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Learn Python Programming

Learn Python Programming

By : Fabrizio Romano, Fabrizio Romano, Heinrich Kruger, Heinrich Kruger
5 (1)
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Learn Python Programming

Learn Python Programming

5 (1)
By: Fabrizio Romano, Fabrizio Romano, Heinrich Kruger, Heinrich Kruger

Overview of this book

Learn Python Programming, Fourth Edition, provides a comprehensive, up-to-date introduction to Python programming, covering fundamental concepts and practical applications. This edition has been meticulously updated to include the latest features from Python versions 3.9 to 3.12, new chapters on type hinting and CLI applications, and updated examples reflecting modern Python web development practices. This Python book empowers you to take ownership of writing your software and become independent in fetching the resources you need. By the end of this book, you will have a clear idea of where to go and how to build on what you have learned from the book. Through examples, the book explores a wide range of applications and concludes by building real-world Python projects based on the concepts you have learned. This Python book offers a clear and practical guide to mastering Python and applying it effectively in various domains, such as data science, web development, and automation.
Table of Contents (20 chapters)
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18
Other Books You May Enjoy
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Index

Persisting data on disk

In this section of this chapter, we will look at how to persist data on disk in three different formats. To persist data means that the data is written to non-volatile storage, like a hard drive, for example, and it is not deleted when the process that wrote it ends its life cycle. We will explore the pickle and shelve modules, as well as a short example that will involve accessing a database using SQLAlchemy, perhaps the most widely adopted ORM library in the Python ecosystem.

Serializing data with pickle

The pickle module, from the Python standard library, offers tools to convert Python objects into byte streams, and vice versa. Even though there is a partial overlap in the API that pickle and json expose, the two are quite different. As we have seen previously in this chapter, JSON is a text format that is human readable, language independent, and supports only a restricted subset of Python data types. The pickle module, on the other hand, is not human readable...

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