Extract Elements From A JSON Document
JMESPath (pronounced "jaymz path") allows you to declaratively specify how to extract elements from a JSON document.
For example, given this document:
{"foo": {"bar": "baz"}}
The jmespath expression foo.bar will return "baz".
JMESPath also supports:
Referencing elements in a list. Given the data:
{"foo": {"bar": ["one", "two"]}}
The expression: foo.bar[0] will return "one". You can also reference all the items in a list using the * syntax:
{"foo": {"bar": [{"name": "one"}, {"name": "two"}]}}
The expression: foo.bar[*].name will return ["one", "two"]. Negative indexing is also supported (-1 refers to the last element in the list). Given the data above, the expression foo.bar[-1].name will return ["two"].
The * can also be used for hash types:
{"foo": {"bar": {"name": "one"}, "baz": {"name": "two"}}}
The expression: foo.*.name will return ["one", "two"].
-
1
derived packages
- Links to openSUSE:Factory / python-jmespath
- Has a link diff
- Download package
-
Checkout Package
osc -A https://api.opensuse.org checkout SUSE:ALP:Source:Standard:0.1/python-jmespath && cd $_
- Create Badge
Source Files (show merged sources derived from linked package)
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
_link | 0000000467 467 Bytes |
Comments 0