pytutorial/python_basics/pickle/README.md
David Rotermund 8075b95189
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Signed-off-by: David Rotermund <54365609+davrot@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-12-28 17:00:37 +01:00

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# [pickle](https://docs.python.org/3/library/pickle.html#module-pickle): Python object serialization
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## The goal
How to store Python objects in files and how to restore them.
Questions to [David Rotermund](mailto:davrot@uni-bremen.de)
**Warning The pickle module is not secure. Only unpickle data you trust.**
## [pickle](https://docs.python.org/3/library/pickle.html#module-pickle)
> The [pickle](https://docs.python.org/3/library/pickle.html#module-pickle) module implements binary protocols for serializing and de-serializing a Python object structure. “Pickling” is the process whereby a Python object hierarchy is converted into a byte stream, and “unpickling” is the inverse operation, whereby a byte stream (from a binary file or bytes-like object) is converted back into an object hierarchy.
## [pickle.dump](https://docs.python.org/3/library/pickle.html#pickle.dump) and [pickle.dumps](https://docs.python.org/3/library/pickle.html#pickle.dumps)
```python
pickle.dump(obj, file, protocol=None, *, fix_imports=True, buffer_callback=None)
```
> Write the pickled representation of the object obj to the open file object file. This is equivalent to Pickler(file, protocol).dump(obj).
>
> Arguments file, protocol, fix_imports and buffer_callback have the same meaning as in the Pickler constructor.
```python
pickle.dumps(obj, protocol=None, *, fix_imports=True, buffer_callback=None)
```
> Return the pickled representation of the object obj as a bytes object, instead of writing it to a file.
>
> Arguments protocol, fix_imports and buffer_callback have the same meaning as in the Pickler constructor.
```python
import pickle
import numpy as np
class Example:
a: int
b: float
c: np.ndarray
def __init__(self) -> None:
super().__init__()
self.a = 0
self.b = 0
self.c = np.zeros((1, 2))
instance_to_save = Example()
instance_to_save.a = 1
instance_to_save.b = 2
instance_to_save.c[0, 0] = 3
instance_to_save.c[0, 1] = 4
with open("test.pkl", "wb") as file:
pickle.dump(instance_to_save, file)
print(instance_to_save.a) # -> 1
print(instance_to_save.b) # -> 2
print(instance_to_save.c) # -> [[3. 4.]]
```
## [pickle.load](https://docs.python.org/3/library/pickle.html#pickle.load) and [pickle.loads](https://docs.python.org/3/library/pickle.html#pickle.loads)
```python
pickle.load(file, *, fix_imports=True, encoding='ASCII', errors='strict', buffers=None)
```
> Read the pickled representation of an object from the open file object file and return the reconstituted object hierarchy specified therein. This is equivalent to Unpickler(file).load().
>
> The protocol version of the pickle is detected automatically, so no protocol argument is needed. Bytes past the pickled representation of the object are ignored.
>
> Arguments file, fix_imports, encoding, errors, strict and buffers have the same meaning as in the Unpickler constructor.
```python
pickle.loads(data, /, *, fix_imports=True, encoding='ASCII', errors='strict', buffers=None)
```
> Return the reconstituted object hierarchy of the pickled representation data of an object. data must be a bytes-like object.
>
> The protocol version of the pickle is detected automatically, so no protocol argument is needed. Bytes past the pickled representation of the object are ignored.
>
> Arguments fix_imports, encoding, errors, strict and buffers have the same meaning as in the Unpickler constructor.
```python
import pickle
import numpy as np
class Example:
a: int
b: float
c: np.ndarray
def __init__(self) -> None:
super().__init__()
self.a = 0
self.b = 0
self.c = np.zeros((1, 2))
with open("test.pkl", "rb") as file:
instance_to_load = pickle.load(file)
print(instance_to_load.a) # -> 1
print(instance_to_load.b) # -> 2
print(instance_to_load.c) # -> [[3. 4.]]
```