson
implements caching for just this purpose.
You can use livejson
with a short-term cache if you know you're going to be doing a lot all at once. Caching is as simple as wrapping whatever operations you want to do in a with
block:
foo = livejson.ListFile("test.json")
with foo:
for i in range(10000):
foo.append(i)
In this way, you can perform many operations very quickly. See Performance for more details.
JSON files can be just an array. This means a JSON file can start with [
, like this:
["a", "b", "c", {"a": "b"}]
livejson
fully supports this type of file. If you've already got this kind of file, using
livejson.File("my_array_file.json")
will automatically create an object that behaves like a list.
To initialize a new file of this type, use
foo = livejson.ListDatabase("test.json")