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glom

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113 issues

Commits

List of commits on branch master.
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f9a68b002248790ff0adb1c0678fb0b69565926f

add FAQ entry about remap vs glom, fixes #237

mmahmoud committed a year ago
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278a7f06d256b4ed906005cc29df319552402176

changelog formatting fix

mmahmoud committed a year ago
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50ec6c742d9c3eaff26a089f2b61ee358b1d2c7e

bump version for v23.5.1dev

mmahmoud committed a year ago
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5ceda1fa8e8704180407ab8e7de4fb3c0a8e4744

changelog and docs version for v23.5.0

mmahmoud committed a year ago
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e13258ae91b04833e9366717f2879bee1d11d76e

bump version for v23.5.0 release

mmahmoud committed a year ago
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9df6850e17aaf5ab05741b96cc05abb4d76de181

add 311 classifier

mmahmoud committed a year ago

README

The README file for this repository.

glom

Restructuring data, the Python way

Real applications have real data, and real data nests. Objects inside of objects inside of lists of objects.

glom is a new and powerful way to handle real-world data, featuring:

  • Path-based access for nested data structures
  • Readable, meaningful error messages
  • Declarative data transformation, using lightweight, Pythonic specifications
  • Built-in data exploration and debugging features

All of that and more, available as a fully-documented, pure-Python package, tested on Python 3.7+, as well as PyPy3. Installation is as easy as:

  pip install glom

And when you install glom, you also get the glom command-line interface, letting you experiment at the console, but never limiting you to shell scripts:

Usage: glom [FLAGS] [spec [target]]

Command-line interface to the glom library, providing nested data access and data
restructuring with the power of Python.

Flags:

  --help / -h                     show this help message and exit
  --target-file TARGET_FILE       path to target data source (optional)
  --target-format TARGET_FORMAT
                                  format of the source data (json, python, toml,
                                  or yaml) (defaults to 'json')
  --spec-file SPEC_FILE           path to glom spec definition (optional)
  --spec-format SPEC_FORMAT       format of the glom spec definition (json, python,
                                    python-full) (defaults to 'python')
  --indent INDENT                 number of spaces to indent the result, 0 to disable
                                    pretty-printing (defaults to 2)
  --debug                         interactively debug any errors that come up
  --inspect                       interactively explore the data

Anything you can do at the command line readily translates to Python code, so you've always got a path forward when complexity starts to ramp up.

Examples

Without glom

>>> data = {'a': {'b': {'c': 'd'}}}
>>> data['a']['b']['c']
'd'
>>> data2 = {'a': {'b': None}}
>>> data2['a']['b']['c']
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not subscriptable

With glom

>>> glom(data, 'a.b.c')
'd'
>>> glom(data2, 'a.b.c')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
PathAccessError: could not access 'c', index 2 in path Path('a', 'b', 'c'), got error: ...

Learn more

If all this seems interesting, continue exploring glom below:

All of the links above are overflowing with examples, but should you find anything about the docs, or glom itself, lacking, please submit an issue!

In the meantime, just remember: When you've got nested data, glom it! ☄️