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File(filename, mode='r')
This opens a file and returns a handle object, which can be used for methods
that need an open file, such as alignment.read_one(). Many methods (such
as model.write()) can also be given a writeable file handle, to have them
append their output to that file rather than creating a new one. (They can also
be given a Python filelike object, such as sys.stdout or io.StringIO,
to write to a Python file; however, this is less efficient as it must call
Python functions to do the IO.)
The file is closed automatically when the handle object is deleted, or
explicitly by calling its close method.
The mode argument functions similarly to that used by C or Python; i.e.,
the following modes are acceptable: 'r', 'w', 'rb' and 'wb', to open
a file for reading in text mode, writing in text mode, reading in binary mode,
or writing in binary mode, respectively. Note that while only Windows operating
systems make a distinction between text and binary mode, MODELLER will do
some additional checks on text format files to catch common mistakes
(e.g., trying to read a Unicode rather than plain text file) so you should use
the 'b' suffix on all platforms if you are using binary files.
Example: See alignment.read_one() command.
Next: The scripts module: utility
Up: The modfile module: handling
Previous: modfile.inquire() check
Contents
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2014-02-11