Create the named tuple outside of the function:
from collections import namedtuple
import pickle
P = namedtuple("P", "one two three four")
def pickle_test():
my_list = []
abe = P("abraham", "lincoln", "vampire", "hunter")
my_list.append(abe)
f = open('abe.pickle', 'w')
pickle.dump(abe, f)
f.close()
pickle_test()
Now pickle
can find it; it is a module global now. When unpickling, all the pickle
module has to do is locate __main__.P
again. In your version, P
is a local, to the pickle_test()
function, and that is not introspectable or importable.
It is important to remember that namedtuple()
is a class factory; you give it parameters and it returns a class object for you to create instances from. pickle
only stores the data contained in the instances, plus a string reference to the original class to reconstruct the instances again.
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