Book Image

Learn Python in 7 Days

Book Image

Learn Python in 7 Days

Overview of this book

Python is a great language to get started in the world of programming and application development. This book will help you to take your skills to the next level having a good knowledge of the fundamentals of Python. We begin with the absolute foundation, covering the basic syntax, type variables and operators. We'll then move on to concepts like statements, arrays, operators, string processing and I/O handling. You’ll be able to learn how to operate tuples and understand the functions and methods of lists. We’ll help you develop a deep understanding of list and tuples and learn python dictionary. As you progress through the book, you’ll learn about function parameters and how to use control statements with the loop. You’ll further learn how to create modules and packages, storing of data as well as handling errors. We later dive into advanced level concepts such as Python collections and how to use class, methods, objects in python. By the end of this book, you will be able to take your skills to the next level having a good knowledge of the fundamentals of Python.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
2
Type Variables and Operators

Unpickling


Unpickling means retrieving the data from the pickle file. In the previous topic, you learned how to store (list, dictionary) data in the pickle file; now it's time to retrieve the stored data. In order to perform unpickling, we will use pickle.load(). The pickle.load() takes one file object as an argument.

Let's see the program:

import pickle
pickle_file = open("emp1.dat",'r')
name_list = pickle.load(pickle_file)
skill_list =pickle.load(pickle_file)
print name_list ,"n", skill_list

Let's understand the program line by line. The pickle_file = open("emp1.dat",'r') syntax creates a file object in read mode. The name_list = pickle.load(pickle_file) syntax reads the first pickled object in the file and unpickles it to produce the ['mohit', 'bhaskar', 'manish'] list. Similarly,  skill_list =pickle.load(pickle_file) reads the second pickled object in the file and unpickles it to produce the ['Python', 'Python', 'Java'] list.

Let's see the output to clear up any confusion:

Output of filepickle2...