Question

I am writing a list processing script that needs to read configuration data about each item in the list. The configuration data is best represented as a nested tree.

I would normally have used YAML for storing the data - but I think that using ConfigParser would be a more Pythonic approach - and make the script more 'transparent' to other Python coders - since a surprising number of people are not familiar with the YAML format.

I have had a very quick look at the configParser documentation, but I have not been able to ascertain whether it can deal with nested data.

My configuration data will have the following structure:

<markers>
    <marker>
        <date></date>
        <value></value>
    </marker>
</markers>
<items>
    <item>
        <start></start>
        <end></end>
        <mcc>
           <chg>
                <date></date>
                <ival></ival>
                <fval></fval>
           </chg>
        </mcc>
    </item>
</items>

Can I use ConfigParser to read/(write ?) this kind of nested data in a config file? (I'm more interested in being able to read than writing the config file. I don't mind manually writing the config file if necessary).

Was it helpful?

Solution

No, configparser doesn't support nesting. You could look at configObj instead. It's mature and quite widely used.

OTHER TIPS

As per your xml data you need section and subsection. So you can use the ConfigParser but you have to give sub section with some meaning like

[markers]
[markers.marker]
date=''
value=''

[items]
[items.item]
start=''
end=''
[items.item.mcc]
[items.item.mcc.chg]
date=''
ival=''
fval=''

Then you have to override the getsection function to get the nested data.

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