1

I want to remove the values I don't need from an existing json file:

{ "items": [ { "id": "abcd", "h": 2, "x": 0, "level": 4 }, { "id": "dfgg", "h": 7, "x": 5, "level": 30 } ] }

I've tried to remove the values in place but get 'dictionary changed size during iteration'.

with open('inventory2.json', 'r') as inf:
    data = json.load(inf)
    inf.close()

    keysiwant = ['x', 'h']
    for dic in data['items']:
        for k, v in dic.items():
            if k not in keysiwant:
                dic.pop(k, None)
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2 Answers 2

3

Problem: dict.items() in python 3 is just a view - not a copy of the dict's items - you cannot change it while iterating.

You can however put the dict.items() iterator into a list() (which copies it and decouples it from the dict that way) - you can then iterate over the copy of the dict.items() instead:

import json

t = """{ "items": [ { "id": "abcd", "h": 2, "x": 0, "level": 4 }, 
                    { "id": "dfgg", "h": 7, "x": 5, "level": 30 } ] }"""

data = json.loads(t)   # loads is better for SO-examples .. it makes it a mcve
keysiwant = ['x', 'h']
for dic in data['items']:
    for k, v in list(dic.items()):
        if k not in keysiwant:
            dic.pop(k, None)

print(data) 

Output:

{'items': [{'h': 2, 'x': 0}, {'h': 7, 'x': 5}]}

More on python2/python3 dict.items(): in this answer to What is the difference between dict.items() and dict.iteritems()?

2
  • json.loads() gave an error, still used json.load(), otherwise, nailed it thank you :)
    – Regardy
    Jan 21, 2019 at 19:39
  • 1
    @Scott json.loads() is to load json from a string not a file ;) hence better for demonstration as minimal reproducible example on SO Jan 21, 2019 at 19:40
0

Please try this. It uses fewer iterations because it filters out keys first, before sending them to pop/remove. Also, it uses keys only (list(dic)) instead of tuple key/value.

import json

t = """{ "items": [ { "id": "abcd", "h": 2, "x": 0, "level": 4 },
                    { "id": "dfgg", "h": 7, "x": 5, "level": 30 } ] }"""

data = json.loads(t)
keysiwant = ["x", "h"]

for dic in data["items"]:
    for k in (k for k in list(dic) if k not in keysiwant):
        dic.pop(k, None)

print(data)

Output:

{'items': [{'h': 2, 'x': 0}, {'h': 7, 'x': 5}]}
1
  • Works just as well maybe slightly faster on the few comparisons I ran. Thank you!
    – Regardy
    Jan 22, 2019 at 23:20

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