JMESPath is a query language for JSON.

Overview

JMESPath

https://travis-ci.org/jmespath/jmespath.py.svg?branch=develop https://codecov.io/github/jmespath/jmespath.py/coverage.svg?branch=develop

JMESPath (pronounced "james path") allows you to declaratively specify how to extract elements from a JSON document.

For example, given this document:

{"foo": {"bar": "baz"}}

The jmespath expression foo.bar will return "baz".

JMESPath also supports:

Referencing elements in a list. Given the data:

{"foo": {"bar": ["one", "two"]}}

The expression: foo.bar[0] will return "one". You can also reference all the items in a list using the * syntax:

{"foo": {"bar": [{"name": "one"}, {"name": "two"}]}}

The expression: foo.bar[*].name will return ["one", "two"]. Negative indexing is also supported (-1 refers to the last element in the list). Given the data above, the expression foo.bar[-1].name will return "two".

The * can also be used for hash types:

{"foo": {"bar": {"name": "one"}, "baz": {"name": "two"}}}

The expression: foo.*.name will return ["one", "two"].

Installation

You can install JMESPath from pypi with:

pip install jmespath

API

The jmespath.py library has two functions that operate on python data structures. You can use search and give it the jmespath expression and the data:

>>> import jmespath
>>> path = jmespath.search('foo.bar', {'foo': {'bar': 'baz'}})
'baz'

Similar to the re module, you can use the compile function to compile the JMESPath expression and use this parsed expression to perform repeated searches:

>>> import jmespath
>>> expression = jmespath.compile('foo.bar')
>>> expression.search({'foo': {'bar': 'baz'}})
'baz'
>>> expression.search({'foo': {'bar': 'other'}})
'other'

This is useful if you're going to use the same jmespath expression to search multiple documents. This avoids having to reparse the JMESPath expression each time you search a new document.

Options

You can provide an instance of jmespath.Options to control how a JMESPath expression is evaluated. The most common scenario for using an Options instance is if you want to have ordered output of your dict keys. To do this you can use either of these options:

>>> import jmespath
>>> jmespath.search('{a: a, b: b}',
...                 mydata,
...                 jmespath.Options(dict_cls=collections.OrderedDict))


>>> import jmespath
>>> parsed = jmespath.compile('{a: a, b: b}')
>>> parsed.search(mydata,
...               jmespath.Options(dict_cls=collections.OrderedDict))

Custom Functions

The JMESPath language has numerous built-in functions, but it is also possible to add your own custom functions. Keep in mind that custom function support in jmespath.py is experimental and the API may change based on feedback.

If you have a custom function that you've found useful, consider submitting it to jmespath.site and propose that it be added to the JMESPath language. You can submit proposals here.

To create custom functions:

  • Create a subclass of jmespath.functions.Functions.
  • Create a method with the name _func_<your function name>.
  • Apply the jmespath.functions.signature decorator that indicates the expected types of the function arguments.
  • Provide an instance of your subclass in a jmespath.Options object.

Below are a few examples:

import jmespath
from jmespath import functions

# 1. Create a subclass of functions.Functions.
#    The function.Functions base class has logic
#    that introspects all of its methods and automatically
#    registers your custom functions in its function table.
class CustomFunctions(functions.Functions):

    # 2 and 3.  Create a function that starts with _func_
    # and decorate it with @signature which indicates its
    # expected types.
    # In this example, we're creating a jmespath function
    # called "unique_letters" that accepts a single argument
    # with an expected type "string".
    @functions.signature({'types': ['string']})
    def _func_unique_letters(self, s):
        # Given a string s, return a sorted
        # string of unique letters: 'ccbbadd' ->  'abcd'
        return ''.join(sorted(set(s)))

    # Here's another example.  This is creating
    # a jmespath function called "my_add" that expects
    # two arguments, both of which should be of type number.
    @functions.signature({'types': ['number']}, {'types': ['number']})
    def _func_my_add(self, x, y):
        return x + y

# 4. Provide an instance of your subclass in a Options object.
options = jmespath.Options(custom_functions=CustomFunctions())

# Provide this value to jmespath.search:
# This will print 3
print(
    jmespath.search(
        'my_add(`1`, `2`)', {}, options=options)
)

# This will print "abcd"
print(
    jmespath.search(
        'foo.bar | unique_letters(@)',
        {'foo': {'bar': 'ccbbadd'}},
        options=options)
)

Again, if you come up with useful functions that you think make sense in the JMESPath language (and make sense to implement in all JMESPath libraries, not just python), please let us know at jmespath.site.

Specification

If you'd like to learn more about the JMESPath language, you can check out the JMESPath tutorial. Also check out the JMESPath examples page for examples of more complex jmespath queries.

The grammar is specified using ABNF, as described in RFC4234. You can find the most up to date grammar for JMESPath here.

You can read the full JMESPath specification here.

Testing

In addition to the unit tests for the jmespath modules, there is a tests/compliance directory that contains .json files with test cases. This allows other implementations to verify they are producing the correct output. Each json file is grouped by feature.

Discuss

Join us on our Gitter channel if you want to chat or if you have any questions.

The project that powers MDN.

Kuma Kuma is the platform that powers MDN (developer.mozilla.org) Development Code: https://github.com/mdn/kuma Issues: P1 Bugs (to be fixed ASAP) P2

MDN Web Docs 1.9k Dec 26, 2022
A tool that allows for versioning sites built with mkdocs

mkdocs-versioning mkdocs-versioning is a plugin for mkdocs, a tool designed to create static websites usually for generating project documentation. mk

Zayd Patel 38 Feb 26, 2022
Plover jyutping - Plover plugin for Jyutping input

Plover plugin for Jyutping Installation Navigate to the repo directory: cd plove

Samuel Lo 1 Mar 17, 2022
epub2sphinx is a tool to convert epub files to ReST for Sphinx

epub2sphinx epub2sphinx is a tool to convert epub files to ReST for Sphinx. It uses Pandoc for converting HTML data inside epub files into ReST. It cr

Nihaal 8 Dec 15, 2022
Automated generation of real Swagger/OpenAPI 2.0 schemas from Django REST Framework code.

drf-yasg - Yet another Swagger generator Generate real Swagger/OpenAPI 2.0 specifications from a Django Rest Framework API. Compatible with Django Res

Cristi Vîjdea 3k Dec 31, 2022
Reproducible Data Science at Scale!

Pachyderm: The Data Foundation for Machine Learning Pachyderm provides the data layer that allows machine learning teams to productionize and scale th

Pachyderm 5.7k Dec 29, 2022
Show Rubygems description and annotate your code right from Sublime Text.

Gem Description for Sublime Text Show Rubygems description and annotate your code. Just mouse over your Gemfile's gem definitions to show the popup. s

Nando Vieira 2 Dec 19, 2022
Grokking the Object Oriented Design Interview

Grokking the Object Oriented Design Interview

Tusamma Sal Sabil 2.6k Jan 08, 2023
100 Days of Code Learning program to keep a habit of coding daily and learn things at your own pace with help from our remote community.

100 Days of Code Learning program to keep a habit of coding daily and learn things at your own pace with help from our remote community.

Git Commit Show by Invide 41 Dec 30, 2022
Main repository for the Sphinx documentation builder

Sphinx Sphinx is a tool that makes it easy to create intelligent and beautiful documentation for Python projects (or other documents consisting of mul

5.1k Jan 02, 2023
A next-generation curated knowledge sharing platform for data scientists and other technical professions.

Knowledge Repo The Knowledge Repo project is focused on facilitating the sharing of knowledge between data scientists and other technical roles using

Airbnb 5.2k Dec 27, 2022
A Python Package To Generate Strong Passwords For You in Your Projects.

shPassGenerator Version 1.0.6 Ready To Use Developed by Shervin Badanara (shervinbdndev) on Github Language and technologies used in This Project Work

Shervin 11 Dec 19, 2022
An awesome Data Science repository to learn and apply for real world problems.

AWESOME DATA SCIENCE An open source Data Science repository to learn and apply towards solving real world problems. This is a shortcut path to start s

Academic.io 20.3k Jan 09, 2023
Always know what to expect from your data.

Great Expectations Always know what to expect from your data. Introduction Great Expectations helps data teams eliminate pipeline debt, through data t

Great Expectations 7.8k Jan 05, 2023
:blue_book: Automatic documentation from sources, for MkDocs.

mkdocstrings Automatic documentation from sources, for MkDocs. Features - Python handler - Requirements - Installation - Quick usage Features Language

1.1k Jan 04, 2023
Plugins for MkDocs.

Plugins for MkDocs and Python Markdown pip install neoteroi-mkdocs This package includes the following plugins and extensions: Name Description Type m

35 Dec 23, 2022
An open-source script written in python just for fun

Owersite Owersite is an open-source script written in python just for fun. It do

大きなペニスを持つ少年 7 Sep 21, 2022
This is the repository that includes the code material for the ESweek 2021 for the Education Class Lecture A3 "Learn to Drive (and Race!) Autonomous Vehicles"

ESweek2021_educationclassA3 This is the repository that includes the code material for the ESweek 2021 for the Education Class Lecture A3 "Learn to Dr

F1TENTH Autonomous Racing Community 29 Dec 06, 2022
YAML metadata extension for Python-Markdown

YAML metadata extension for Python-Markdown This extension adds YAML meta data handling to markdown with all YAML features. As in the original, metada

Nikita Sivakov 14 Dec 30, 2022
Convenient tools for using Swagger to define and validate your interfaces in a Pyramid webapp.

Convenient tools for using Swagger to define and validate your interfaces in a Pyramid webapp.

Scott Triglia 64 Sep 18, 2022