@blending_jake/jtools
v2.0.0
Published
A JavaScript package that aids advanced querying, filtering, and formatting of JSON-like objects
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JTools
JTools is a robust library for interacting with JSON-like objects: providing the ability to quickly query, format, and filter JSON-like data.
JTools is available in Python and JavaScript and consists of three main components:
Query
: Extract and transform the values of nested fields.Query("data.timestamp.$parse_timestamp.$time_part('year')").many(items)
Filter
: Combine the querying capabilities ofQuery
with the ability to define filtering conditions to find just the elements you want.Filter(Key("data.timestamp.$parse_timestamp.$time_part('year')").gt(2015)).many(data)
Formatter
: Take multiple queries and format them into a stringFormatter("Item @data.id was released in @data.timestamp.$parse_timestamp.$time_part('year')").single(data[0])
JTools exists in two different langauges with almost identical names and capabilities to allow you to move between the packages seamlessly.
Python - jtools
JavaScript - @blending_jake/jtools
Written in TypeScript and distributed as an ES6 style module with type declaration files.
Differences
- In JTools-Py, the
==
and===
filter operators will behave the same, as well as!=
and!==
. - JTools-Py uses the
datetime
package for time related queries, while JavaScript usesmoment
- JTools-Py replicates JavaScript's lack of differentiation between
item[0]
anditem["0"]
by default. However, this can be changed in the Python version by settingQuery(..., convert_ints=False)
. If that argument is set toFalse
in Python, thenitem.0
would work on{"item": {"0": ...}}
, but not on{"item": {0: ...}}
. The JavaScript version essentially always hasconvert_ints=True
.
Recent Changes
2.0.0
- Numerous new language features
- Support for arithmetic in arguments. The supported operators are
-
,+
,*
,/
,//
(floor division),**
(exponentiation), and%
. The operators can be used any place a value is valid within an argument, such as$special(14000 * 2)
,$special(@value // 2)
,$special([1, 1+1, 1+2])
. The order of operations follows typical precedence, and arithmetic can be nested in()
. - Support for keyword arguments:
$index("value", fallback=12)
- Whitespace is allowed in a lot more places in a query now, which is very helpful since both JavaScript and Python support multi-line strings.
- Support for arithmetic in arguments. The supported operators are
- Performance increase for cases were a
Query
field doesn't have any specials. A faster parsing method can be used for about a 40x performance increase in creating theQuery
object. Note, this just speeds upQuery
creation and not the speed of.single()
,.many()
, etc. - Added functionality so that
Filter
values can be queries.- Using JSON:
{ field: <field>, operator: <op>, value: { query: <value query> } }
- Using
Key
:Key(<field>).<op>(Key(<value_query>))
- For example:
Key("tag.tag1").gt(Key("tag.tag2"))
- Using JSON:
- Four new filters:
subset
,!subset
,superset
,!superset
. These should be readfield value <op> filter value
, sosubset
means all of the values returned from the field query are in the filter value, which allows better filtering when both the field query and value are iterable. - Many new specials
$key_of_min_value
- Gets the key of the min value in an dict/map/object$key_of_max_value
- Gets the key of the max value in an dict/map/object$time_part(part) -> int
- Get a specific part of a datetime/moment object. Valid values forpart
are as follows:- 'millisecond'
- 'second'
- 'minute' - Starting from 0
- 'hour' - Starting from 0
- 'day' - Day of month, starting from 1
- 'month' - Month of year, starting from 1
- 'year'
- 'dayOfWeek' - Value in 0-6, corresponding to Monday-Sunday
- 'dayOfYear' - Day of year, starting from 1
$min
and$max
$arith(op, arg_value)
- Perform an arithmetic operation on the current value.op
can be any of the support math operators.$lowercase
,$uppercase
, and$titlecase
$filter(field, op, value, single=true)
OR$filter({<filter>}, single=true)
OR$filter([<filters>], single=true)
- Allow a single value or list of values to be filtered. The filters should be formatted that same way they are forFilter
.$pipeline(pipeline)
- Apply multiple specials to value in a given order. Can be very useful when used in conjunction with$map
to apply multiple specials at once.pipeline
must be of format:
- Numerous new language features
[
<special>
OR
[<special>, arg1, arg2, ..., (optional) map/object/dict of keyword arguments],
...
]
for example
$pipeline([
['index', 'balance'],
['range', 1],
['replace', {'old': ',', 'new': ''}],
['float']
])
is the same as
$index("balance").$range(1).$replace(old=",", new="").$float
- Updates to old specials
$index(i, fallback=null, extended=false)
- addedextended
argument to allow$index
to support any valid JQL query fori
ifextended=true
- Bug fixes
- Fixed issue with filters not shortcutting properly
- Fixed Python issue with
$print
- Fixed issues with
$fallback
withFilter
andFormatter
- Fixed issue causing an error when trying to use an integer value in
$sort
and$group_by
Glossary
Installation
Python
pip install jtools
# import
from jtools import Query, Filter, Key, Condition, Formatter
JavaScript
npm i @blending_jake/jtools
// import
import { Query, Filter, Key, Condition, Formatter } from "@blending_jake/jtools";
Quickstart
from jtools import Query
# sort by nested timestamp field by month
q = Query("meta.timestamp.$parse_timestamp.$time_part('month')")
data = [ ... ]
sorted_data = sorted(data, key=q.single)
JQL
JQL
or theJSON Query Language
is a custom built query language forJTools
which supports powerful features like accessing nested fields, transforming values, and even using nested queries as arguments. The basic format of the language is:
(<field> | $<special>) (. (<field> | $<special>))*
EX: 'data', 'data.timestamp', 'data.$split', '$split.0'
field
A field is just a value that can be used as an index, like a string or integer key for a map/dict or an integer for an array. JavaScript has very loose type-checking between strings and integers, so either can essentially work in place of the other when indexing.
Fields can only contain the following characters: [-a-zA-Z0-9_]
. However, fields with prohibited characters can still
be indexed by using the $index
special, so to index range[0]
use $index("range[0]")
.
$special
A special is a function that is applied to the value that has been queried so far. There is a complete list of specials
here. These specials can be passed arguments, which is one of the most powerful features
of JQL
.
Arguments
Arguments can be passed into specials as a positional or keyword arguments. Positional arguments
must come first and are denoted using the standard notation in most programming languages:
$special(arg1, arg2, ...)
. Keyword arguments must come after any positional arguments and
can be used to specify a specific argument to set the value for:
$special(arg1, name1=arg2, name2=arg3, ...)
. Keyword arguments can be used to make it clear
what argument you are setting - improving readability, or can be used to skip arguments which
have default values.
For example, the index special has the following definition:
$index(key, fallback=null, extended=false)
. If you want to use a JQL query for key
, then you need
to set extended=true
. You can either write $index(key, null, true)
, or you can skip the
fallback argument and write $index(key, extended=true)
. Using keyword arguments might not save many
characters if the the special has few arguments, but can still greatly improve readability.
It is important to note that arguments, and the parenthesis surrounding them can be left
completely off of a special if the default argument values are acceptable or there are no
arguments - so a query like data.$values.$max.$divide(@data.$values.$sum)
can be written
where most of the parenthesis and arguments are just left off.
value
Arguments are considered values
and must be one of the following types.
Math Expression
[] or [<value>(, <value>)*] - List
{} or {<value>(, <value>)*} - Set
{:} or {<key>: <value>(, <key>: <value>)*} - Map/Dict/Object (see below for <key> spec)
Integer
Float
String w/ '' or ""
true
false
null
@<query> - Yep! Nested queries!
Math Expression:
Operators listed below
Operands must be one of: Integer, Float, or @<query>
<key>:
Math Expression
@<query>
Integer
Float
String
true
false
null
As shown above, values and queries can be nested, so [[1, 2], ["bob"], {"Ann", 'Ralph'}, {'key': 4, 23: 5}]
is valid. Additionally, the support for nesting queries is extremely powerful and allows for queries like:
item.tag.$lookup(@table.colors)
, which, for {"item": {"tag": "product"}, "table": {"colors": {"product": "red"}}}
results in "red"
Basic math expressions are supported in arguments and, subsequently, nested values.
The supported operators are listed below and follow normal arithmetic precedence with
the order of evaluation from first -> last being: ()
, **
, * and / and // and %
,
+ and -
.
The operands for math expressions are limited to numbers (Float and Integer) and nested queries.
Math expressions can be nested in other values, for example:
$special([ 1, @value, @value**2, @value**3 ])
Math Operators
+
-
*
/
//
- Floor division, akaMath.floor(a / b)
%
- Mod operator**
- Exponentiation, akaMath.pow(a, b)
ora^b
()
- Parenthesis can be use to change precedence and/or improve readability
Query
Query
takes the power ofJQL
and puts it into practice querying and transforming values in JSON-like data.
Query(query, fallback=null, [convert_ints=true (if Python)])
query
:str | List[str]
The field or fields to queryfallback
: The value that will result if a non-existent field is queriedconvert_ints
: Whether or not to convert any digit-only fields to integers
.single(item, context={})
item
: The item to querycontext
: SeeContext
for more details
Take a single item and query it using the query(ies) provided
Query(field).single(...) -> result
Query([field, field, ...]).single(...) -> [result, result, ...]
.many(items, context={})
items
: The items to querycontext
: SeeContext
for more details
Take a list of items, and query each item using the query(ies) provided
Query(field).many(...) -> [result, result, ...]
Query([field, field, ...]).many(...) -> [[result, result, ...], [result, result, ...], ...]
Notes
- More specials can be added by using the class method
.register_special()
like so:Query.register_special(<name>, <func>, <argDef> [if JavaScript])
. The function should be formatted as such:
# Python
lambda value, *args, context: ...
// JavaScript
(value, context, args) => { ... }
Where value
is the current query value, and context
is the current context.
Registering a special in JavaScript
Registering a special works differently in JavaScript because the language does not support keyword arguments. To get around this, an argument definition should be provided whenever the special is registered. The argument definition should be formatted:
[
'<argument name>' | { 'name': '<argument name>', [ 'default': <default value> ] }
]
The argument definition allows you to state what the name of each parameter is, and allows a default value to be provided. Additionally, '$args' and '$kwargs' can be placed in the argument definition to capture a variable number of positional arguments or keyword arguments, respectively.
Each registered special function is then passed an object, args
, which is { <argument name>: <argument value>, ... }
.
The keys '$args' and '$kwargs' capture the variable number of positional and keyword arguments, respectively.
Some example argument definitions and usages:
Query.register_special('index', (value, context, args) => {
// use args.key, args.fallback, and args.extended to access arguments
}, [ 'key', { name: 'fallback', default: null }, { name: 'extended', default: false } ])
Query.register_special('filter', (value, context, args) => {
// args.$args is an array of any positional arguments
// args.single must be specified as a keyword argument (as it's after $args)
}, [ '$args', { name: 'single', default: false } ])
Query.register_special('update', (value, context, args) => {
// args.$kwargs is an object of any captured key->value pairs
return { ...value, ...args.$kwargs };
}, [ '$kwargs' ])
Context
Context is a way of putting temporary variables into the query search space.
How do I add something to context
?
- Manually introduce values through
.single(..., context)
or.many(..., context)
. - Use the
$store_as()
special to place a value in the current context for later use
How do I access something in context
?
- Any top-level field name is first looked for on the current item, then in
context
. Note, top-level means it is the main query in aQuery
string, or it follows an@
, either as an argument or in aFormatter
string. - It is important to note that fields on the current item will shadow fields in the context, so make sure to use unique field names.
Ok, but give me an example.
# Python
context = {
"NOW": time.time()
}
Query("NOW.$subtract(@meta.timestamp).$divide(86400).$round.$suffix(' Days Ago')").single({ ... }, context)
// JavaScript
const context = {
NOW: Date.now() / 1000
}
new Query("NOW.$subtract(@meta.timestamp).$divide(86400).$round.$suffix(' Days Ago')").single({ ... }, context)
Specials
General
$inject(value: any) -> any
: Inject a value into the query$length -> int
$lookup(lookup: dict, fallback=null) -> any
: Lookup the current value in the provided map/dict$store_as(name: string) -> any
: Store the current query value in the current context for later use in the query. This does not change the underlying data being queried.$pipeline(pipeline) -> any
: Take a value and run it through multiple specials. Can be used in conjunction with$map
or$value_map
to apply a series of transformations across a list of values.pipeline
must be a list where each value is:string
- Name of special[string, *args]
- Name + positional arguments[string, dict of keyword args]
- Name + dict/map/object of keyword arguments[string, *args, dict of keyword args]
- Name + positional arguments + dict/map/object of keyword arguments
# Python
Query("""
meta
.timestamp
.$pipeline([
['divide', 1000],
'parse_timestamp',
['time_part', 'year']
])
""")
$print -> any
: Print the current query value before continuing to pass that value along$filter(field, op, value, single=true)
OR$filter({<filter>}, single=true)
OR$filter([<filters>], single=true)
: Allow a single value or list of values to be filtered. The filters should be formatted that same way they are forFilter
.single
can only be supplied as a keyword argument.
Dict/Maps/Objects
$items -> List[[any, any]]
$keys -> List[any]
$key_of_max_value(just_key=true) -> any | [any, any]
: Find the key of the max value in a dict/object/map. Ifjust_key=true
, then just the value of the key will be returned. Otherwise, the[key, value
] will be returned.$key_of_min_value(just_key=true) -> any | [any, any]
: Find the key of the min value in a dict/object/map. Ifjust_key=true
, then just the value of the key will be returned. Otherwise, the[key, value
] will be returned.$wildcard(nxt, just_field=true) -> List[any]
: On a given map or list, go through all values and see ifnxt
is a defined field. If it is, then return just the value ofnxt
on that item, ifjust_field=true
, or the entire item otherwise. This special allows a nested field to be extracted across multiple items where it it present. For example:
# Python
data = {
"a": {"tag": "run"},
"b": {"tag": "to-do", "other": "task"},
"meta": None
}
Query('$wildcard("tag")').single(data) # => ["run", "to-do"]
Query('$wildcard("tag", false)').single(data) # => [{"tag": "run"}, {"tag": "to-do", "other": "task"}]
// JavaScript
let data = {
"a": {"tag": "run"},
"b": {"tag": "to-do", "other": "task"},
"meta": null
}
new Query('$wildcard("tag")').single(data) // => ["run", "to-do"]
new Query('$wildcard("tag", false)').single(data) // => [{"tag": "run"}, {"tag": "to-do", "other": "task"}]
$values -> List[any]
$value_map(special, duplicate=true, *args, **kwargs): Dict[any: any]
: Go through the values on the current item in the query, applying a special to each one in-place. Ifduplicate=true
, then the original value will not be modified. Similar to:
# Python
for key in value:
value[key] = SPECIALS[special](value[key], *args, **kwargs)
// JavaScript
Object.keys(value).forEach(key => {
value[key] = SPECIALS[special](value[key], ...args, ...kwargs);
});
Type Conversions
$dict -> Dict[any: any]
: Take an incoming list of(key, value)
pairs and make a map/dict/object out of them.$fallback(fallback) -> value or fallback
: If the value isnull
, then it will be replaced withfallback
.$float -> float
$int -> int
$not -> bool
: Returnsnot value
or!value
$set -> set
$string -> str
$ternary(if_true, if_false, strict=false) -> any
: Returnif_true
if the value istruish
, otherwise, returnif_false
. Passtrue
forstrict
if the value must betrue
and not justtruish
.
Datetime
$parse_timestamp -> datetime or moment
: Take a Unix timestamp in seconds and return a corresponding datetime/moment object$strftime(fmt="%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ" or "YYYY-MM-DD[T]HH:mm:ss[Z]") -> string
: Format a datetime/moment object as a string usingfmt
. Refer to datetime or moment for formatting instructions$strptime(fmt=null) -> datetime or moment
: Parse a datetime string and return a corresponding datetime/moment object. Iffmt=None
, then standard formats will be tried. Refer to datetime or moment for formatting instructions$timestamp -> int
: Dump a datetime/moment object to a UTC timestamp as the number of seconds since the Unix Epoch$time_part(part) -> int
: Take adatetime
ormoment
value and get a specific part of the date.part
can be:millisecond
second
minute
hour
day
month
year
dayOfWeek
dayOfYear
Math / Numbers
$abs(num) -> number
$add(num) -> number
$arith(op, arg_value) -> number
: Take the value and use it as the first operand of an expression with the specified math operator.op
can be any of the math operators. The expression will bevalue op arg_value
.$distance(other) -> float
: Euler distance in N-dimensions$divide(num) -> number
$math(attr, ...args) -> any
: Returnsmath[attr](value, ...args)
, which can be used for operations likefloor
,cos
,sin
,min
, etc. See the Python Docs for validattr
values in Python and the JavaScript Docs for validattr
values in JavaScript.$multiply(num) -> number
$pow(num) -> number
$round(n=2) -> number
$subtract(num) -> number
Strings
$lowercase -> string
$prefix(prefix) -> string
: Prefix the value with the specified string$replace(old, new) -> string
: Replace all occurrences of a string$split(on=" ") -> List[string]
: Split a string$strip -> string
: Strip leading and trailing whitespace$suffix(suffix) -> string
: Concatenate a string to the end of the value$titlecase -> string
$trim(length=50, suffix="...") -> string
: Trim the length of a string$wrap(prefix, suffix) -> string
: Wrap a string with a prefix and suffix. Combines features of above two specials.$uppercase -> string
Lists
$group_by(key="", count=false) -> Dict[any: any[] | int]
: Take an incoming list and group the values by the specified key. Any valid JQL query or integer can be used for the key.""
means the value itself. The result by default will be keys to a list of values. However, ifcount=true
, then the result will be keys to the number of elements in that group.$index(key, fallback=null, extended=false) -> any
: Index the current piece of data either using a string or index key, or a full JQL query ifextended=true
. If the index is invalid, thenfallback
will be returned. Ifextended=false
andkey
is an integer, then a negative key can be used to index from the end of the array.$join(sep=", ") -> string
: Join a list using the specified separator$join_arg(arg: List[any], sep=", ")
: Similar to$join
except this operates on an argument instead of the query value. Essentially a shortened form of$inject(arg).$join(sep)
.$map(special, *args, **kwargs) -> List[any]
: Applyspecial
to every element in the value. Arguments can be passed through to the special being used.$max -> number
: Find the max value in the list$min -> number
: Find the min value in the list$sum -> number
: Return the sum of the items in the value$range(start, end=null) -> List[any]
: Get a sublist. Defaults tovalue.slice(start)
orvalue[start:]
, but an end value can be specified. Negative indices are allowed.$remove_nulls -> List[any]
: Remove any values that areNone
if Python, ornull
andundefined
if JavaScript$sort(key="", reverse=false) -> List[any]
: Sort an incoming list of values by a given key which can be any valid JQL query or an integer. By default,key=""
means the top-level value will be sorted on.
Attributes
$attr(attr) -> any
: Access an attribute of the given object, implemented asgetattr(value, attr)
andvalue[attr]
$call(func, *args, **kwargs) -> any
: Call a function that is on the current value, implemented asgetattr(value, func)(*args)
andvalue[func](...args)
Filter
Filter
takes the power ofJQL
and combines it with filtering conditions to allow lists of items to be filtered down to just those of interest. The filters can be manually built, or theKey
andCondition
classes can be used to simplify your code.
new Filter(filters, [convert_ints=true (if Python)], empty_filters_response=true, missing_field_response=false)
filters
:Condition | List[dict]
The filters to apply to any data. IfList[dict]
, then the filters should be formatted as shown below.
[
{"field": <field>, "operator": <op>, "value": <value>},
OR
{"or": <nested outer structure>},
OR
{"not": <nested outer structure>},
...
]
<field>: any valid `JQL` query
<op>: See list below
<value>: Any valid value for the operator, or
{ "query": <JQL query> } to have a value which is a query
convert_ints
:bool
Corresponds with the argument with the same name inQuery
. Determines whether digit only fields are treated as integers or strings. Defaults totrue
.empty_filters_response
:bool
Determines what gets returned when no filters are supplied.missing_field_response
:bool
Determines the result of a filter where the field could not be found.
Filters are evaluated in order and short-cutting can be used to avoid executing filters.
For example, a present
operator can be used before trying to access or manipulate a field.
Additionally, the $fallback
special can be used to the same effect in certain cases.
.single(item, context={})
context
: SeeContext
for more details
Take a single item and determine whether it satisfies the filters or not
Filter(filters).single(...) -> boolean
.many(items, context={})
context
: SeeContext
for more details
Take a list of items, and returns only those which satisfy the filters. Note,
Filter.many()
introducesINDEX
into the query namespace. Allowing items to be filtered by their 0-based index.
Filter(filters).many(...) -> [result, result, ...]
Notes
{"or": [
[ {filter1}, {filter2} ],
{filter3}
]} === (filter1 AND filter2) OR filter3
Nesting in an
or
will cause those filters to beAND'd
and then everything in the toplevel of thator
will beOR'd
.
Operators:
>
<
>=
<=
==
!=
===
!==
in
:<field> in <value>
!in
contains
:<value> in <field>
!contains
subset
:x in <value> for x in <field>
!subset
:exists x in <field> such that x not in <value>
superset
:x in <field> for x in <value>
!superser
:exists x in <value> such that x not in <field>
interval
:<field> in interval [value[0], value[1]]
(closed/inclusive interval)!interval
:<field> not in interval [value[0], value[1]]
startswith
endswith
present
!present
Key
Intended to simplify having to write
{"field": <field>, "operator": <operator>, "value": value}
a lot. The basic usage is:Key(<field>).<op>(<value>)
, or for the first six operators, the actual Python operators can be used, soKey(<field>) <op> <value>
. For example:Key("meta.id").eq(12)
is the same asKey("meta.id") == 12
, which is the same as{"field": "meta.id", "operator": "==", "value": 12}
.
To use a filter where the value is a query itself, use
Key(<field>)
as the value. For example:Key("tags.tag1").gt(Key("tag.tag2"))
.
The table below describes all of the functions which map to the underlying conditions. Additionally, several other methods are provided to simplify certain aspects of building filters and conditions:
Key(field).is_true()
: Same asKey(field).seq(true)
Key(field).is_false()
: Same asKey(field).seq(false)
Key(field).is_null()
: Same asKey(field).seq(null)
Key(field).op(operator).value(value)
: Same asKey(field).<op>(value)
. Can be used for times when you want to construct a filter and the operator is dynamic.
Operators:
| underlying operator | Key
function | Python
operator |
| ------------------- | -------- | -------- |
| >
| gt
| >
|
| <
| lt
| <
|
| <=
| lte
| <=
|
| >=
| gte
| >=
|
| ==
| eq
| ==
|
| !=
| ne
| !=
|
| ===
| seq
| N/A |
| !==
| sne
| N/A
| in
| in_
| N/A |
| !in
| nin
| N/A |
| contains
| contains
| N/A |
| !contains
| not_contains
| N/A |
| subset
| subset
| N/A |
| !subset
| not_subset
| N/A |
| superset
| superset
| N/A |
| !superset
| not_superset
| N/A |
| interval
| interval
| N/A |
| !interval
| not_interval
| N/A |
| startswith
| startswith
| N/A |
| endswith
| endswith
| N/A |
| present
| present
| N/A |
| !present
| not_present
| N/A |
Condition
Intended to be used in combination with
Key
to make creating filters easier than manually creating theJSON
. There are three conditions supported:and
,or
, andnot
. They can be manually accessed viaand_(...conditions)
,or_(...conditions)
, andnot_()
.The conditions can also be accessed through the overloaded operators
&
,|
, and~
, respectively, if in Python. Caution:&
and|
bind tighter than the comparisons operators and~
binds the tightest
Key("first_name") == "John" | Key("first_name") == "Bill"
is actually(Key("first_name") == ("John" | Key("first_name"))) == "Bill"
, not(Key("first_name") == "John") | (Key("first_name") == "Bill")
Condition.ander(cond1, cond2, *conditions)
AND two or more conditions together
Condition.orer(cond1, cond2, *conditions)
OR two or more conditions together
.and_(*conditions)
AND the current condition with multiple other conditions
.or_(*conditions)
OR the current condition with multiple other conditions
.not_()
NOT the current condition
.clone(deep=false)
Clone the current condition. If deep, then all aspects will be duplicated.
.traverse(callback, on_duplicate=false) -> Condition
Traverse through all of the filters in the current condition, calling
callback(filter)
with each one.on_duplicate
indicates whether the current condition is iterated over, or a duplicate. Whatever condition was iterated over will be returned.
.to_list() -> list
Return a list of filters/conditions for this condition
Condition.from_list(conditions) -> Condition
Take a list of filters/conditions and make a Condition object out of it
Examples
# Python
Key("state").eq("Texas") | Key("city").eq("New York")
(Key("gender") == "male") & (Key("age") >= 18) & (Key("selective_service") == False)
Key('creation_time.$parse_timestamp.$attr("year")').lt(2005).or_(
Key('creation_time.$parse_timestamp.$attr("year")').gt(2015)
).and_(
Key("product_id") == 15
)
# (year < 2005 OR year > 2015) AND product_id == 15
// JavaScript
Key('creation_time.$parse_timestamp.$call("year")').lt(2005).or_(
Key('creation_time.$parse_timestamp.$call("year")').gt(2015)
).and_(
Key("product_id").seq(15)
);
Formatter
Formatter
allows fields to be queried from an object and then formatted into a string. Any queries in a format string should be prefixed with@
and any validJQL
query can be used. For example,new Formatter('Name: @name}').single({"name": "John Smith"})
results inName: John Smith
.
Formatter(spec, fallback="<missing>", [convert_ints=true (if Python)])
spec
:str
The format stringfallback
:str
The value that will be used in the formatted string if a query could not be performed. For example, if the fieldmissing
does exist, then the query"Age: @missing"
will result in"Age: <missing>"
convert_ints
:bool
Whether digit-only fields get treated as integers or strings
.single(item, context={})
context
: SeeContext
for more details
Return a formatted string or the fallback value if the query fails
.many(items, context={})
context
: SeeContext
for more details
Return a list of formatted strings or the fallback value.
Notes
The differences between
Query
andFormatter
are:
Query
can return a value of any type,Formatter
just returns stringsFormatter
supports multiple queries, end-to-end,Query
does not- All queries must be prefixed with
@
withFormatter
, not just when used as an argument like withQuery
- Both support all the features of
JQL
Query
actually can theoretically do everythingFormatter
does by using$prefix
,$suffix
, and$string
. For example,'@name @age'
->'name.$suffix(" ").$suffix(@age)'
. However, the latter is much longer than the former
Example (flattening operations):
# Python
errors = {
"errors": {
"Process Error": "Could not communicate with the subprocess",
"Connection Error": "Could not connect with the database instance"
}
}
Formatter('Errors: \n@errors.$items.$map("join", ": \\n\\t").$join("\\n")').single(errors)
# Errors:
# Process Error:
# Could not communicate with the subprocess
# Connection Error:
# Could not connect with the database instance
// JavaScript
const errors = {
errors: {
"Process Error": "Could not communicate with the subprocess",
"Connection Error": "Could not connect with the database instance"
}
};
new Formatter('Erros: @errors.$items.$map("join", ": \\n\\t").$join("\\n")}').single(errors);
// Errors:
// Process Error:
// Could not communicate with the subprocess
// Connection Error:
// Could not connect with the database instance
The above example shows a powerful usage of flattening
errors
into its items, then joining each item; splitting the error name and message between lines, then joining all the errors together.
Example (nested replacement):
# Python
item = {
"x1": 1,
"y1": 1,
"x2": 12,
"y2": 54
}
Formatter(
"Midpoint: [@x2.$subtract(@x1).$divide(2), @y2.$subtract(@y1).$divide(2)]"
)
# Midpoint: [5.5, 26.5]
// JavaScript
const item = {
x1: 1,
y1: 1,
x2: 12,
y2: 54
};
new Formatter(
"Midpoint: [@x2.$subtract(@x1).$divide(2), @y2.$subtract(@y1).$divide(2)]"
).single(item);
// Midpoint: [5.5, 26.5]
Performance
There are several ways to increase the performance of querying, filtering, and formatting. The performance gains can be had by limiting the amount of times a query string has to be parsed. This means that using a
Query
,Filter
, orFormatter
object multiple times will be faster then creating a new object every time.
Examples:
# Python
# slower
for item in items:
f = Query("timestamp.$parse_timestamp").single(item)
# do other stuff
# faster
query = Query("timestamp.$parse_timestamp")
for item in items:
f = query.single(item)
# do other stuff
// JavaScript
// slower
items.forEach(item => {
let f = new Query("timestamp.$parse_timestamp").single(item);
// do other stuff
});
// faster
const query = new Query("timestamp.$parse_timestamp");
items.forEach(item => {
let f = query.single(item);
// do other stuff
});
Across 10,000 runs:
- Python
- reusing
Query
can improve performance by 302x - reusing
Filter
can improve performance by 132x - reusing
Formatter
can improve performance by 377x.
- reusing
- JavaScript
- reusing
Query
can improve performance by 192 - reusing
Filter
can improve performance by 120x - reusing
Formatter
can improve performance by 210x.
- reusing
Changelog
1.1.5
- Unify
README
between Python and JavaScript versions - Expand documentation
- Unify
1.1.4
- Added
$value_map
, which allows the values on an map/dict/object to be modified with a special, either in-place or on a duplicate - Exposed
context
so additional fields can manually be put into the current query space. This was already being used by$store_as
.context
can be passed to any.single()
or.many()
call. - Additionally,
Filter.many()
is now placingINDEX
into the query space to allow items to be filtered by their 0-based index - Exposed many of the internal TypeScript types
- Added
1.1.3
- Changed the behavior of
new Query("")
, from returning the fallback value, to returning the source data element itself. For example,new Query("").single(data) === data
. - Added
SpecialNotFoundError
, which is raised when an invalid special is queried. Can be imported asimport { SpecialNotFoundError } from "@blending_jake/jtools";
- Added new specials
$store_as(name)
Store the current query value in the current context for later use in the query. This does not change the underlying data being queried.$group_by(key="", count=false)
Take an incoming list and group the values by the specified key. Any valid JQL query can be used for the key, so""
means the value itself. The result by default will be keys to a list of values. However, ifcount=true
, then the result will be keys to the number of elements with each key.$sort(key="", reverse=false)
Sort an incoming list of values by a given key which can be any valid JQL query. By default,key=""
means the top-level value will be sorted on.$dict
Take an incoming list of(key, value)
pairs and make a dict out of them.$join_arg(arg, sep=', ')
Similar to$join
except this operates on an argument instead of the query value. Essentially a shortened form of$inject(arg).$join(sep)
.
- Changed the underlying special function definition to now include the keyword argument
context
. This argument is implemented to only be accessed by name to avoid collision if the user provides too many arguments in their query. The purpose of the context is to support specials adding values temporarily to the data namespace of the query, like$store_as
does.
- Changed the behavior of
1.1.2
- Version
1.1.1
was skipped to keep on track withJTools-Py
- Catch and handle
Extraneous Input Error
- Change
JQL
so that field and special names must only contain[-a-zA-Z0-9_]
.$index
can be used to get fields with prohibited characters. The change was to support more formatting use-cases, likeAge: @age, DOB: @dob
, which previously would have failed because the,
would have been considered part of the field name. - Change
Formatter
so thatfallback
is just a string that is substituted for invalid queries, instead of being the entire return value. Previously,"Age: @missing"
would result inNone
, now it results in"Age: <missing>"
. This change allows for better debugging as it becomes clear exactly which queries are failing. - Add function docstrings
- Version
1.1.0
- Rename
Getter
toQuery
to more accurately describe what the class does - Migrate queries to use
JQL
- The migration opens the door to nested queries in
Query
, allowing queries, prefixed with@
to be used as arguments to specials, or even as values in the supported argument data structures - Special arguments are no longer parsed as
JSON
, allowing features like sets, query nesting, and support for single and double quoted strings. - Formatter no longer uses
{{}}
to surround queries. Instead, all queries must be prefixed with@
, so"{{name}} {{age}}"
->"@name @age"
.@@
must be used to get a literal@
in a formatted string:"bob@@gmail.com"
->"[email protected]"
- Formatter got about a 2x performance boost
- The migration opens the door to nested queries in
- Added
$wrap(prefix, suffix)
to combine$prefix
and$suffix
- Added
$remove_nulls
- Added
$lookup(map, fallback=None)
- Added
$wildcard(next, just_value=True)
, which allows level of nesting to be "skipped", such that a list of sub-values wherenext
is present - Added a
fallback
argument to$index
- Added
$print
to display the current value in the query - Added
$inject
to allow any valid argument value to be injected into the query to be accessed and transformed by subsequent fields and specials
- Rename
1.0.6
- Migrate to TypeScript, so a declaration file is now included in the distribution
- Add this
README
- Add
===
and!==
filters for strict equality checking. The methodsseq
andsne
have been added toKey
to correspond with the new filters. - Rename
null
->!present
and!null
->present
. Corresponding methods have been renamed tonot_present
andpresent
. This filter will catch values that arenull
orundefined
. - Make membership filters (
in
,contains
,!in
and!contains
) work properly with strings, arrays, associative arrays, and sets. - Remove
$datetime
. See below for replacement. - Add
$call
and$attr
for calling a function and accessing an attribute. Can be used to replace$datetime
functionality. - Remove
Formatter.format
and addFormatter.single
andFormatter.many
to be consistent across other classes and support formatting arrays of items. - Add more tests to increase coverage and do basic performance testing