A Wednesday 02 September 2009 05:50:57 Robert Kern escrigué: > On Tue, Sep 1, 2009 at 21:11, Jorge Scandaliaris<jorgesmbox...@yahoo.es> wrote: > > David Warde-Farley <dwf <at> cs.toronto.edu> writes: > >> If you actually want to save multiple arrays, you can use > >> savez('fname', *[a,b,c]) and they will be accessible under the names > >> arr_0, arr_1, etc. and a list of these names is in the 'files' > >> attribute on the NpzFile object. To retrieve your list of arrays when > >> you load, you can just do > >> > >> mynewlist = [data[arrname] for arrname in data.files] > > > > Thanks for the tip. I have realized, though, that I might need some more > > flexibility than just the ability to save ndarrays. The data I am dealing > > with is best kept in a hierarchical way (I could represent the structure > > with ndarrays also, but I think it would be messy and difficult). I am > > having a look at h5py to see if it fulfill my needs. I know there is > > pytables, too, but from having a quick look it seems h5py is simpler. Am > > I right on this?. I also get a nice side-effect, the data would be > > readable by the de-facto standard software used by most people in my > > field. > > If there is a particular format that uses HDF5 that you are trying to > replicate, h5py is the clear answer. However, PyTables will, by and > large, make files that are entirely readable by other HDF5 libraries > when you just use the subset of features that is supported by > HDF5-proper. For example, tables and arrays work just fine. What won't > be supported by non-PyTables libraries are things like dataset > attributes which are pickled objects. Your non-PyTables HDF5 apps will > see some extraneous attributes on the arrays and tables, but those are > typically not necessary for interpretation.
Most of these 'extraneous' attributes are derived from the use of the high level HDF5 interface (http://www.hdfgroup.org/HDF5/doc/HL/). If they bother you, you can get rid of them by setting the parameter ``PYTABLES_SYS_ATTRS`` to false (either in tables/parameters.py or passing it to `tables.openFile`). -- Francesc Alted _______________________________________________ NumPy-Discussion mailing list NumPy-Discussion@scipy.org http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion