Background: I am working on a Python project where, given a set of input files (text/image/audio), it generates an executable game. The text files are there to describe the rules of the game.

Currently, the program reads and parses the files upon each startup, and builds a Python class that contains these rules, as well as links to image/audio files. This is fine for now, but I don’t want the end executable to have to bundle these files and re-parse them each time it gets run.

My question: Is there a way to persist the instance of my class to disk, as it exists in memory? Kind of like a snapshot of the object. Since this is a Python project, my question is specific to Python. But, I’d be curious if this concept exists anywhere else. I’ve never heard of it.

My aim is not to serialize/de-serialize the class to a text file, but instead load the 1’s and 0’s that existed before into an instance of a class.

  • jerkface@lemmy.ca
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    12 days ago

    The Zope Object Data Base (aka ZODB) exists for more complex persistence use cases. It’s been a long time, though, there are probably more modern options.