Here's a recursive solution that also replaces None
s inside lists.
First we define a simple class, Null
, to act as the replacement for None
.
class Null(object):
def __repr__(self):
return 'Null'
NULL = Null()
def replace_none(data):
for k, v in data.items() if isinstance(data, dict) else enumerate(data):
if v is None:
data[k] = NULL
elif isinstance(v, (dict, list)):
replace_none(v)
# Test
data = {
1: 'one',
2: ['two', 2, None],
3: None,
4: {4: None, 44: 'four'},
5: {
5: [55, 56, None],
6: {66: None, 67: None},
8: [88, {9:'nine', 99:None}, 100]
}
}
print(data)
replace_none(data)
print(data)
output
{1: 'one', 2: ['two', 2, None], 3: None, 4: {44: 'four', 4: None}, 5: {8: [88, {9: 'nine', 99: None}, 100], 5: [55, 56, None], 6: {66: None, 67: None}}}
{1: 'one', 2: ['two', 2, Null], 3: Null, 4: {44: 'four', 4: Null}, 5: {8: [88, {9: 'nine', 99: Null}, 100], 5: [55, 56, Null], 6: {66: Null, 67: Null}}}
None
in nested dictionaries also?dict
and any values in it which are containers, replacingNone
s as you go. This sounds like a good job for recursion.None
, not keys.{1: 'one', 2: [1, 2, None], '3': None, None: {None: None, 2: [1,2, None, {None: None, 2: None}]}}