Does this look familiar?
>>> import json >>> from datetime import date >>> MY_DATA = {'foo': 123, 'bar': date(2018, 5, 22)} >>> json.dumps(MY_DATA) Traceback (most recent call last): ... TypeError: datetime.date(2018, 5, 22) is not JSON serializable
It's one thing when your serialization tools don't know how to handle your
custom classes, but it's annoying when they don't handle the built-in and/or
common data types. Thus, basicserial
was born.
This package is a thin wrapper around the common serialization tools that can do the following for you when working with JSON, YAML, and TOML:
Automatically serializes the following types to common-sense representations:
Type
JSON
YAML
TOML
array
sequence
array
array
sequence
array
number
float
float
string
string
string
string (ISO 8601)
timestamp
string (ISO 8601)
string (ISO 8601)
string (ISO 8601)
string (ISO 8601)
string (ISO 8601)
timestamp
string (ISO 8601)
string
string
string
object
map
key/value
object
map
key/value
object
map
key/value
object
map
key/value
array
sequence
array
string
string
string
string
string
string
Can serialize Enum members appropriately based on their type.
Can automatically deserialize dates, times, and datetimes into the native Python objects.
Provides a simple flag for generating "pretty" strings.
To use this package, install it from PyPI (pip install basicserial
). Then,
make sure you install the serialization package you'd like basicserial
to
use:
- For YAML, it supports PyYAML and ruamel.yaml.
- For TOML, it supports toml, pytoml, qtoml, tomlkit, and tomli/tomli-w.
- For JSON, it supports Python's built-in json module, simplejson, orjson, rapidjson, ujson, hyperjson, and pysimdjson.
basicserial
will automatically find a package to use, but if you want to
use a specific one, you can specify its name via the pkg
argument to the
functions.
JSON:
>>> print(basicserial.to_json(MY_DATA)) {"foo": 123, "bar": "2018-05-22"} >>> print(basicserial.to_json(MY_DATA, pretty=True)) { "foo": 123, "bar": "2018-05-22" } >>> basicserial.from_json(basicserial.to_json(MY_DATA)) {u'foo': 123, u'bar': datetime.date(2018, 5, 22)} >>> basicserial.from_json(basicserial.to_json(MY_DATA), native_datetimes=False) {u'foo': 123, u'bar': u'2018-05-22'}
YAML:
>>> print(basicserial.to_yaml(MY_DATA)) {bar: 2018-05-22, foo: 123} >>> print(basicserial.to_yaml(MY_DATA, pretty=True)) bar: 2018-05-22 foo: 123 >>> basicserial.from_yaml(basicserial.to_yaml(MY_DATA)) {u'foo': 123, u'bar': datetime.date(2018, 5, 22)} >>> basicserial.from_yaml(basicserial.to_yaml(MY_DATA), native_datetimes=False) {'foo': 123, 'bar': u'2018-05-22'}
TOML:
>>> print(basicserial.to_toml(MY_DATA)) foo = 123 bar = "2018-05-22" >>> print(basicserial.to_toml(MY_DATA, pretty=True)) foo = 123 bar = "2018-05-22" >>> basicserial.from_toml(basicserial.to_toml(MY_DATA)) {u'foo': 123, u'bar': datetime.date(2018, 5, 22)} >>> basicserial.from_toml(basicserial.to_toml(MY_DATA), native_datetimes=False) {u'foo': 123, u'bar': u'2018-05-22'}
This project is released under the terms of the MIT License.