You can use 'wb'
mode to write multiple pickles to a file, and if you need to reopen it for one ore more additional dump
, then you should use append mode ('a'
, not 'w'
). Here I write multiple entries using 'wb'
, and then later add one entry using 'ab'
.
>>> scores = dict(Travis=100, Polly=125, Guido=69)
>>> import pickle
>>> with open('scores.pkl', 'wb') as highscores:
... for name,score in scores.items():
... pickle.dump((name,score)), highscores)
...
>>> with open('scores.pkl', 'ab') as highscores:
... pickle.dump(scores, highscores)
...
>>> with open('scores.pkl', 'rb') as highscores:
... a = pickle.load(highscores)
... b = pickle.load(highscores)
... c = pickle.load(highscores)
... d = pickle.load(highscores)
...
>>> a
('Travis', 100)
>>> b
('Polly', 125)
>>> c
('Guido', 69)
>>> d
{'Polly': 125, 'Travis': 100, 'Guido': 69}
>>>
And if you have a lot of data, so that you are worried about being able to dump
and/or load
all of your items at once, then you can use (one of my packages) klepto
, which enables you to store large pickled data to a file, directory, or database… where you can seamlessly access one entry at a time.
>>> import klepto
>>> store = klepto.archives.dir_archive('high', serialized=True)
>>> store.update(scores)
>>> store
dir_archive('high', {'Polly': 125, 'Guido': 69, 'Travis': 100}, cached=True)
>>> # dump all entries at once
>>> store.dump()
>>> # create a new empty archive proxy
>>> store2 = klepto.archives.dir_archive('high', serialized=True)
>>> store2
dir_archive('high', {}, cached=True)
>>> # load one entry, as opposed to loading all entries
>>> store2.load('Guido')
>>> store2
dir_archive('high', {'Guido': 69}, cached=True)
>>> store2['Guido']
69
>>> # load everything else
>>> store2.load()
>>> store2
dir_archive('high', {'Polly': 125, 'Guido': 69, 'Travis': 100}, cached=True)
>>>
dump
5 times to the file, then you will need to doload
5 times. Oneload
for everydump
.dump
the dict all at once. then, you'd only need the oneload
.pickle
or you're more interested in storing data?