Python Data Structures for Humans™.
For more information, please see our documentation: http://schematics.readthedocs.org/en/latest/
Schematics is a Python library to combine types into structures, validate them, and transform the shapes of your data based on simple descriptions.
The internals are similar to ORM type systems, but there is no database layer in Schematics. Instead, we believe that building a database layer is made significantly easier when Schematics handles everything but writing the query.
Further, it can be used for a range of tasks where having a database involved may not make sense.
Some common use cases:
- Design and document specific data structures
- Convert structures to and from different formats such as JSON or MsgPack
- Validate API inputs
- Remove fields based on access rights of some data's recipient
- Define message formats for communications protocols, like an RPC
- Custom persistence layers
This is a simple Model.
>>> from schematics.models import Model >>> from schematics.types import StringType, URLType >>> class Person(Model): ... name = StringType(required=True) ... website = URLType() ... >>> person = Person({'name': u'Joe Strummer', ... 'website': 'http://soundcloud.com/joestrummer'}) >>> person.name u'Joe Strummer'
Serializing the data to JSON.
>>> import json >>> json.dumps(person.to_primitive()) {"name": "Joe Strummer", "website": "http://soundcloud.com/joestrummer"}
Let's try validating without a name value, since it's required.
>>> person = Person() >>> person.website = 'http://www.amontobin.com/' >>> person.validate() Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> File "schematics/models.py", line 231, in validate raise ModelValidationError(e.messages) schematics.exceptions.ModelValidationError: {'name': [u'This field is required.']}
Add the field and validation passes
>>> person = Person() >>> person.name = 'Amon Tobin' >>> person.website = 'http://www.amontobin.com/' >>> person.validate() >>>
At the top of this projects Github page is says "forked from exfm/dictshield". James (@j2labs) started dictshield while working for exfm. It was open sourced, so he forked it and continued work on it.
Alas, the name, which was originally a 3am decision to make me James laugh turned into something that was awkward and a little crude, so it was renamed Schematics.
DictShield still exists, but consider anything with that label to be a ghost from this project's early years.
Run coverage and check the missing statements.
$ `coverage run --source schematics -m py.test && coverage report`