On Wednesday, August 5, 2015 at 7:38:46 PM UTC+5:30, Steven D'Aprano wrote: > On Wed, 5 Aug 2015 11:46 pm, Rustom Mody wrote: > > > On Sunday, August 2, 2015 at 3:44:51 PM UTC+5:30, Cecil Westerhof wrote: > >> There are a lot of ways to store configuration information: > >> - conf file > >> - xml file > >> - database > >> - json file > >> - and possible a lot of other ways > > > > One that I dont think has been mentioned: > > ast.literal_eval > > > Probably because it doesn't work :-)
In the way you describe... yes Works alright if you give it *literals* >>> from ast import literal_eval >>> literal_eval('{"x":"hello", "y":2, "z":3.142}') {'z': 3.142, 'x': 'hello', 'y': 2} which is identical the the json.loads behavior >>> loads('{"x":"hello", "y":2, "z":3.142}') {'z': 3.142, 'x': 'hello', 'y': 2} of course the natural method of use would of course get the string from the open-ing of a config file -- something along the lines configuration = literal_eval(open("~/.fooconfig")) -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list