This is a fork of hukkin/tomli that is compatible with cpython and micropython.
Code changes primarily revolve around slight differences in the micropython re library, and type annotations.
There are two recommended ways of adding tomli to your micropython project:
-
Manually add the
src/tomlifolder to your board's/libdirectory. -
Use the Belay Package Manager. Simply add the following to your
pyproject.toml[tool.belay.dependencies] tomli = "https://github.com/BrianPugh/micropython-tomli/tree/master/src/tomli"
Datetime is required for date/time support.
If you don't need datetime support, then you don't need to include the _re_time.py file.
In this case, the _parser.py file is standalone and could be renamed to tomli.py
The remainder of this README is from the original tomli repo.
A lil' TOML parser
Table of Contents generated with mdformat-toc
Tomli is a Python library for parsing TOML. It is fully compatible with TOML v1.0.0.
A version of Tomli, the tomllib module,
was added to the standard library in Python 3.11
via PEP 680.
Tomli continues to provide a backport on PyPI for Python versions
where the standard library module is not available
and that have not yet reached their end-of-life.
pip install tomliimport tomli
toml_str = """
[[players]]
name = "Lehtinen"
number = 26
[[players]]
name = "Numminen"
number = 27
"""
toml_dict = tomli.loads(toml_str)
assert toml_dict == {
"players": [{"name": "Lehtinen", "number": 26}, {"name": "Numminen", "number": 27}]
}import tomli
with open("path_to_file/conf.toml", "rb") as f:
toml_dict = tomli.load(f)The file must be opened in binary mode (with the "rb" flag).
Binary mode will enforce decoding the file as UTF-8 with universal newlines disabled,
both of which are required to correctly parse TOML.
import tomli
try:
toml_dict = tomli.loads("]] this is invalid TOML [[")
except tomli.TOMLDecodeError:
print("Yep, definitely not valid.")Note that error messages are considered informational only. They should not be assumed to stay constant across Tomli versions.
from decimal import Decimal
import tomli
toml_dict = tomli.loads("precision-matters = 0.982492", parse_float=Decimal)
assert isinstance(toml_dict["precision-matters"], Decimal)
assert toml_dict["precision-matters"] == Decimal("0.982492")Note that decimal.Decimal can be replaced with another callable that converts a TOML float from string to a Python type.
The decimal.Decimal is, however, a practical choice for use cases where float inaccuracies can not be tolerated.
Illegal types are dict and list, and their subtypes.
A ValueError will be raised if parse_float produces illegal types.
Python versions 3.11+ ship with a version of Tomli:
the tomllib standard library module.
To build code that uses the standard library if available,
but still works seamlessly with Python 3.6+,
do the following.
Instead of a hard Tomli dependency, use the following dependency specifier to only require Tomli when the standard library module is not available:
tomli >= 1.1.0 ; python_version < "3.11"
Then, in your code, import a TOML parser using the following fallback mechanism:
try:
import tomllib
except ModuleNotFoundError:
import tomli as tomllib
tomllib.loads("['This parses fine with Python 3.6+']")- it's lil'
- pure Python with zero dependencies
- the fastest pure Python parser *: 16x as fast as tomlkit, 2.3x as fast as toml
- outputs basic data types only
- 100% spec compliant: passes all tests in BurntSushi/toml-test test suite
- thoroughly tested: 100% branch coverage
No.
The tomli.loads function returns a plain dict that is populated with builtin types and types from the standard library only.
Preserving comments requires a custom type to be returned so will not be supported,
at least not by the tomli.loads and tomli.load functions.
Look into TOML Kit if preservation of style is what you need.
Tomli-W is the write-only counterpart of Tomli, providing dump and dumps functions.
The core library does not include write capability, as most TOML use cases are read-only, and Tomli intends to be minimal.
| TOML type | Python type | Details |
|---|---|---|
| Document Root | dict |
|
| Key | str |
|
| String | str |
|
| Integer | int |
|
| Float | float |
|
| Boolean | bool |
|
| Offset Date-Time | datetime.datetime |
tzinfo attribute set to an instance of datetime.timezone |
| Local Date-Time | datetime.datetime |
tzinfo attribute set to None |
| Local Date | datetime.date |
|
| Local Time | datetime.time |
|
| Array | list |
|
| Table | dict |
|
| Inline Table | dict |
The benchmark/ folder in this repository contains a performance benchmark for comparing the various Python TOML parsers.
The benchmark can be run with tox -e benchmark-pypi.
Running the benchmark on my personal computer output the following:
foo@bar:~/dev/tomli$ tox -e benchmark-pypi
benchmark-pypi installed: attrs==21.4.0,click==8.0.3,pytomlpp==1.0.10,qtoml==0.3.1,rtoml==0.7.1,toml==0.10.2,tomli==2.0.1,tomlkit==0.9.2
benchmark-pypi run-test-pre: PYTHONHASHSEED='3088452573'
benchmark-pypi run-test: commands[0] | python -c 'import datetime; print(datetime.date.today())'
2022-02-09
benchmark-pypi run-test: commands[1] | python --version
Python 3.8.10
benchmark-pypi run-test: commands[2] | python benchmark/run.py
Parsing data.toml 5000 times:
------------------------------------------------------
parser | exec time | performance (more is better)
-----------+------------+-----------------------------
rtoml | 0.891 s | baseline (100%)
pytomlpp | 0.969 s | 91.90%
tomli | 4 s | 22.25%
toml | 9.01 s | 9.88%
qtoml | 11.1 s | 8.05%
tomlkit | 63 s | 1.41%The parsers are ordered from fastest to slowest, using the fastest parser as baseline. Tomli performed the best out of all pure Python TOML parsers, losing only to pytomlpp (wraps C++) and rtoml (wraps Rust).