vote up 6 vote down star

I frequently see python code similar to

for line in open(filename):
    do_something(line)

When does filename get closed with this code?

Would it be better to write

with open(filename) as f:
    for line in f.readlines():
        do_something(line)
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4 Answers

vote up 17 vote down check

filename would be closed when it falls out of scope. That normally would be the end of the method.

Yes, its better to use with.

Once you have a file object, you perform all file I/O by calling methods of this object. ... When you are done with the file, you should finish by calling the close method on the object, to close the connection to the file:

input.close()

In short scripts, people often omit this step, as Python automatically closes the file when a file object is reclaimed during garbage collection (which in mainstream Python means the file is closed just about at once, although other important Python implementations, such as Jython and IronPython, have other, more relaxed garbage collection strategies). Nevertheless, it is good programming practice to close your files as soon as possible, and it is especially a good idea in larger programs, which otherwise may be at more risk of having excessive numbers of uselessly open files lying about. Note that try/finally is particularly well suited to ensuing that a file gets closed, even when a function terminates due to an uncaught exception.

Python Cookbook, Page 59.

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I think you mean f instead of filename in "filename would be closed..." – Andrew Keeton Sep 25 at 18:20
I meant that the object created with open(filename) would be closed when it falls out of scope, i.e., when the iteration ends. – voyager Sep 25 at 18:30
It would be closed when the for loop ends or at the end of the relevant method? – foosion Sep 25 at 19:00
Depends on the GC, but I believe that its closed when the loop ends on CPython (later will check when is it being GCd) – voyager Sep 25 at 19:10
vote up 0 vote down

Drop .readlines(). It is redundant and undesirable for large files (due to memory consumption). The variant with 'with' block always closes file.

with open(filename) as file_:
    for line in file_:
        do_something(line)

When file will be closed in the bare 'for'-loop variant depends on Python implementation.

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Dex mentioned eliminating readlines() a while back. >>depends on Python implementation>> That could be why different people are giving different answers. – foosion Sep 25 at 19:27
vote up 2 vote down

python is garbage-collected - cpython has reference counting and a backup cycle detecting garbage collector.

File objects close their file handle when the are deleted/finalized.

Thus the file will be eventually closed, and in cpython will closed as soon as the for loop finishes.

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vote up 4 vote down

The with part is better because it close the file afterwards. You don't even have to use readlines(). for line in file is enough.

I don't think the first one closes it.

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