Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: objdict-bf
Version: 0.1.10
Summary: A custom wrapper object around dict that allows attribute-style access to dictionary items and support for nested JSON data.
Home-page: https://github.com/B4PT0R/objdict
Author: Baptiste Ferrand
Author-email: bferrand.maths@gmail.com
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Requires-Python: >=3.6
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
License-File: LICENSE

# objdict-bf

`objdict-bf` is a Python module that provides a wrapper class for conveniently manipulating dictionaries or dict-based JSON nested structures using attribute-like syntax. It is intended mostly to ease manipulation of JSON data, web requests responses, configuration files, dynamic prototyping...

## Features

- Attribute-style access to dictionary items (e.g., `obj.key` instead of `obj['key']`).
- Synchronization with the original dictionary if passed at instantiation.
- Utility methods for recursive conversion of nested structures to and from `objdict` and `dict`.
- JSON serialization and deserialization methods for both strings and files with optional jsonpickle support.
- optional object-like behavior, by auto-passing the instance as 'self' to callable attributes with 'self' in their signature.

## Installation

```bash
pip install objdict-bf
```

## Usage

Here's an example of how to use the `objdict` wrapper:

```python
from objdict_bf import objdict

# Create an objdict with some initial data
data = objdict(
    name='John',
    age=30,
    location='New York'
)

#Or synchronize with an existing dict
d={'name': 'John', 'age': 30, 'location': 'New York'}
data = objdict(d)

# Access data using attribute-style access
print(data.name)  # Output: John
print(data.age)   # Output: 30

# Modify data
data.age = 31

#Changes are reflected on the original dict
print(d['age']) #Ouput: 31

#Support for nested structures involving lists
d={
    'profile':{
        'name':'John',
        'hobbies':[
            {'type':'sport','title':'tennis'},
            {'type':'music','title':'guitar playing'}
        ]
    }
}
data = objdict(d)

print(data.profile.hobbies[1].title) #Output: guitar playing

#Conversion of dict items to their objdict version is automatic.
#The objdict being essentially a wrapper interface on the initial dict,  
#this conversion is reflected in the initial dict content as well

print(isinstance(data.profile.hobbies[1],objdict)) #Output: True
print(isinstance(d['profile']['hobbies'][1],objdict)) #Output: True

#to_dict returns the underlying dict, converting recursively all objdicts found in the nested structure back to dicts
print(d is data.to_dict()) #Ouptut: True
print(isinstance(d['profile']['hobbies'][1], dict) #Output: True 

# Serialize to JSON string
json_string = data.dumps()

#dump to a JSON file
data.dump("my_json_file.json")
#or
data.dump("my_json_file.json",use_jsonpickle=True)

#make some more changes
data.email="dummy.email@gmail.com

#the reference to the file and jsonpickle usage preference from the last dump is kept in the objdict instance so you don't have to pass them again
data.dump()

# Deserialize from JSON string (creates a new instance)
data = objdict.loads(json_string)
#or
data = objdict.loads(json_string,use_jsonpickle=True)

# Deserialize from a JSON file (new instance keeping reference to the json file)
data = objdict.load("my_json_file.json")
#or
data = objdict.load("my_json_file.json",use_jsonpickle=True)

#update data
data.email="dummy.email@gmail.com"
data.user="dummy_username"

#dump changes to 'my_json_file.json' 
data.dump()

#Using it as a mocked object with context aware methods thanks to the _auto_self parameter which automatically passes the objdict instance as 'self' to callable attributes having 'self' in their signature

obj=objdict(_auto_self=True)
obj.a=2

#create a function with 'self' as first parameter (any other name won't receive the instance)
def add_to_a(self,b):
    self.a+=b

#attach the function as attribute
obj.add_to_a=add_to_a
obj.add_to_a(3)
print(obj.a) #output 5

```

## License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the [LICENSE](LICENSE) file for details.
