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Mastering Object-Oriented Python

You're reading from   Mastering Object-Oriented Python Build powerful applications with reusable code using OOP design patterns and Python 3.7

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789531367
Length 770 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Steven F. Lott Steven F. Lott
Author Profile Icon Steven F. Lott
Steven F. Lott
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Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Tighter Integration Via Special Methods FREE CHAPTER
2. Preliminaries, Tools, and Techniques 3. The __init__() Method 4. Integrating Seamlessly - Basic Special Methods 5. Attribute Access, Properties, and Descriptors 6. The ABCs of Consistent Design 7. Using Callables and Contexts 8. Creating Containers and Collections 9. Creating Numbers 10. Decorators and Mixins - Cross-Cutting Aspects 11. Section 2: Object Serialization and Persistence
12. Serializing and Saving - JSON, YAML, Pickle, CSV, and XML 13. Storing and Retrieving Objects via Shelve 14. Storing and Retrieving Objects via SQLite 15. Transmitting and Sharing Objects 16. Configuration Files and Persistence 17. Section 3: Object-Oriented Testing and Debugging
18. Design Principles and Patterns 19. The Logging and Warning Modules 20. Designing for Testability 21. Coping with the Command Line 22. Module and Package Design 23. Quality and Documentation 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Creating a shelf

The first part of creating a shelf is done using a module-level function, shelve.open(), to create a persistent shelf structure. The second part is closing the file properly so that all changes are written to the underlying filesystem. We'll look at this in a more complete example, in the Designing an access layer for shelve section.

Under the hood, the shelve module is using the dbm module to do the real work of opening a file and mapping from a key to a value. The dbm module itself is a wrapper around an underlying DBM-compatible library. Consequently, there are a number of potential implementations for the shelve features. The good news is that the differences among the dbm implementations are largely irrelevant.

The shelve.open() module function requires two parameters: the filename and the file access mode. Often, we want the default mode of 'c...

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