I've been trying to parse a JSON file with Python's ijson
library. This works when looking at second-level elements or when using a parser, but I'd prefer the convenience of looking at top level elements directly.
The JSON is basically formatted like this:
{"foo":{"a":1,"b":2},"bar":{"c":3,"d":4}}
So, nothing fancy. What I'd like to do is iterate through it in a way that yields "foo"
and its value / "bar"
and its value per iteration. (So just like if I were to json.loads
this thing.) My code is the following - I know it's not going to yield both, I was just testing:
f=open('test')
i=ijson.items(f,'item')
for j in i:
print j
The syntax of the items()
function is what I got from stackoverflow.
However, strangely, the loop does take time, but it doesn't actually output anything. (Not even if I put a print 'qyx'
in there, so I don't know what it's doing.) If I modify the items()
function to parse foo.item
, it does work, but what little info I can find indicates that it should work for the top level as well. Plus if I use the following, it works, but it's much more opaque:
i=ijson.parse(f)
for prefix, event, value in i:
if not prefix or event == 'map_key' or ( '.' in prefix and event in ('start_map','end_map') ):
continue
print prefix, event, value
This would output
foo start_map None
foo.a number 1
foo.b number 2
foo end_map None
bar start_map None
bar.c number 3
bar.d number 4
bar end_map None
... which could be processed to yield "foo"
and {"a":1,"b":2}
etc, but it's much more of a hassle.