21

I happen to have a complex dictionary (having lists, dicts within lists etc). The values for some of the keys are set as None

Is there a way I can replace this None with some default value of my own irrespective of the complex structure of the dictionary?

8
  • Do you want to replace the None in nested dictionaries also?
    – Ilja
    Mar 14, 2016 at 11:16
  • 2
    Yes, but as far as I know there's no shortcut approach, you have to traverse the dict and any values in it which are containers, replacing Nones as you go. This sounds like a good job for recursion.
    – PM 2Ring
    Mar 14, 2016 at 11:16
  • @MariusSiuram: The OP wants to replace values which are None, not keys.
    – PM 2Ring
    Mar 14, 2016 at 11:17
  • @Marius: no, he means, 'some values' by 'the values for some of the keys' :)
    – Ilja
    Mar 14, 2016 at 11:18
  • 2
    Or, alternatively, what do you expect for the following data structure: {1: 'one', 2: [1, 2, None], '3': None, None: {None: None, 2: [1,2, None, {None: None, 2: None}]}} Mar 14, 2016 at 11:18

6 Answers 6

21

You can do it using object_pairs_hook from json module:

def dict_clean(items):
    result = {}
    for key, value in items:
        if value is None:
            value = 'default'
        result[key] = value
    return result

dict_str = json.dumps(my_dict)
my_dict = json.loads(dict_str, object_pairs_hook=dict_clean)
3
  • 8
    Alternative implementation for the function: return {k: v if v is not None else 'default' for k, v in items}. Mar 14, 2016 at 11:24
  • I would also have a default parameter for the dict_clean function. Mar 14, 2016 at 11:25
  • 1
    Not sure if optimal, but definitely quite elegant. Though, this may fail if the dict contains any unserializable object.
    – bereal
    Mar 14, 2016 at 11:25
17
# replace_none_with_empty_str_in_dict.py

raw = {'place': 'coffee shop', 'time': 'noon', 'day': None}

def replace_none_with_empty_str(some_dict):
    return { k: ('' if v is None else v) for k, v in some_dict.items() }

print(replace_none_with_empty_str(raw))
2
4

Here's a recursive solution that also replaces Nones 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}}}
3
for k, v in my_dict.items():
    if v is None:
        my_dict[k] = "my default value"
4
  • 1
    The question seems quite explicit about None, so I should advise v is None instead of not v, as this last option would change empty strings, false values, number 0... Mar 14, 2016 at 11:13
  • Agreed, None is less that not v.
    – user5547025
    Mar 14, 2016 at 11:15
  • @LutzHorn That solution will work if the value is at the first level. In my case, the value is deep within the dict (inside a dict within a list within a dict) and the solution fails
    – MSK
    Mar 14, 2016 at 11:18
  • 2
    Please edit your question and provide a sample of your real input.
    – user5547025
    Mar 14, 2016 at 11:19
3

Recursive solution from Lutz:

def replace(any_dict):
    for k, v in any_dict.items():
        if v is None:
            any_dict[k] = "my default value"
        elif type(v) == type(any_dict):
            replace(v)

replace(my_dict)
1
  • what is the "elif type(v) == type(any_dict): replace(v)" part? Sounds pretty useless.
    – Ball Hog
    Mar 11, 2021 at 22:54
2

You could do it with recursive function that iterates over all dicts and lists:

def convert(obj):
    if type(obj) == list:
        for x in obj:
            convert(x)
    elif type(obj) == dict:
        for k, v in obj.iteritems():
            if v is None:
                obj[k] = 'DEFAULT'
            else:
                convert(v)

data = {1: 'foo', 2: None, 3: [{1: 'foo', 2: None}]}
convert(data)
print data # -> {1: 'foo', 2: 'DEFAULT', 3: [{1: 'foo', 2: 'DEFAULT'}]}

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