31

In this code snippet (authored by another person), self.archive is a path to a large file and raw_file is the contents of the file read as binary data.

with open(self.archive, "rb") as f:
    f.seek(offset)
    raw_file = start + f.read(dlen - len(start))
    ...
    f.write(raw_file)

This archive file contains stored image files, and I'd like to access them pygame.image.load which requires a File object. But I need to do something like pygame.image.load(toVirtualFileObject(raw_file)) (i.e. access this archive file's contents as File objects without writing to disk first).

Can this be done?

3
  • You could use any file-like object, for example StringIO; but if its a few MB, you might exhaust the available memory as doing so will load the file into memory at once. What is the problem with writing to disk and reading it? Apr 15, 2013 at 3:57
  • Strange rules? Typically such extracting is done as part of the install process - which is why programs with a heavy asset library take up a lot of disk space, and take a while to install as well (think MMORPGs). @jwodder pointed you in the right direction. Apr 15, 2013 at 4:02
  • Ah, the joys of copy protection :) Apr 15, 2013 at 4:06

1 Answer 1

37

This is what StringIO (in Python 2) and io.BytesIO in (in Python 3) are for.

0

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