NAME Python::Serialise::Marshal - a module for reading and writing marshalled Python files SYNOPSIS use Python::Serialise::Marshal; my $pr = Python::Serialise::Marshal->new("file/for/reading"); while (my $data = $pr->load()) { print Dumper $data; } my $pw = Python::Serialise::Marshal->new(">file/for/writing"); $pw->dump(['a' 'list']); $pw->dump("a string"); $pw->dump(42); $pw->dump({'a'=>'hash'}); $pw->close(); DESCRIPTION Marshalling is a method of serialising files in Python (another method, Pickling, is also available). It is the method that Mailman uses to store its config files. This module is an attempt to write a pure Perl implementation of the algorithm. METHODS new Open a file for reading or writing. Can take any arguments that `IO::File' can. load Returns the next data structure from the marshalled file or undef. dump Takes a ref to an array or a hash or a number or string and pickles it. Structures may be nested. close Closes the current file. NOTES Complex numbers Python has inbuilt support form complex numbers whilst Perl provides it through the core module `Math::Complex'. Unserialising a Python complex number will return a `Math::Complex' object and, as you'd expect, serialising something that ISA `Math::Complex' will result in a serialised Python complex number. None Python has `None' objects, similar to Perl's `undef'. Because *load* indictaes "no more objects" by returning `undef' we have to return `Python::Serialise::None' objects. However dump can take `undef' and serialise it as a `None' object. BUGS Much less than my `Pickle' module because this is a *much* saner file format. Tests for None I can't think of a nice elegant way of doing tests at the moment. I'm sure I will soon. Longs There's no support for longs. I've figured out how to write them in Python but I just can't seem to extract them properly. Unicode Not an itch that needs scratching at the moment so there's no support. Code Ditto ALTERNATIVES You could always dump the data structure out as YAML in Python and then read it back in with YAML in Perl. I also may look into wrapping the Python source code file in XS. AUTHOR Simon Wistow COPYRIGHT (c) 2003 Simon Wistow Distributed under the same terms as Perl itself. This software is under no warranty and will probably ruin your life, kill your friends, burn your house and bring about the apocalypse. SEE ALSO http://www.python.org, the YAML manpage, the File::Binary manpage and the RESOURCES file in this distribution.