125

In Ruby you can read from a file using s = File.read(filename). The shortest and clearest I know in Python is

with open(filename) as f:
    s = f.read()

Is there any other way to do it that makes it even shorter (preferably one line) and more readable?

Note: initially I phrased the question as "doing this in a single line of code". As pointed by S.Lott, shorter doesn't necessary mean more readable. So I rephrased my question just to make clear what I meant. I think the Ruby code is better and more readable not necessarily because it's one line versus two (though that matters as well), but also because it's a class method as opposed to an instance method, which poses no question about who closes the file, how to make sure it gets closed even if an exception is raised, etc. As pointed in the answers below, you can rely on the GC to close your file (thus making this a one-liner), but that makes the code worse even though it's shorter. Not only by being unportable, but by making it unclear.

17
  • 7
    Create your own function. Then you can use it to get the contents. The call would be one line. Sep 21, 2010 at 7:33
  • @Felix Hehe, sure. I was looking for a way to do it using the standard library. :)
    – ibz
    Sep 21, 2010 at 7:46
  • 1
    Just curious, does the Ruby statement close the file as well?
    – dheerosaur
    Sep 21, 2010 at 8:19
  • 4
    My question makes sense for me. I'm trying to find a better way to write these two lines (4 lines before the with statement in 2.5). Maybe there is a way, maybe there isn't. I can always try to find out, right? If you don't like it, downvote and move on. :)
    – ibz
    Sep 22, 2010 at 3:03
  • 2
    The benefit of File.readlines("filename") is that it reads the contents of a file given its name. There is no file handle, descriptor, or object anywhere in evidence. All the Python "equivalents" I've seen include an explicit open/close (or worse, an implicit open that requires an explicit close).
    – Mark Reed
    Oct 21, 2012 at 3:41

7 Answers 7

197

A one-liner. No reason to do this.

with open('x.py') as f: s = f.read()
0
77

Use pathlib.

Python 3.5 and above:

from pathlib import Path
contents = Path(file_path).read_text()

For lower versions of Python use pathlib2:

$ pip install pathlib2

Then

from pathlib2 import Path
contents = Path(file_path).read_text()

Writing is just as easy:

Path(file_path).write_text('my text')
2
  • When I use pathlib, I get this error UnicodeDecodeError: 'charmap' codec can't decode byte 0x81 in position 148: character maps to <undefined>. And as far as I search, it seems I can't set encoding to pathlib, so I have to read the content traditionally with the os module. Jun 22, 2022 at 5:30
  • Note that the pathlib2 backport is worthless on Windows with python 2.7 as it does not support non-ascii chars on this platform - see known issues.
    – mara004
    Jan 11 at 15:28
42

This is same as above but does not handle errors:

s = open(filename, 'r').read()
8
  • 34
    Not really, yours leaves the file open.
    – ibz
    Sep 21, 2010 at 7:45
  • 3
    The CPython implementation does close the file when the reference count goes to zero, but that is an implementation detail that shouldn't be relied on. Sep 21, 2010 at 8:01
  • 1
    This does handle errors; an exception will be thrown as usual. This does not "leave the file open", but what it may do is cause the file close to be delayed depending on the GC implementation. That can be a problem (locking in Windows, and eg. FD limits if looping over many files), but that's very different from leaving the file open (eg. leaking the file). Sep 21, 2010 at 8:50
  • 2
    @Glenn Maynard: Theoretically closing can be delayed until termination of the process, and in the meantime, the open file could leak (for instance to subprocesses in case of a fork()).
    – user355252
    Sep 21, 2010 at 9:10
  • 7
    No, this isn't confusing in the slightest. Sep 21, 2010 at 19:54
20
contents = open(filename).read()
2
  • 15
    And when do you close the file?
    – ibz
    Sep 21, 2010 at 7:44
  • 1
    @ionut bizau - When the return of open(...) is garbage collected, I think. Someone correct me if I'm wrong.
    – detly
    Sep 21, 2010 at 9:09
12

This isn't Perl; you don't want to force-fit multiple lines worth of code onto a single line. Write a function, then calling the function takes one line of code.

def read_file(fn):
    """
    >>> import os
    >>> fn = "/tmp/testfile.%i" % os.getpid()
    >>> open(fn, "w+").write("testing")
    >>> read_file(fn)
    'testing'
    >>> os.unlink(fn)
    >>> read_file("/nonexistant")
    Traceback (most recent call last):
        ...
    IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/nonexistant'
    """
    with open(fn) as f:
        return f.read()

if __name__ == "__main__":
    import doctest
    doctest.testmod()
5

Simple like that:

    f=open('myfile.txt')
    s=f.read()
    f.close()

And do whatever you want with the content "s"

4

Slow, ugly, platform-specific... but one-liner ;-)

import subprocess

contents = subprocess.Popen('cat %s' % filename, shell = True, stdout = subprocess.PIPE).communicate()[0]
2
  • 8
    aaaaaaaaaaargh! (excess 'a's to meet min char limit) Sep 21, 2010 at 11:10
  • 8
    Certainly matches the spirit of the question... perverse use of Python to make it resemble Bash is no worse than making it resemble Ruby or Perl.
    – detly
    Sep 22, 2010 at 7:30

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