In article <b11a8a0e-03ca-41c9-b0d0-c5180b6a2...@p15g2000vbl.googlegroups.com>, RunThePun <ubershme...@gmail.com> wrote: >On Aug 30, 10:33=A0pm, a...@pythoncraft.com (Aahz) wrote: >> In article <e09276e8-8152-4002-8366-4c12705a8...@l35g2000vba.googlegroups= >.com>, >> RunThePun =A0<ubershme...@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>I made a DictMixin where the keys are filenames and the values are the >>>file contents. It was very simple and easy to do thanks to DictMixin. >>> >>>For example this code writes "abc" in a file named "temp.txt" and >>>prints the contents of the file named "swallow", these files are >>>looked up/created/deleted in the directory "spam": >>>>>> d =3D3D FilesDict('spam') >>>>>> d['temp.txt'] =3D3D 'abc' >>>>>> print(d['swallow']) >>> >>>My problem arose when I wanted to append a string to a file which >>>using open(..., 'ab') would have been miles more efficient because I >>>wouldn't have to read the entire file (__getitem__) and then write the >>>entire file back (__setitem__). The files are expected to be as big as >>>600 KB which will be appended 30 bytes at a time about 3 times a >>>second. Performance-wise the system would probably work without open >>>(..., 'ab') but it would be a real thrashing so the current solution >>>uses a method "AddTo" as Robert suggested, sacrificing the neat >>>getitem/setitem syntax. >> >> You can do mostly what you want, I think, by having __setitem__() >> convert string values into FileProxy() objects that have an appropriate >> __iadd__() method. =A0That brings a whole new set of problems, of course. > >I'm guessing you meant __getitem__, which is what Jan Kaliszewski >suggested, but as you noted, would be a bit cumbersome in this case.
Actually, what I meant was __setitem__. The idea is that you create the proxy item when you add the data to the dict (wrapping the original data), and the proxy has an __iadd__ method, which would allow you to do the file append. -- Aahz (a...@pythoncraft.com) <*> http://www.pythoncraft.com/ "I support family values -- Addams family values" --www.nancybuttons.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list