2

I am trying to decode the following JSON file with Python:

{"node":[
    {
    "id":"12387",
    "ip":"172.20.0.1",
    "hid":"213", 
    "coord":{"dist":"12","lat":"-9.8257","lon":"65.0880"},
    "status":{"speed":"90","direction":"N"},
    "ts":"12387"}
]
}

By using:

json_data=open('sampleJSON')
jdata = json.load(json_data)
for key, value in jdata.iteritems():
    print "Key:"
    print key
    print "Value:"
    print value

and i have as output:

Key:
node
Value:
[{u'status': {u'direction': u'N', u'speed': u'90'}, u'ip': u'172.20.0.1', u'ts': u'12387', u'coord': {u'lat': u'-9.8257', u'lon': u'65.0880', u'dist': u'12'}, u'hid': u'213', u'id': u'12387'}]

And i want to be able to print the key's and values of the nested objects status, coord, and also que key/values of node, "hid", "id", "ip" and "ts".

How can i interate throughout all the nested values?

Thank you in advance!

3 Answers 3

7

You can use a recursive function to print it all out. This could be improved, but here is the idea:

import json

json_data = open('data.json')
jdata = json.load(json_data)

def printKeyVals(data, indent=0):
    if isinstance(data, list):
        print
        for item in data:
            printKeyVals(item, indent+1)
    elif isinstance(data, dict):
        print
        for k, v in data.iteritems():
            print "    " * indent, k + ":",
            printKeyVals(v, indent + 1)
    else:
        print data

OUTPUT

 node:

         status:
             direction: N
             speed: 90
         ip: 172.20.0.1
         ts: 12387
         coord:
             lat: -9.8257
             lon: 65.0880
             dist: 12
         hid: 213
         id: 12387

Otherwise, you could just use:

import pprint
pprint.pprint(jdata)
1
  • Thank you so much! it totally nailed it
    – Rui Costa
    Oct 20, 2012 at 3:46
0

Without knowing more about your specific use case, it's hard to give a general answer, but..

If you have an arbitrarily nested structure, this is a good case for recursion.

simple sample code:

def print_object(object, indent=0):
    if type(object)==dict:
        for key, value in object.iteritems():
            print " "*4*indent, "Key: ", key
            print " "*4*indent, "Value: "
            print_object(value, indent+1)
    elif type(object)==list:
        for value in object:
            print_object(value,indent+1)
    else:
        print " "*4*indent, object

you really don't want to do strict type checking, but it works for quick-and-dirty sample code.

output:

 Key:  node
 Value: 
         Key:  status
         Value: 
             Key:  direction
             Value: 
                 N
             Key:  speed
             Value: 
                 90
         Key:  ip
         Value: 
             172.20.0.1
         Key:  ts
         Value: 
             12387
         Key:  coord
         Value: 
             Key:  lat
             Value: 
                 -9.8257
             Key:  lon
             Value: 
                 65.0880
             Key:  dist
             Value: 
                 12
         Key:  hid
         Value: 
             213
         Key:  id
         Value: 
             12387
-1

It looks like the top level element of your JSON is a dictionary containing a list of dictionaries. If you want to keep this structure, try the code below.

from pprint import pprint

json_data=open('sampleJSON')
jdata = json.load(json_data)
node = jdata['node'][0]

for key, value in node.iteritems():
    pprint("Key:")
    pprint(key)
    pprint("Value:")
    pprint(value)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.