I really like these ideas. Effectively, we can use pathlib.Path without ever needing to import shutil. We would like also copyfile from shutil if we are only interested copying the file data. How about adding append_text and append_bytes with newLine similar to what you suggested?
> On Nov 22, 2020, at 11:53 PM, Todd <toddr...@gmail.com> wrote: > > I know enhancements to pathlib gets brought up occasionally, but it doesn't > look like anyone has been willing to take the initiative and see things > through to completion. I am willing to keep the ball rolling here and even > implement these myself. I have some suggestions and I would like to discuss > them. I don't think any of them are significant enough to require a pep. > These can be split it into independent threads if anyone prefers. > > 1. copy > > The big one people keep bringing up that I strongly agree on is a "copy" > method. This is really the only common file manipulation task that currently > isn't possible. You can make files, read them, move them, delete them, > create directories, even do less common operations like change owners or > create symlinks or hard links. > > A common objection is that pathlib doesn't work on multiple paths. But that > isn't the case. There are a ton of methods that do that, including: > > * symlink_to > * link_to > * rename > * replace > * glob > * rglob > * iterdir > * is_relative_to > * relative_to > * samefile > > I think this is really the only common file operation that someone would need > to switch to a different module to do, and it seems pretty strange to me to > be able to make symbolic or hard links to a file but not straight up copy one. > > 2. recursive remove > > This could be a "recursive" option to "rmdir" or a "rmtree" method (I prefer > the option). The main reason for this is symmetry. It is possible to create > a tree of folders (using "mkdir(parents=True)"), but once you do that you > cannot remove it again in a straightforward way. > > 3. newLine for write_text > > This is the only relevant option that "Path.open" has but "Path.write_text" > doesn't, and is a serious omission when dealing with multiple operating > systems. > > 4. uid and gid > > You can get the owner and group name of a file (with the "owner" and "group" > methods), but there is no easy way to get the corresponding number. > > 5. Stem with no suffixes > > The stem property only takes off the last suffix, but even in the example > given ('my/library.tar.gz') it isn't really useful because the suffix has two > parts ('.tar' and '.gz'). I suggest another property, probably called > "rootstem" or "basestem", that takes off all the suffixes, using the same > logic as the "suffixes" property. This is another symmetry issue: it is > possible to extract all the suffixes, but not remove them. > > 6. with_suffixes > > Equivalent to with_suffix, but replacing all suffixes. Again, this is a > symmetry issue. It is hard to manipulate all the suffixes right now, as the > example show. You can add them or extract them, but not change them without > doing several steps. > > 7. exist_ok for is_* methods > > Currently all the is_* methods (such as is_file) return False if the file > doesn't exist or if it is a broken symlink. This can be dangerous, since it > is not trivially easy to tell if you are dealing with the wrong type of file > vs. a missing file. And it isn't obvious behavior just from the method name. > I suggest adding an "exist_ok" argument to all of these, with the default > being "True" for backwards-compatibility. This argument name is already in > use elsewhere in pathlib. If this is False and the file is not present, a > "FileNotFoundError" is raised. > > > _______________________________________________ > Python-ideas mailing list -- python-ideas@python.org > To unsubscribe send an email to python-ideas-le...@python.org > https://mail.python.org/mailman3/lists/python-ideas.python.org/ > Message archived at > https://mail.python.org/archives/list/python-ideas@python.org/message/YEN7UA67INEUGG44R3RWAF2JFHAXZC77/ > Code of Conduct: http://python.org/psf/codeofconduct/
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