A shell-like object pipeline
Project description
Piper is a pipeline for python objects. It’s great. Go, use it.
Piper enables you to write clean, decoupled functions to process all that dirty data you have. It borrows freely from the UNIX philosophy, processing data much like a shell pipeline. Chain together simple, orthogonal functions, and reduce spaghetti by 95%.
Install
pip install piper
Overview
Each pipe in the pipeline takes an item and a context. It returns an iterable of the outputs, which get passed to the next pipe. It’s strictly serial, so at each stage of the pipeline the first object gets fully processed before anything is done with the second.
flow takes an iterable (your data set), and a list of functions (“pipes”) to pass it through. The output of each pipe serves as the input to the next. The final result is just another iterable.
Session is a communication facility. You can use it as a simple way to share state between pipes, and to skip the remainder of the pipeline for specific outputs.
pipe turns a simple 1-input 1-output function into one that can fit in the pipeline.
verbose is a pipe decorator that prints all the goings on to stdout.
Example
import csv from dateutil.parser import parse as parsedate from piper import flow def to_dict(row, session): if 'headings' not in session: session['headings'] = row return val = dict(zip(session['headings'], row)) val['date'] = parsedate(val['date']) val['cost'] = float(val['price']) * float(val['quantity']) yield val def skip_mondays(row, session): if row['date'].weekday() != 0: yield row def get_cost(row, session): yield row['cost'] rows = csv.reader(some_csv_content) pipeline = [ to_dict, skip_mondays, get_cost, ] for cost in flow(rows, pipeline): print(cost)
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