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Transit marshalling for Python

Project description

transit-python2

Forked from transit-python. Python 3.6 to 3.10 are supported

Transit is a format and set of libraries for conveying values between applications written in different programming languages. The library provides support for marshalling data to/from Python.

This implementation's major.minor version number corresponds to the version of the Transit specification it supports.

NOTE: Transit is a work in progress and may evolve based on feedback. As a result, while Transit is a great option for transferring data between applications, it should not yet be used for storing data durably over time. This recommendation will change when the specification is complete.

Releases and Dependency Information

The PYPI package is transit-python2

  • Latest stable release: 0.8

You can install with any of the following:

  • easy_install transit-python2
  • pip install --use-wheel --pre transit-python2

You can uninstall with:

  • pip uninstall transit-python2

Usage

# io can be any Python file descriptor,
# like you would typically use with JSON's load/dump

from transit.writer import Writer
from transit.reader import Reader

writer = Writer(io, "json") # or "json-verbose", "msgpack"
writer.write(value)

reader = Reader("json") # or "msgpack"
val = reader.read(io)

For example:

>>> from transit.writer import Writer
>>> from transit.reader import Reader
>>> from StringIO import StringIO
>>> io = StringIO()
>>> writer = Writer(io, "json")
>>> writer.write(["abc", 1234567890])
>>> s = io.getvalue()
>>> reader = Reader()
>>> vals = reader.read(StringIO(s))

Supported Python versions

  • 2.7.X
  • 3.5.X

Type Mapping

Typed arrays, lists, and chars

The transit spec defines several semantic types that map to more general types in Python:

  • typed arrays (ints, longs, doubles, floats, bools) map to Python Tuples
  • lists map to Python Tuples
  • chars map to Strings/Unicode

When the reader encounters an of these (e.g. {"ints" => [1,2,3]}) it delivers just the appropriate object to the app (e.g. (1,2,3)).

Use a TaggedValue to write these out if it will benefit a consuming app e.g.:

writer.write(TaggedValue("ints", [1,2,3]))

Python's bool and int

In Python, bools are subclasses of int (that is, True is actually 1).

>>> hash(1)
1
>>> hash(True)
1
>>> True == 1
True

This becomes problematic when decoding a map that contains bool and int keys. The bool keys may be overridden (ie: you'll only see the int key), and the value will be one of any possible bool/int keyed value.

>>> {1: "Hello", True: "World"}
{1: 'World'}

To counter this problem, the latest version of Transit Python introduces a Boolean type with singleton (by convention of use) instances of "true" and "false." A Boolean can be converted to a native Python bool with bool(x) where x is the "true" or "false" instance. Logical evaluation works correctly with Booleans (that is, they override the nonzero method and correctly evaluate as true and false in simple logical evaluation), but uses of a Boolean as an integer will fail.

Default type mapping

Transit type Write accepts Read returns
null None None
string unicode, str unicode
boolean bool bool
integer int int
decimal float float
keyword transit_types.Keyword transit_types.Keyword
symbol transit_types.Symbol transit_types.Symbol
big decimal float float
big integer long long
time long, int, datetime datetime
uri transit_types.URI transit_types.URI
uuid uuid.UUID uuid.UUID
char transit_types.TaggedValue unicode
array list, tuple tuple
list list, tuple tuple
set set set
map dict dict
bytes transit_types.TaggedValue tuple
shorts transit_types.TaggedValue tuple
ints transit_types.TaggedValue tuple
longs transit_types.TaggedValue tuple
floats transit_types.TaggedValue tuple
doubles transit_types.TaggedValue tuple
chars transit_types.TaggedValue tuple
bools transit_types.TaggedValue tuple
link transit_types.Link transit_types.Link

Development

Setup

Transit Python requires Transit to be at the same directory level as transit-python2 for access to the exemplar files. You will also need to add transit-python2 to your PYTHONPATH.

export PYTHONPATH=$(pwd)

Tests should be run from the transit-python2 directory.

Benchmarks

python tests/seattle_benchmark.py

Running the examples

python tests/exemplars_test.py

Build

pip install -e .

The version number is automatically incremented based on the number of commits. The command below shows what version number will be applied.

bin/revision

Contributing

This library is open source, developed internally by Cognitect. We welcome discussions of potential problems and enhancement suggestions on the transit-format mailing list. Issues can be filed using GitHub issues for this project. Because transit is incorporated into products and client projects, we prefer to do development internally and are not accepting pull requests or patches.

Copyright and License

Copyright © 2014-2016 Cognitect

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

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