290

I've converted my scripts from Python 2.7 to 3.2, and I have a bug.

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import time
from datetime import date
from lxml import etree
from collections import OrderedDict

# Create the root element
page = etree.Element('results')

# Make a new document tree
doc = etree.ElementTree(page)

# Add the subelements
pageElement = etree.SubElement(page, 'Country',Tim = 'Now', 
                                      name='Germany', AnotherParameter = 'Bye',
                                      Code='DE',
                                      Storage='Basic')
pageElement = etree.SubElement(page, 'City', 
                                      name='Germany',
                                      Code='PZ',
                                      Storage='Basic',AnotherParameter = 'Hello')
# For multiple multiple attributes, use as shown above

# Save to XML file
outFile = open('output.xml', 'w')
doc.write(outFile) 

On the last line, I got this error:

builtins.TypeError: must be str, not bytes
File "C:\PythonExamples\XmlReportGeneratorExample.py", line 29, in <module>
  doc.write(outFile)
File "c:\Python32\Lib\site-packages\lxml\etree.pyd", line 1853, in lxml.etree._ElementTree.write (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:44355)
File "c:\Python32\Lib\site-packages\lxml\etree.pyd", line 478, in lxml.etree._tofilelike (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:90649)
File "c:\Python32\Lib\site-packages\lxml\etree.pyd", line 282, in lxml.etree._ExceptionContext._raise_if_stored (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:7972)
File "c:\Python32\Lib\site-packages\lxml\etree.pyd", line 378, in lxml.etree._FilelikeWriter.write (src/lxml/lxml.etree.c:89527)

I've installed Python 3.2, and I've installed lxml-2.3.win32-py3.2.exe.

On Python 2.7, it works.

2

3 Answers 3

643

The outfile should be in binary mode.

outFile = open('output.xml', 'wb')
8
  • 119
    Mind blown. Python3 has reimagined what to do with that little 'b'. It used to only annoy Windows users who would forget to include it (or couldn't because they were using stdio). Now it can annoy Python users on all platforms. Hopefully, it will be worth the pain. Aug 17, 2013 at 6:11
  • 7
    If you are parsing text it is definitely worth it. Jan 15, 2014 at 21:56
  • @nobar It is required to e.g. switch off Universal newline support, legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0278 , which is on by default in Python 3
    – user7610
    Jul 26, 2014 at 15:28
  • Works for me in gzip for python3 too! json.load(gzip.open('file.json.gz')) fails, and json.load(gzip.open('file.json.gz', 'rt')) succeeds!
    – hobs
    Nov 18, 2016 at 19:24
  • @LennartRegebro, Not if the system setting is unexpected. Binary is best and less error prone. If it works it really does work. As for text, there's always a "what if" involved.
    – Pacerier
    Feb 16, 2017 at 19:14
9

Convert binary file to base64 & vice versa. Prove in python 3.5.2

import base64

read_file = open('/tmp/newgalax.png', 'rb')
data = read_file.read()

b64 = base64.b64encode(data)

print (b64)

# Save file
decode_b64 = base64.b64decode(b64)
out_file = open('/tmp/out_newgalax.png', 'wb')
out_file.write(decode_b64)

# Test in python 3.5.2
0
0

If for whatever reason, the output file was opened with mode='w' and cannot be reopened with 'wb', a workaround is to access .buffer on the TextIOWrapper to create a BufferedWriter (which is instantiated if a file was opened with mode='wb') and write.

s = """
<country name="Liechtenstein">
    <year>2008</year>
    <gdppc>141100</gdppc>
</country>
"""
import xml.etree.ElementTree as ET
doc = ET.ElementTree(ET.fromstring(s))

outFile = open('output.xml', 'w')
doc.write(outFile.buffer)             # <--- buffer here
outFile.close()

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