It is not that commonly used. It is used when you have Python source code in string form, and you want to make it into a Python code object that you can keep and use. Here's a trivial example:
>>> codeobj = compile('x = 2
print "X is", x', 'fakemodule', 'exec')
>>> exec(codeobj)
X is 2
Basically, the code object converts a string into an object that you can later call exec
on to run the source code in the string. (This is for "exec" mode; the "eval" mode allows use of eval
instead, if the string contains code for a single expression.) This is not a common task, which is why you may never run across a need for it.
The main use for it is in metaprogramming or embedding situations. For instance, if you have a Python program that allows users to script its behavior with custom Python code, you might use compile
and exec
to store and execute these user-defined scripts.
Another reason compile
is rarely used is that, like exec
, eval
, and their ilk, compile
is a potential security hole. If you take user code in string form and compile it and later exec it, you could be running unsafe code. (For instance, imagine that in my example above the code was formatYourHardDrive()
instead of print x
.)
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