1

Is it possible to read values from a file with an iterator, so that the file is automatically closed at the end of the iteration?

Creating such an iterator using the with statement doesn't seem to work.

with open('/dev/zero', 'rb') as f:                                              
    values = iter(f.read(1) for i in (1, 2, 3))                                 

values.next()             #ValueError: I/O operation on closed file                                        
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  • You'll need to create a wrapper class, implement __iter__ and __next__, and call f.__exit__() when you raise a StopIteration. Sep 20, 2017 at 10:16
  • What you try to do isn't advisable because if you forget to iterate to the end or an exception happens you'll leak a file handle.All operations on a file should be done inside the with!
    – MSeifert
    Sep 20, 2017 at 10:17

2 Answers 2

5

If you want to use with you need to do:

def file_generator(filename):
    with open(filename,'rb') as file:
        for i in (1, 2, 3):
            yield file.read(1)

values = file_generator('/dev/zero')
next(values)

However if you don't reach the end of this iterator, you will never close the file, so in essence it's not very different from:

file = open(filename,'rb')
next(file)
file.close()

When processing a file it's best to go through it all at once if you can, and then close it once you are done using it. Keeping a handle on an open file is usually not a reliable solution.

4
  • 1
    Don't do that in production code. This can easily leak a file handle when the generator isn't exhausted or the generator isn't deleted if an exception happened. (Almost all the good points of with are negated if you use yield inside the context).
    – MSeifert
    Sep 20, 2017 at 10:21
  • @MSeifert I agree yes. However OP wants to have an iterator on a file, so either you keep the file open between two calls to next, or you close it and re-open it every time, but I don't see any satisfying solution. All in all, most of the time it's best to process the file all at once and then close it or implement a special handle for custom usage.
    – Flynsee
    Sep 20, 2017 at 10:44
  • @MSeifert as long as you make sure .close() is called there should be no leaks, right?
    – Ernest A
    Sep 20, 2017 at 11:28
  • Yeah, but the with is essentially useless then - because if you need to make sure you call .close() yourself, then what's the point of using with?
    – MSeifert
    Sep 20, 2017 at 12:20
1

The fileinput module does that for you. Opening and closing files is handled automatically.

import fileinput

files = ['path to file']

iterator = fileinput.input(files)

for line in iterator:
    print(line)

You can give a list of multiple file paths to the input method and it will iterate over their lines like it was reading a single file.

1
  • Thanks. I think the standard file object already allows you to iterate over lines. The problem is when you want to iterate over bits of data that aren't lines or that are not sequential.
    – Ernest A
    Sep 20, 2017 at 11:31

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