======
Morph!
Morph provides the following functions to help identify object types:
============================ =================================================
Name Functionality
============================ =================================================
morph.isstr(obj)
Is obj
a string?
morph.isseq(obj)
Is obj
a sequence-like (i.e. iterable) type
(but not a string or dict)?
morph.isdict(obj)
Is obj
a dict-like type? This means that it
must have at least the following methods:
keys()
, values()
, and items()
.
============================ =================================================
Morph provides the following functions to help morph objects:
============================ =================================================
Name Functionality
============================ =================================================
morph.tobool(obj)
Converts obj
to a bool; if string-like, it
is matched against a list of "truthy" or "falsy"
strings; if bool-like, returns itself; then, if
the default
parameter is not ValueError
(which defaults to False
), returns that;
otherwise throws a ValueError exception.
morph.tolist(obj)
Converts obj
to a list; if string-like, it
splits it according to Unix shell semantics (if
keyword split
is truthy, the default); if
sequence-like, returns itself converted to a list
(optionally flattened if keyword flat
is
truthy, the default), and otherwise returns a
list with itself as single object.
morph.pick(...)
Extracts a subset of key/value pairs from a
dict-like object where the key is a specific
value or has a specific prefix.
morph.omit(...)
Converse of morph.pick()
.
morph.flatten(obj)
Converts a multi-dimensional list or dict type
to a one-dimensional list or dict.
morph.unflatten(obj)
Reverses the effects of flatten
(note that
lists cannot be unflattened).
morph.xform(obj, func)
Recursively transforms sequences & dicts in
object
.
============================ =================================================
Flattening
When flattening a sequence-like object (i.e. list or tuple),
morph.flatten
recursively reduces multi-dimensional arrays to a
single dimension, but only for elements of each descended list that
are list-like. For example:
.. code:: python
[1, [2, [3, 'abc', 'def', {'foo': ['zig', ['zag', 'zog']]}], 4]]
is morphed to
[1, 2, 3, 'abc', 'def', {'foo': ['zig', ['zag', 'zog']]}, 4]
When flattening a dict-like object, it collapses list- and dict-
subkeys into indexed and dotted top-level keys. For example:
.. code:: python
{
'a': {
'b': 1,
'c': [
2,
{
'd': 3,
'e': 4,
}
]
}
}
is morphed to
{
'a.b': 1,
'a.c[0]': 2,
'a.c[1].d': 3,
'a.c[1].e': 4,
}
(This is primarily useful when dealing with INI files, which can only
be flat: the flatten
and unflatten
functions allow converting
between complex structures and flat INI files).
Note that lists can never be unflattened, and unflattening dicts is
not garanteed to be round-trip consistent. The latter can happen if
the dict-to-be-flattened had keys with special characters in them,
such as a period ('.'
) or square brackets ('[]'
).
Picking and Omitting
Morph's pick
and omit
functions allow you to extract a set of keys
(or properties) from a dict-like object (or plain object). These
functions will aggressively return a valid dict, regardless of the
supplied value -- i.e. if None
is given as a source, an empty dict
is returned. Furthermore, the following optional keyword parameters
are accepted:
-
dict:
Specifies the class type that should be returned, which defaults
to the standard python dict
type.
-
prefix:
For pick
, specifies that only keys that start with the specified
string will be returned (and also filtered for the specified keys),
with the prefix stripped from the keys. If no keys are specified,
this will simply return only the keys with the specified prefix.
For omit
, specifies that keys that start with the specified value
should be stripped from the returned dict.
-
tree:
If specified and truthy, then the keys specified to either pick
or
omit
are evaluated as a multi-dimensional item addresses like
those produced by morph.flatten
.
Examples:
.. code:: python
d = {'foo': 'bar', 'zig.a': 'b', 'zig.c': 'd'}
morph.pick(d, 'foo', 'zig.a')
==> {'foo', 'bar', 'zig.a': 'b'}
morph.pick(d, prefix='zig.')
==> {'a': 'b', 'c': 'd'}
morph.pick(d, 'c', prefix='zig.')
==> {'c': 'd'}
morph.omit(d, 'foo')
==> {'zig.a': 'b', 'zig.c': 'd'}
morph.omit(d, prefix='zig.')
==> {'foo': 'bar'}
class mydict(dict): pass
morph.pick(dict(foo='bar', zig='zag'), 'foo', dict=mydict)
==> mydict({'foo': 'bar'})
With some limitations, this also works on object properties. For
example:
.. code:: python
class X():
def init(self):
self.foo = 'bar'
self.zig1 = 'zog'
self.zig2 = 'zug'
def zigMethod(self):
pass
x = X()
morph.pick(x, 'foo', 'zig1')
==> {'foo': 'bar', 'zig1': 'zog'}
morph.pick(x, prefix='zig')
==> {'1': 'zog', '2': 'zug'}
morph.pick(x)
==> {}
morph.omit(x, 'foo')
==> {'zig1': 'zog', 'zig2': 'zug'}
morph.omit(x, prefix='zig')
==> {'foo': 'bar'}
morph.omit(x)
==> {'foo': 'bar', 'zig1': 'zog', 'zig2': 'zug'}
Transformation
The morph.xform
helper function can be used to recursively transform
all the items in a list & dictionary tree -- this effectively allows
the ease of list comprehensions to be applied to nested list/dict
structures.
Example:
.. code:: python
morph.xform([2, [4, {6: 8}]], lambda val, **kws: val ** 2)
==> [4, [16, {36: 64}]]
Note that the callback function xformer
, passed as the second
argument to morph.xform
, should always support an arbitrary number
of keyword parameters (i.e. should always end the parameter list with
something like **kws
).