I have this code
import json
from pprint import pprint
json_data=open('bookmarks.json')
jdata = json.load(json_data)
pprint (jdata)
json_data.close()
How can I search through it for u'uri': u'http:
?
As json.loads
simply returns a dict, you can use the operators that apply to dicts:
>>> jdata = json.load('{"uri": "http:", "foo", "bar"}')
>>> 'uri' in jdata # Check if 'uri' is in jdata's keys
True
>>> jdata['uri'] # Will return the value belonging to the key 'uri'
u'http:'
Edit: to give an idea regarding how to loop through the data, consider the following example:
>>> import json
>>> jdata = json.loads(open ('bookmarks.json').read())
>>> for c in jdata['children'][0]['children']:
... print 'Title: {}, URI: {}'.format(c.get('title', 'No title'),
c.get('uri', 'No uri'))
...
Title: Recently Bookmarked, URI: place:folder=BOOKMARKS_MENU(...)
Title: Recent Tags, URI: place:sort=14&type=6&maxResults=10&queryType=1
Title: , URI: No uri
Title: Mozilla Firefox, URI: No uri
Inspecting the jdata
data structure will allow you to navigate it as you wish. The pprint
call you already have is a good starting point for this.
Edit2: Another attempt. This gets the file you mentioned in a list of dictionaries. With this, I think you should be able to adapt it to your needs.
>>> def build_structure(data, d=[]):
... if 'children' in data:
... for c in data['children']:
... d.append({'title': c.get('title', 'No title'),
... 'uri': c.get('uri', None)})
... build_structure(c, d)
... return d
...
>>> pprint.pprint(build_structure(jdata))
[{'title': u'Bookmarks Menu', 'uri': None},
{'title': u'Recently Bookmarked',
'uri': u'place:folder=BOOKMARKS_MENU&folder=UNFILED_BOOKMARKS&(...)'},
{'title': u'Recent Tags',
'uri': u'place:sort=14&type=6&maxResults=10&queryType=1'},
{'title': u'', 'uri': None},
{'title': u'Mozilla Firefox', 'uri': None},
{'title': u'Help and Tutorials',
'uri': u'http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/help/'},
(...)
}]
To then "search through it for u'uri': u'http:'
", do something like this:
for c in build_structure(jdata):
if c['uri'].startswith('http:'):
print 'Started with http'
ObjectPath is a library that provides ability to query JSON and nested structures of dicts and lists. For example, you can search for all attributes called "foo" regardless how deep they are by using $..foo
.
While the documentation focuses on the command line interface, you can perform the queries programmatically by using the package's Python internals. The example below assumes you've already loaded the data into Python data structures (dicts & lists). If you're starting with a JSON file or string you just need to use load
or loads
from the json module first.
import objectpath
data = [
{'foo': 1, 'bar': 'a'},
{'foo': 2, 'bar': 'b'},
{'NoFooHere': 2, 'bar': 'c'},
{'foo': 3, 'bar': 'd'},
]
tree_obj = objectpath.Tree(data)
tuple(tree_obj.execute('$..foo'))
# returns: (1, 2, 3)
Notice that it just skipped elements that lacked a "foo" attribute, such as the third item in the list. You can also do much more complex queries, which makes ObjectPath handy for deeply nested structures (e.g. finding where x has y that has z: $.x.y.z
). I refer you to the documentation and tutorial for more information.
Seems there's a typo (missing colon) in the JSON dict provided by jro.
The correct syntax would be: jdata = json.load('{"uri": "http:", "foo": "bar"}')
This cleared it up for me when playing with the code.
Functions to search through and print dicts, like JSON. *made in python 3
Search:
def pretty_search(dict_or_list, key_to_search, search_for_first_only=False):
"""
Give it a dict or a list of dicts and a dict key (to get values of),
it will search through it and all containing dicts and arrays
for all values of dict key you gave, and will return you set of them
unless you wont specify search_for_first_only=True
:param dict_or_list:
:param key_to_search:
:param search_for_first_only:
:return:
"""
search_result = set()
if isinstance(dict_or_list, dict):
for key in dict_or_list:
key_value = dict_or_list[key]
if key == key_to_search:
if search_for_first_only:
return key_value
else:
search_result.add(key_value)
if isinstance(key_value, dict) or isinstance(key_value, list) or isinstance(key_value, set):
_search_result = pretty_search(key_value, key_to_search, search_for_first_only)
if _search_result and search_for_first_only:
return _search_result
elif _search_result:
for result in _search_result:
search_result.add(result)
elif isinstance(dict_or_list, list) or isinstance(dict_or_list, set):
for element in dict_or_list:
if isinstance(element, list) or isinstance(element, set) or isinstance(element, dict):
_search_result = pretty_search(element, key_to_search, search_result)
if _search_result and search_for_first_only:
return _search_result
elif _search_result:
for result in _search_result:
search_result.add(result)
return search_result if search_result else None
Print:
def pretty_print(dict_or_list, print_spaces=0):
"""
Give it a dict key (to get values of),
it will return you a pretty for print version
of a dict or a list of dicts you gave.
:param dict_or_list:
:param print_spaces:
:return:
"""
pretty_text = ""
if isinstance(dict_or_list, dict):
for key in dict_or_list:
key_value = dict_or_list[key]
if isinstance(key_value, dict):
key_value = pretty_print(key_value, print_spaces + 1)
pretty_text += "\t" * print_spaces + "{}:\n{}\n".format(key, key_value)
elif isinstance(key_value, list) or isinstance(key_value, set):
pretty_text += "\t" * print_spaces + "{}:\n".format(key)
for element in key_value:
if isinstance(element, dict) or isinstance(element, list) or isinstance(element, set):
pretty_text += pretty_print(element, print_spaces + 1)
else:
pretty_text += "\t" * (print_spaces + 1) + "{}\n".format(element)
else:
pretty_text += "\t" * print_spaces + "{}: {}\n".format(key, key_value)
elif isinstance(dict_or_list, list) or isinstance(dict_or_list, set):
for element in dict_or_list:
if isinstance(element, dict) or isinstance(element, list) or isinstance(element, set):
pretty_text += pretty_print(element, print_spaces + 1)
else:
pretty_text += "\t" * print_spaces + "{}\n".format(element)
else:
pretty_text += str(dict_or_list)
if print_spaces == 0:
print(pretty_text)
return pretty_text
You can use jsonpipe if you just need the output (and more comfortable with command line):
cat bookmarks.json | jsonpipe |grep uri
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8383136/parsing-json-and-searching-through-it