jpath 1.2
Access nested dicts and lists using JSON-like path notation.
Access nested dicts and lists using JSON-like path notation.
Note that this code is written for python 3.
The notation is as follows:
You can just write the names of components in your path like you would in javascript:
foo.bar.baz
To access arrays or names with spaces in them, use the '[]' notation. You can use negative indices with arrays to count from the end.
["foo"]["bar"]["baz"] array[-1].attr [3]
You can use the wildcard character '*' to iterate over all elements:
foo.*.baz ["foo"][*]["baz"]
This may return more or less than a single element. Use get to get the first one, and get_all to get a list of all possibilities. If you want to skip any number of elements in path, use two dots '..':
foo..baz
You can slice the arrays just like in python:
array[1:-1:2]
Finally, you can filter the elements:
foo(bar.baz=true) foo.bar(baz>0).baz foo(bar="yawn").bar
At the moment only =, >, <, >=, <= and != operators are available, and you can only use them with strings, integers and boolean values.
This code was written in STX Next.
| File | Type | Py Version | Uploaded on | Size | # downloads |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| jpath-1.2.tar.gz (md5) | Source | 2012-01-17 | 4KB | 200 | |
- Author: Radomir Dopieralski
- Home Page: http://www.stxnext.pl/open-source/jpath
- Download URL: https://bitbucket.org/thesheep/jpath/get/tip.tar.gz
-
Categories
- Development Status :: 6 - Mature
- Intended Audience :: Developers
- License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
- License :: OSI Approved :: Python Software Foundation License
- Operating System :: OS Independent
- Programming Language :: Python :: 3
- Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules
- Topic :: Text Processing
- Package Index Owner: sheep
- DOAP record: jpath-1.2.xml
