I am consuming several endpoints of an API that is very verbose in the data it returns. I would like to provide a subset of this data to another piece of code elsewhere.
Suppose I am given several dictionaries like this (which I plan to loop through and filter):
asset = {
'id': 1,
'name': 'MY-PC',
'owner': 'me',
'location': 'New York City',
'model': {
'id': 1,
'name': 'Surface',
'manufacturer': {
'id': 1,
'name': 'Microsoft'
}
}
}
I want to create a function that will take that dictionary in, along with a "mask" which will be used to create a new dictionary of only the allowed items. This might be an example mask (though, I can work with whatever format makes the resulting code the most concise):
mask = {
'id': True,
'name': True,
'model': {
'id': True,
'name': True,
'manufacturer': {
'name': True
}
}
}
The function should then return this:
mask = {
'id': 1,
'name': 'MY-PC',
'model': {
'id': 1,
'name': 'Surface',
'manufacturer': {
'name': 'Microsoft'
}
}
}
Is there something already built into Python 3 that would help aid in this? It looks like if I have to do this manually, it's going to get quite ugly quickly. I found itertools.compress
, but that seems like it's for lists and won't handle the complexity of dictionaries.
jq(1)
?