The applications I write are made of, lets say, algorithms and data. I mean constant data, dicts, tables, etc: to keep algorithms simple, describe what is peculiar, data dependent, as data rather than "case statements". These could be called configuration data.
The lazy way to do this: have modules that initialize bunches of objects, attributes holding the data: the object is somehow the row of the "table", attribute names being the column. This is the way I proceeded up to now. Data input this way are almost "configuration data", with 2 big drawbacks: - Only a python programmer can fix the file: this cant be called a configuration file. - Even for the author, these data aint easy to maintain. I feel pretty much ready to change this: - make these data true text data, easier to read and fix. - write the module that will make python objects out of these data: the extra cost should yield ease of use. 2 questions arise: - which kind of text data? - csv: ok for simple attributes, not easy for lists or complex data. - xml: the form wont be easier to read than python code, but an xml editor could be used, and a formal description of what is expected can be used. - how can I make the data-to-object transformation both easy, and able to spot errors in text data? Last, but not least: is there a python lib implementing at least part of this dream? -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list