Is it possible to temporarily disable Python's string interpolation?

dangerouslyfacetious picture dangerouslyfacetious · Mar 29, 2010 · Viewed 10k times · Source

I have a python logger set up, using python's logging module. I want to store the string I'm using with the logging Formatter object in a configuration file using the ConfigParser module.

The format string is stored in a dictionary of settings in a separate file that handles the reading and writing of the config file. The problem I have is that python still tries to format the file and falls over when it reads all the logging-module-specific formatting flags.

{
    "log_level":logging.debug,
    "log_name":"C:\\Temp\\logfile.log",
    "format_string":
        "%(asctime)s %(levelname)s: %(module)s, line %(lineno)d - %(message)s"
}

My question is simple: how can I disable the formatting functionality here while keeping it elsewhere. My initial reaction was copious use of the backslash to escape the various percent symbols, but that of course permanently breaks the formatting such that it wont work even when I need it to.

I should also mention, since it was bought up in the comments, that ConfigParser does some internal interpolation that causes the trip-up. Here is my traceback:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "initialconfig.py", line 52, in <module>
    "%(asctime)s %(levelname)s: %(module)s, line %(lineno)d - %(message)s"
  File "initialconfig.py", line 31, in add_settings
    self.set(section_name, setting_name, default_value)
  File "C:\Python26\lib\ConfigParser.py", line 668, in set
    "position %d" % (value, m.start()))
ValueError: invalid interpolation syntax in '%(asctime)s %(levelname)s: %(module
)s, line %(lineno)d - %(message)s' at position 10

Also, general pointers on good settings-file practices would be nice. This is the first time I've done anything significant with ConfigParser (or logging for that matter).

Thanks in advance, Dominic

Answer

wRAR picture wRAR · Mar 29, 2010

Did you try to escape percents with %%?