问题
I am trying to create hdf5 file, but the output file is empty.
I have written a python code which is supposed to run in loop and write string in the created datasets. After the file gets saved, I found that the output file is always empty.
Below is the piece of code I have written:
h5_file_name = 'sample.h5'
hf = h5py.File(h5_file_name, 'w')
g1 = hf.create_group('Objects')
dt = h5py.special_dtype(vlen=str)
d1 = g1.create_dataset('D1', (2, 10), dtype=dt)
d2 = g1.create_dataset('D2', (3, 10), dtype=dt)
for i in range(10):
d1[0][i] = 'Sample'
d1[1][i] = str(i)
d2[0][i] = 'Hello'
d2[1][i] = 'World'
d2[2][i] = str(i)
hf.close()
The output file is empty as mentioned above.
Can anyone please point out what am I missing here, many thanks in advance !
回答1:
Your code works for me (in an ipython session):
In [1]: import h5py
In [2]: h5_file_name = 'sample.h5'
...: hf = h5py.File(h5_file_name, 'w')
...: g1 = hf.create_group('Objects')
...: dt = h5py.special_dtype(vlen=str)
...: d1 = g1.create_dataset('D1', (2, 10), dtype=dt)
...: d2 = g1.create_dataset('D2', (3, 10), dtype=dt)
...: for i in range(10):
...: d1[0][i] = 'Sample'
...: d1[1][i] = str(i)
...: d2[0][i] = 'Hello'
...: d2[1][i] = 'World'
...: d2[2][i] = str(i)
...: hf.close()
This runs, and creates a file. It is not "empty" in the normal sense. But if by file being empty you mean that it didn't write the words to the file? All that's present is the original ''
.
In [4]: hf = h5py.File(h5_file_name, 'r')
In [5]: hf['Objects/D1']
Out[5]: <HDF5 dataset "D1": shape (2, 10), type "|O">
In [6]: hf['Objects/D1'][:]
Out[6]:
array([['', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', ''],
['', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '']], dtype=object)
===
The problem isn't with the file setup, but rather with how you are trying to set elements:
In [45]: h5_file_name = 'sample.h5'
...: hf = h5py.File(h5_file_name, 'w')
...: g1 = hf.create_group('Objects')
...: dt = h5py.special_dtype(vlen=str)
...: d1 = g1.create_dataset('D1', (2, 10), dtype=dt)
...: d2 = g1.create_dataset('D2', (3, 10), dtype=dt)
...:
In [46]: d1[:]
Out[46]:
array([['', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', ''],
['', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '']], dtype=object)
In [47]: d1[0][0] = 'sample'
In [48]: d1[:]
Out[48]:
array([['', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', ''],
['', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '']], dtype=object)
Use the tuple
style of indexing:
In [49]: d1[0, 0] = 'sample'
In [50]: d1[:]
Out[50]:
array([['sample', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', ''],
['', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '']], dtype=object)
With a numpy array d1[0][0]=...
works, but that's because d1[0]
is a view
of d1
, but h5py
(apparently) does not quite replicate this. d1[0]
is a copy, an actual numpy array, not the dataset itself.
Variations on that whole-array indexing:
In [51]: d1[0, :] = 'sample'
In [52]: d1[1, :] = np.arange(10)
In [53]: d1[:]
Out[53]:
array([['sample', 'sample', 'sample', 'sample', 'sample', 'sample',
'sample', 'sample', 'sample', 'sample'],
['0', '1', '2', '3', '4', '5', '6', '7', '8', '9']], dtype=object)
In [54]: d2[:,0] = ['one','two','three']
In [55]: d2[:]
Out[55]:
array([['one', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', ''],
['two', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', ''],
['three', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '']], dtype=object)
Verifying the change in type with indexing:
In [64]: type(d1)
Out[64]: h5py._hl.dataset.Dataset
In [65]: type(d1[0])
Out[65]: numpy.ndarray
d1[0][0]='foobar'
would change that d1[0]
array without affecting the d1
dataset.
回答2:
Not sure how this can be solved using h5py but if you are not bound to a specific library, take a look at HDFql as it is really easy to handle HDF5 files with it.
Using HDFql in Python, your use-case can be solved with the help of hyperslabs as follows:
import HDFql
HDFql.execute("CREATE FILE sample.h5")
HDFql.execute("USE FILE sample.h5")
HDFql.execute("CREATE CHUNKED(1) DATASET objects/D1 AS VARCHAR(10, 2)")
HDFql.execute("CREATE CHUNKED(1) DATASET objects/D2 AS VARCHAR(10, 3)")
for i in range(10):
HDFql.execute("INSERT INTO objects/D1(%d:::1) VALUES(Sample, %d)" % (i, i))
HDFql.execute("INSERT INTO objects/D2(%d:::1) VALUES(Hello, World, %d)" % (i, i))
HDFql.execute("CLOSE FILE")
Additional examples on how to use HDFql can be found here.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/61162318/failing-to-write-in-hdf5-file