glom Tutorial

Learn to use glom in no time!

Basic use of glom requires only a glance, not a whole tutorial. The case studies below takes a wider look at day-to-day data and object manipulation, helping you develop an eye for writing robust, declarative data transformations.

Go beyond basic with 10 minutes or less, and even further if you can spare a half hour.

Note

glom’s tutorial is a runnable module, feel free to run pip install glom and from glom.tutorial import * in the Python REPL to glom along. Or try it in your browser here or in the embedded REPLs below!

Dealing with Data

Every application deals with data, and these days, even the simplest applications deal with rich, heavily-nested data.

What does nested data look like? In its most basic form:

>>> data = {'a': {'b': {'c': 'd'}}}
>>> data['a']['b']['c']
'd'

Pretty simple right? On a good day, it certainly can be. But other days, a value might not be set:

>>> data2 = {
...     'a': {
...         'b': None
...     }
... }
>>> data2['a']['b']['c']
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: 'NoneType' object is not subscriptable

Well that’s no good. We didn’t get our value. We got a TypeError, a type of error that doesn’t help us at all. The error message doesn’t even tell us which access failed. If data2 had been passed to us, we wouldn’t know if 'a', 'b', or 'c' had been set to None.

If only there were a more semantically powerful accessor.

Accessing Nested Data

AKA “Access Granted”

After years of research and countless iterations, the glom team landed on this simple construct:

>>> glom(data, 'a.b.c')
'd'

Well that’s short, and reads fine, but what about in the error case?

>>> glom(data2, 'a.b.c')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
PathAccessError: could not access 'c', index 2 in path Path('a', 'b', 'c'), got error: ...

That’s more like it! We have a function that can give us our data, or give us an error message we can read, understand, and act upon.

See also

For more on glom’s error messages, see Exceptions & Debugging.

Interactive Deep Get

And would you believe this “deep access” example doesn’t even scratch the surface of the tip of the iceberg? Welcome to glom.

Going Beyond Access

To start out, let’s introduce some basic terminology:

  • target is our data, be it a dict, list, or any other object

  • spec is what we want output to be

With output = glom(target, spec) committed to memory, we’re ready for some new requirements.

Let’s follow some astronomers on their journey exploring the solar system.

>>> target = {
...     'galaxy': {
...         'system': {
...             'planet': 'jupiter'
...         }
...     }
... }
>>> spec = 'galaxy.system.planet'
>>> glom(target, spec)
'jupiter'

Our astronomers want to focus in on the Solar system, and represent planets as a list. Let’s restructure the data to make a list of names:

>>> target = {
...     'system': {
...         'planets': [
...             {'name': 'earth'},
...             {'name': 'jupiter'}
...         ]
...     }
... }
>>> glom(target, ('system.planets', ['name']))
['earth', 'jupiter']

And let’s say we want to capture a parallel list of moon counts with the names as well:

>>> target = {
...     'system': {
...         'planets': [
...             {'name': 'earth', 'moons': 1},
...             {'name': 'jupiter', 'moons': 69}
...         ]
...     }
... }
>>> spec = {
...     'names': ('system.planets', ['name']),
...     'moons': ('system.planets', ['moons'])
... }
>>> pprint(glom(target, spec))
{'moons': [1, 69], 'names': ['earth', 'jupiter']}

We can react to changing data requirements as fast as the data itself can change, naturally restructuring our results, despite the input’s nested nature. Like a list comprehension, but for nested data, our code mirrors our output.

Handling Nested Lists

In the example above we introduced a new wrinkle: the target for planets has multiple entries stored in a list. Previously our targets were all nested dictionaries.

To handle this we use a new spec pattern: (path, [subpath]). In this pattern path is the path to the list, and subpath is the path within each element of the list. What’s that? You need to handle lists within lists (within lists …)? Then just repeat the pattern, replacing subpath with another (path, [subpath]) tuple. For example, say we have information about each planet’s moons like so:

>>> target = {
...     'system': {
...         'planets': [
...             {
...                 'name': 'earth',
...                 'moons': [
...                     {'name': 'luna'}
...                 ]
...             },
...             {
...                 'name': 'jupiter',
...                 'moons': [
...                     {'name': 'io'},
...                     {'name': 'europa'}
...                 ]
...             }
...         ]
...     }
... }

We can get the names of each moon from our nested lists by nesting our subpath specs:

>>> spec = {
...     'planet_names': ('system.planets', ['name']),
...     'moon_names': ('system.planets', [('moons', ['name'])])
... }
>>> pprint(glom(target, spec))
{'moon_names': [['luna'], ['io', 'europa']], 'planet_names': ['earth', 'jupiter']}

Changing Requirements

Unfortunately, data in the real world is messy. You might be expecting a certain format and end up getting something completely different. No worries, glom to the rescue.

Coalesce is a glom construct that allows you to specify fallback behavior for a list of subspecs. Subspecs are passed as positional arguments, while defaults can be set using keyword arguments.

Let’s say our astronomers recently got a new update in their systems, and sometimes system will contain dwarf_planets instead of planets.

To handle this, we can define the dwarf_planets subspec as a Coalesce fallback.

>>> from glom import Coalesce
>>> target = {
...     'system': {
...         'planets': [
...             {'name': 'earth', 'moons': 1},
...             {'name': 'jupiter', 'moons': 69}
...         ]
...     }
... }
>>> spec = {
...     'planets': (Coalesce('system.planets', 'system.dwarf_planets'), ['name']),
...     'moons': (Coalesce('system.planets', 'system.dwarf_planets'), ['moons'])
... }
>>> pprint(glom(target, spec))
{'moons': [1, 69], 'planets': ['earth', 'jupiter']}

You can see here we get the expected results, but say our target changes…

>>> target = {
...     'system': {
...         'dwarf_planets': [
...             {'name': 'pluto', 'moons': 5},
...             {'name': 'ceres', 'moons': 0}
...         ]
...     }
... }
>>> pprint(glom(target, spec))
{'moons': [5, 0], 'planets': ['pluto', 'ceres']}

Voila, the target can still be parsed and we can elegantly handle changes in our data formats.

Data-Driven Assignment

Quite often APIs deliver data in dictionaries without constant key values. They use parts of the data itself as a key. This we call data-driven assignment.

The following example shows you a way to handle this situation. It extracts the moon count from a dictionary that has the planet names as a key.

>>> from glom import glom, T, Merge, Iter, Coalesce
>>> target = {
...    "pluto": {"moons": 6, "population": None},
...    "venus": {"population": {"aliens": 5}},
...    "earth": {"moons": 1, "population": {"humans": 7700000000, "aliens": 1}},
... }
>>> spec = {
...     "moons": (
...          T.items(),
...          Iter({T[0]: (T[1], Coalesce("moons", default=0))}),
...          Merge(),
...     )
... }
>>> pprint(glom(target, spec))
{'moons': {'earth': 1, 'pluto': 6, 'venus': 0}}

Don’t worry if you do not fully understand how this works at this point. If you would like to learn more, look up Iter(), T, or Merge in the glom API reference.

True Python Native

Most other implementations are limited to a particular data format or pure model, be it jmespath or XPath/XSLT. glom makes no such sacrifices of practicality, harnessing the full power of Python itself.

Going back to our example, let’s say we wanted to get an aggregate moon count:

>>> target = {
...     'system': {
...         'planets': [
...             {'name': 'earth', 'moons': 1},
...             {'name': 'jupiter', 'moons': 69}
...         ]
...     }
... }
>>> pprint(glom(target, {'moon_count': ('system.planets', ['moons'], sum)}))
{'moon_count': 70}

With glom, you have full access to Python at any given moment. Pass values to functions, whether built-in, imported, or defined inline with lambda.

Interactive Planetary Templating

Practical Production Use

AKA “Point of Contact”

glom is a practical tool for production use. To best demonstrate how you can use it, we’ll be building an API response. We’re implementing a Contacts web service, like an address book, but backed by an ORM/database and compatible with web and mobile frontends.

Let’s create a Contact to familiarize ourselves with our test data: pri

>>> from glom.tutorial import *  # import the tutorial module members
>>> contact = Contact('Julian',
...                   emails=[Email(email='jlahey@svtp.info')],
...                   location='Canada')
>>> contact.save()
>>> contact.primary_email
Email(id=5, email='jlahey@svtp.info', email_type='personal')
>>> contact.add_date
datetime.datetime(...)
>>> contact.id
5

As you can see, the Contact object has fields for primary_email, defaulting to the first email in the email list, and add_date, to track the date the contact was added. And as the unique, autoincrementing id suggests, there appear to be a few other contacts already in our system.

>>> len(Contact.objects.all())
5

Sure enough, we’ve got a little address book going here. But right now it consists of plain Python objects, not very API friendly:

>>> json.dumps(Contact.objects.all())
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: Contact(id=1, name='Kurt', ...) ... is not JSON serializable

But at least we know our data, so let’s get to building the API response with glom.

First, let’s set our source object, conventionally named target:

>>> target = Contact.objects.all()  # here we could do filtering, etc.

Next, let’s specify the format of our result. Remember, the processing is not happening here, this is just declaring the format. We’ll be going over the specifics of what each line does after we get our results.

>>> spec = {'results': [{'id': 'id',
...                      'name': 'name',
...                      'add_date': ('add_date', str),
...                      'emails': ('emails', [{'id': 'id',
...                                             'email': 'email',
...                                             'type': 'email_type'}]),
...                      'primary_email': Coalesce('primary_email.email', default=None),
...                      'pref_name': Coalesce('pref_name', 'name', skip='', default=''),
...                      'detail': Coalesce('company',
...                                         'location',
...                                         ('add_date.year', str),
...                                         skip='', default='')}]}

With target and spec in hand, we’re ready to glom, build our response, and take a look the final json-serialized form:

>>> resp = glom(target, spec)
>>> print(json.dumps(resp, indent=2, sort_keys=True))
{
  "results": [
    {
      "add_date": "20...",
      "detail": "Mountain View",
      "emails": [
        {
          "email": "kurt@example.com",
          "id": 1,
          "type": "personal"
        }
      ],
      "id": 1,
      "name": "Kurt",
      "pref_name": "Kurt",
      "primary_email": "kurt@example.com"
    },
...
}

As we can see, our response looks a lot like our glom specification. This type of WYSIWYG code is one of glom’s most important features. After we’ve appreciated that simple fact, let’s look at it line by line.

Understanding the Specification

For id and name, we’re just doing simple copy-overs. For add_date, we use a tuple to denote repeated gloms; we access add_date and pass the result to str to convert it to a string.

For emails we need to serialize a list of subobjects. Good news, glom subgloms just fine, too. We use a tuple to access emails, iterate over that list, and from each we copy over id and email. Note how email_type is easily remapped to simply type.

For primary_email we see our first usage of glom’s Coalesce feature. Much like SQL’s keyword of the same name, Coalesce returns the result of the first spec that returns a valid value. In our case, primary_email can be None, so a further access of primary_email.email would, outside of glom, result in an AttributeError or TypeError like the one we described before the Contact example. Inside of a glom Coalesce, exceptions are caught and we move on to the next spec. glom raises a CoalesceError when no specs match, so we use default to tell it to return None instead.

Some Contacts have nicknames or other names they prefer to go by, so for pref_name, we want to return the stored pref_name, or fall back to the normal name. Again, we use Coalesce, but this time we tell it not only to ignore the default GlomError exceptions, but also ignore empty string values, and finally default to empty string if all specs result in empty strings or GlomError.

And finally, for our last field, detail, we want to conjure up a bit of info that’ll help jog the user’s memory. We’re going to include the location, or company, or year the contact was added. You can see an example of this feature as implemented by GitHub, here: https://github.com/mahmoud/glom/stargazers

Interactive Contact Management

Conclusion

We’ve seen a crash course in how glom can tame your data and act as a powerful source of code coherency. glom transforms not only your data, but also your code, bringing it in line with the data itself.

glom tamed our nested data, avoiding tedious, bug-prone lines, replacing what would have been large sections with code that was declarative, but flexible, an ideal balance for maintainability.