Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: graze
Version: 0.0.12
Summary: Cache (a tiny part of) the internet
Home-page: https://github.com/thorwhalen/graze
Author: Thor Whalen
License: mit
Description: # graze
        
        Cache (a tiny part of) the internet.
        
        ## install
        
        ```pip install graze```
        
        # Example
        
        ```python
        from graze import Graze
        import os
        rootdir = os.path.expanduser('~/graze')
        g = Graze(rootdir)
        list(g)
        ```
        
        If this is your first time, you got nothing:
        
        ```
        []
        ```
        
        So get something. For no particular reason let's be self-referential and get myself:
        
        ```python
        url = 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/thorwhalen/graze/master/README.md'
        content = g[url]
        type(content), len(content)
        ```
        
        Before I grew up, I had only 46 petty bytes:
        ```
        (bytes, 46)
        ```
        
        These were:
        
        ```python
        print(content.decode())
        ```
        
        ```
        
        # graze
        
        Cache (a tiny part of) the internet
        ```
        
        But now, here's the deal. List your ``g`` keys now. Go ahead, don't be shy!
        
        ```python
        list(g)
        ```
        ```
        ['https://raw.githubusercontent.com/thorwhalen/graze/master/README.md']
        ```
        
        What does that mean? 
        
        I means you have a local copy of these contents. 
        
        The file path isn't really ``https://...``, it's `rootdir/https/...`, but you 
        only have to care about that if you actually have to go get the file with
        something else than graze. Because graze will give it to you.
        
        How? Same way you got it in the first place:
        
        ```
        content_2 = g[url]
        assert content_2 == content
        ```
        
        But this time, it didn't ask the internet. It just got it's local copy.
        
        And if you want a fresh copy? 
        
        No problem, just delete your local one. You guessed! 
        The same way you would delete a key from a dict:
        
        ```python
        del g[url]
        ```
        
        
Platform: any
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
