I have a file named dict_file.json
in current folder with empty dict content {}
I want to open it such that I can do both read and modify the content. That is I will read the json file as dict
, modify that dict
and write it back to json file.
I tried r
and r+
below:
import json
f = open('dict_file.json', 'r') # same output for r+
json.loads(list_file.read())
This prints
{}
When I tried w+
:
f = open('dict_file.json', 'r')
this first clears the file. Then,
json.loads(list_file.read())
gives error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "F:\ProgramFiles\Python37\lib\json\__init__.py", line 296, in load
parse_constant=parse_constant, object_pairs_hook=object_pairs_hook, **kw)
File "F:\ProgramFiles\Python37\lib\json\__init__.py", line 348, in loads
return _default_decoder.decode(s)
File "F:\ProgramFiles\Python37\lib\json\decoder.py", line 337, in decode
obj, end = self.raw_decode(s, idx=_w(s, 0).end())
File "F:\ProgramFiles\Python37\lib\json\decoder.py", line 355, in raw_decode
raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting value", s, err.value) from None
json.decoder.JSONDecodeError: Expecting value: line 1 column 1 (char 0)
When I tried a+
:
f = open('dict_file.json', 'a+')
json.loads(list_file.read())
gives error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "F:\ProgramFiles\Python37\lib\json\__init__.py", line 296, in load
parse_constant=parse_constant, object_pairs_hook=object_pairs_hook, **kw)
File "F:\ProgramFiles\Python37\lib\json\__init__.py", line 348, in loads
return _default_decoder.decode(s)
File "F:\ProgramFiles\Python37\lib\json\decoder.py", line 337, in decode
obj, end = self.raw_decode(s, idx=_w(s, 0).end())
File "F:\ProgramFiles\Python37\lib\json\decoder.py", line 355, in raw_decode
raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting value", s, err.value) from None
json.decoder.JSONDecodeError: Expecting value: line 1 column 1 (char 0)
Though, it does not clear the file.
So, I guess I should be using r+
for my usecase scenario. Also I tried reading writing both :
f = open('dict_file.json', 'r+')
a = json.loads(list_file.read())
a = {'key':'value'} # this involves complex logic instead of plain assignment
json.dump(a,f)
f.flush()
Now when I open the file, its contents are weird:
{}{'key':'value'}
whereas I want it to be:
{'key':'value'}
So I have few questions:
Q1. Why w+
and a+
gives error?
Q2. Why file contained {}{'key':'value'}
instead of {'key':'value'}
?
Q3. How to correctly do reading and writing (with or without with
block)?
PS: I am reading file, then running some loop which computes new dict and write it to file. Then loop sleeps for some time and repeats the same. Thats why I felt flush()
will be correct here. That is I open file once outside loop and only flush
inside the loop. No need to open file in each iteration.