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My code looks like this:

    payload = base64.b64decode(record['kinesis']['data'])
    print("Decoded payload: " + payload)

In the log the result of the print line looks like this:

Decoded payload: { "timeStamp": 1509835693.7319956, "thing": "testing/23" }

Wouldn't I reference the timeStamp like this:

payload['timeStamp']

I am confused by what I have in this data structure. Can someone please explain to me what I have here and how I access the data inside the variable payload?

2
  • Im guessing you have a string Nov 4, 2017 at 23:17
  • Using repr(payload) gives a more helpful string including type information Nov 4, 2017 at 23:19

1 Answer 1

5

The decoded data is a string (as the error says), not a dictionary. You need to parse it before accessing its elements.

Considering your data is in JSON format, like the one you presented above:

import json

payload_str = base64.b64decode(record['kinesis']['data'])
payload = json.loads(payload_str)  # parsing
print("Decoded payload: ", payload)

And now you have no problem accessing payload['timeStamp'], as far as the JSON does contain this field.

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  • Thank you for that...That makes a lot more sense...I am still a bit confused by the {} parentheses in my decoded payload output above. Nov 5, 2017 at 0:53
  • @EricSnyder do you mean why there are {} around the data? That's a JSON object... take a look here, for example.
    – grovina
    Nov 5, 2017 at 1:12

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