Hi all, I've written a function that reads a specifically formatted text file and spits out a dictionary. Here's an example:
config.txt: Destination = C:/Destination Overwrite = True Here's my function that takes 1 argument (text file) the_file = open(textfile,'r') linelist = the_file.read().split('\n') the_file.close() configs = {} for line in linelist: try: key,value = line.split('=') key.strip() value.strip() key.lower() value.lower() configs[key] = value except ValueError: break so I call this on my config file, and then I can refer back to any config in my script like this: shutil.move(your_file,configs['destination']) which I like because it's very clear and readable. So this works great for simple text config files. Here's how I want to improve it: I want to be able to look at the value and determine what type it SHOULD be. Right now, configs['overwrite'] = 'true' (a string) when it might be more useful as a boolean. Is there a quick way to do this? I'd also like to able to read '1' as an in, '1.0' as a float, etc... I remember once I saw a script that took a string and tried int(), float() wrapped in a try except, but I was wondering if there was a more direct way. Thanks in advance, Zach -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list