73

I have a config file abc.txt which looks somewhat like:

path1 = "D:\test1\first"
path2 = "D:\test2\second"
path3 = "D:\test2\third"

I want to read these paths from the abc.txt to use it in my program to avoid hard coding.

3

7 Answers 7

122

In order to use my example, your file "abc.txt" needs to look like this.

[your-config]
path1 = "D:\test1\first"
path2 = "D:\test2\second"
path3 = "D:\test2\third"

Then in your code you can use the config parser.

import ConfigParser

configParser = ConfigParser.RawConfigParser()   
configFilePath = r'c:\abc.txt'
configParser.read(configFilePath)

As human.js noted in his comment, in Python 3, ConfigParser has been renamed configparser. See Python 3 ImportError: No module named 'ConfigParser' for more details.

12
  • I've edited the post, my suggestion is for using config files it much easier and very useful, that way you can learn a new thing that can really help you. the error MissingSectionHeaderError was beacuse you need the section [file]
    – Kobi K
    Oct 15, 2013 at 10:54
  • Certainly useful; did not know this before. +1
    – tobias_k
    Oct 15, 2013 at 10:56
  • 2
    @KobiK I'm able to get the path of the currently executed script file by os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(sys.argv[0])). Then I could do an os.path.join with my "abc.txt". That solved the issue. Thanks a lot
    – a4aravind
    Oct 16, 2013 at 9:29
  • 8
    in python 3, ConfigParser is renamed to configparser. Check here for details stackoverflow.com/questions/14087598/…
    – human.js
    Aug 16, 2016 at 15:53
  • 2
    You may want to remove quotes from your config file variables content since using configParser.get('your-config', 'path1') will add another stack of (single) quotes (tested on python3 configparser) Jun 13, 2019 at 23:42
38

You need a section in your file:

[My Section]
path1 = D:\test1\first
path2 = D:\test2\second
path3 = D:\test2\third

Then, read the properties:

import ConfigParser

config = ConfigParser.ConfigParser()
config.readfp(open(r'abc.txt'))
path1 = config.get('My Section', 'path1')
path2 = config.get('My Section', 'path2')
path3 = config.get('My Section', 'path3')
3
  • 12
    readfp is deprecated. Use read_file instead: config.read_file(open(r'abc.txt')) Feb 10, 2019 at 16:48
  • 2
    You can use even config.read(r'abc.txt'). See official doc for deatils. Oct 9, 2020 at 15:16
  • 4
    In Python 3, ConfigParser has been renamed to configparser for PEP 8 compliance. Aug 16, 2021 at 14:36
24

If you need to read all values from a section in properties file in a simple manner:

Your config.cfg file layout :

[SECTION_NAME]  
key1 = value1  
key2 = value2  

You code:

   import configparser

   config = configparser.RawConfigParser()
   config.read('path_to_config.cfg file')
    
   details_dict = dict(config.items('SECTION_NAME'))

This will give you a dictionary where keys are same as in config file and their corresponding values.

details_dict is :

{'key1':'value1', 'key2':'value2'}

Now to get key1's value : details_dict['key1']

Putting it all in a method which reads sections from config file only once(the first time the method is called during a program run).

def get_config_dict():
    if not hasattr(get_config_dict, 'config_dict'):
        get_config_dict.config_dict = dict(config.items('SECTION_NAME'))
    return get_config_dict.config_dict

Now call the above function and get the required key's value :

config_details = get_config_dict()
key_1_value = config_details['key1'] 


Generic Multi Section approach:

[SECTION_NAME_1]  
key1 = value1  
key2 = value2  

[SECTION_NAME_2]  
key1 = value1  
key2 = value2

Extending the approach mentioned above, reading section by section automatically and then accessing by section name followed by key name.

def get_config_section():
    if not hasattr(get_config_section, 'section_dict'):
        get_config_section.section_dict = collections.defaultdict()
        
        for section in config.sections():
            get_config_section.section_dict[section] = dict(config.items(section))
    
    return get_config_section.section_dict

To access:

config_dict = get_config_section()

port = config_dict['DB']['port'] 

(here 'DB' is a section name in config file and 'port' is a key under section 'DB'.)

6

A convenient solution in your case would be to include the configs in a yaml file named **your_config_name.yml** which would look like this:

path1: "D:\test1\first"
path2: "D:\test2\second"
path3: "D:\test2\third"

In your python code you can then load the config params into a dictionary by doing this:

import yaml
with open('your_config_name.yml') as stream:
    config = yaml.safe_load(stream)

You then access e.g. path1 like this from your dictionary config:

config['path1']

To import yaml you first have to install the package as such: pip install pyyaml into your chosen virtual environment.

3

This looks like valid Python code, so if the file is on your project's classpath (and not in some other directory or in arbitrary places) one way would be just to rename the file to "abc.py" and import it as a module, using import abc. You can even update the values using the reload function later. Then access the values as abc.path1 etc.

Of course, this can be dangerous in case the file contains other code that will be executed. I would not use it in any real, professional project, but for a small script or in interactive mode this seems to be the simplest solution.

Just put the abc.py into the same directory as your script, or the directory where you open the interactive shell, and do import abc or from abc import *.

3
  • 1
    Thanks, but I don't have a project build and all. I'm just running the Python script from commandline only. Is it possible to do something like this in this case ? I mean is there any other way to make these together as a package or something like that ?
    – a4aravind
    Oct 15, 2013 at 11:01
  • @user2882117 Sure, just put the abc.py in the same directory as your script, or the directory you start an interactive shell in, and do import abc. Particularly if it's just for a small script, I think this is the simplest solution, but I would not use it in a "real" project.
    – tobias_k
    Oct 15, 2013 at 11:08
  • You need to be careful with backslashes in strings.
    – Alex Che
    Aug 22, 2018 at 17:26
3

For Pyhon 3.X:

Notice the lowercase import configparser makes a big difference.

Step 1:

Create a file called "config.txt" and paste the below two lines:

 [global]
 mykey = prod/v1/install/
    

Step 2:

Go to the same directory and create a testit.py and paste the code below into a file and run it. (FYI: you can put the config file anywhere you like you, you just have to change the read path)

#!/usr/bin/env python
import configparser

config = configparser.ConfigParser()
config.read(r'config.txt')   

print(config.get('global', 'mykey') )
0

Since your config file is a normal text file, just read it using the open function:

file = open("abc.txt", 'r')
content = file.read()
paths = content.split("\n") #split it into lines
for path in paths:
    print path.split(" = ")[1]

This will print your paths. You can also store them using dictionaries or lists.

path_list = []
path_dict = {}
for path in paths:
    p = path.split(" = ")
    path_list.append(p)[1]
    path_dict[p[0]] = p[1]

More on reading/writing file here. Hope this helps!

3
  • 2
    Remember to close the file, or better, use a with block. And might as well put those into a dictionary.
    – tobias_k
    Oct 15, 2013 at 10:59
  • Also, if it's just a text file, i would recommend to discard the quotes.
    – aIKid
    Oct 15, 2013 at 11:21
  • 1
    @tobias_k He can figure it out himself :)
    – aIKid
    Oct 15, 2013 at 11:22

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