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In my app I'm connecting to a server which returns some json style unicode string resembling dictionary of dictionaries. As a result I'd like to get one leveled dictionary with id as a key and unicode value like this :

{'1': u'autos','3': u'cities'}

So I load the response with built in json module :

>>> jsonData = json.loads(data)
>>> jsonData
{u'1': {u'id': u'1', u'name': u'autos'}, u'3': {u'id': u'3', u'name': u'cities'}, u'2': {u'id': u'2', u'name': u'business'},}
>>> type(jsonData)
<type 'dict'>

You can see the returned object here. Then I should decompose it to get rid of the parent dictionary. And finally encode the id's. I've found two methods how to do the encoding. One :

>>> import unicodedata
>>> unicodedata.normalize('NFKD', data).encode('ascii','ignore')

and second:

>>> data.encode('ascii','ignore')

How I should do this task, especially the decomposition ?

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  • How do you mean "get rid of the parent dictionary"? Can you specify what you want it to look like when you've finished?
    – Thomas K
    Nov 27, 2010 at 12:48

2 Answers 2

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This should work:

outputdata = {}
for id, stuff in jsonData.iteritems():
    outputdata[id.encode("ascii")] = stuff[u"name"]

You could also use a generator expression, as in dugres' answer.

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  • dict((i.encode("ascii"),s[u"name"]) for i,s in jsonData.items()) would be even shorter (but essentially the same). Nov 27, 2010 at 15:55
  • @Sven: And if you're using 2.7/3.1, it's even shorter: {i.encode("ascii"): s[u"name"] for i, s in jsonData.items()}. But I thought I'd stick to basics ;-)
    – Thomas K
    Nov 27, 2010 at 17:48
  • Oh, and I just notice that we did not use iteritems() in the 2.x case, but should have... Nov 27, 2010 at 18:02
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decomp=dict((v['id'], v['name']) for v in jsondata.values())
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  • cannot use generator since id is not relevant to the actual position. Still thanks for answer.
    – decarbo
    Nov 27, 2010 at 14:57

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