Skip to main content

A utility that makes it easy to use dot notation with python dictionaries

Project description

|waterbear\_is\_a\_bear| # ``waterbear``, A Utility That Makes Python
Dictionary Accessible With The Dot Notation, Recursively and with
Default Values

Now introducing the smallest bear! **Waterbear**.

Waterbear makes it easy to use python dictionaries with dot notation!

Todos
=====

- [ ] merge ``python2.7`` version with ``python3``
- [ ] make another package called ``tardigrade``

Installation
============

.. code-block:: python

pip install waterbear # unfortuantely, tardigrade wouldn't work.

Usage
=====

For more usage examples, take a look at the
`test.py <https://github.com/episodeyang/waterbear/blob/masterwaterbear/test_waterbear.py>`__!

There are two classes, the ``Bear`` and the ``DefaultBear``. Default
Bear allows you to pass in a default factory as the first argument.
``Bear`` allows you do do so via a keyword argument ``__default``

Example usage below:

.. code-block:: python

# Waterbear is a bear!
from waterbear import Bear

waterbear = Bear(**{"key": 100})
assert waterbear.key == 100, 'now waterbear.key is accessible!'
assert waterbear['key'] == 100, 'item access syntax is also supported!'

Similar to ``collection.defaultdict``, there is ``DefaultBear``
---------------------------------------------------------------

.. code-block:: python

bear = DefaultBear(None, a=10, b=100)
assert vars(bear) == {'a': 10, 'b': 100}

assert bear.does_not_exist is None, "default value works"

and it also supports default factories
--------------------------------------

.. code-block:: python

bear = DefaultBear(tuple, a=10, b=100)
assert bear.does_not_exist is (), "default factory also works!"

You can also use it with ``vars``, ``str``, ``print(repr)``, ``dict`` etc.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

.. code-block:: python

bear = Bear(a=10, b=100)
assert str(bear) == "{'a': 10, 'b': 100}"
assert dir(bear) == ['a', 'b']
assert list(iter(bear)) == ['a', 'b']
assert dict(bear) == {'a': 10, 'b': 100}

More Usages Could be Found in `test.py <https://github.com/episodeyang/waterbear/blob/masterwaterbear/test_waterbear.py>`__!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

.. code-block:: python

test_dict = {
'a': 0,
'b': 1
}

# Use spread operators to construct with a dictionary!
test_args = Bear(**test_dict)
assert test_args.a == 0
assert test_args.b == 1
# the value should now be accessible through the key name.
test_args.haha = 0
assert test_args.haha == 0


# You can also use a nested dictionary.
test_args.haha = {'a': 1}
assert test_args.haha != {'a': 1}
assert vars(test_args.haha) == {'a': 1}
assert test_args.haha.a == 1
assert test_args.__dict__['haha']['a'] == 1
assert vars(test_args)['haha']['a'] == 1
assert str(test_args) == "{'a': 0, 'b': 1, 'haha': {'a': 1}}", \
'test_args should be this value "{\'a\': 0, \'b\': 1, \'haha\': {\'a\': 1}}"'

# To set recursion to false, use this `__recursive` parameter.
test_args = Bear(__recursive=False, **test_dict)
assert test_args.__is_recursive == False
assert test_args.a == 0
assert test_args.b == 1
test_args.haha = {'a': 1}
assert test_args.haha['a'] == 1
assert test_args.haha == {'a': 1}

# Some other usage patterns
test_args = Bear(**test_dict, **{'ha': 'ha', 'no': 'no'})
assert test_args.ha == 'ha', 'key ha should be ha'

To Develop
==========

.. code-block:: python

git clone https://github.com/episodeyang/waterbear.git
cd waterbear
make dev

This ``make dev`` command should build the wheel and install it in your
current python environment. Take a look at the
`https://github.com/episodeyang/waterbear/blob/masterMakefile <https://github.com/episodeyang/waterbear/blob/masterMakefile>`__ for details.

**To publish**, first update the version number, then do:

.. code-block:: bash

make publish

\* image credit goes to BBC `waterbear: The Smallest
Bear! <http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20150313-the-toughest-animals-on-earth>`__
😛 |tardigrade|

.. |waterbear\_is\_a\_bear| image:: waterbear.jpg
.. |tardigrade| image:: waterbear_2.jpg

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

waterbear-1.1.13.tar.gz (4.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

File details

Details for the file waterbear-1.1.13.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: waterbear-1.1.13.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 4.1 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for waterbear-1.1.13.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9da033ddc2903c6f9c9eaf5d75e09fd319acdf0943a011a5fa446bb55ee4aead
MD5 fbbaa24e2e98de35169ba17f8cc45b26
BLAKE2b-256 5d1fb747bf236e1ccfbb703c91087bbd7f3deb9c17e6e6864a84dcb6a4c08782

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page