peacock-data-public-datasets-idc-cronscript
/
venv
/lib
/python3.10
/site-packages
/pydantic
/v1
/json.py
import datetime | |
from collections import deque | |
from decimal import Decimal | |
from enum import Enum | |
from ipaddress import IPv4Address, IPv4Interface, IPv4Network, IPv6Address, IPv6Interface, IPv6Network | |
from pathlib import Path | |
from re import Pattern | |
from types import GeneratorType | |
from typing import Any, Callable, Dict, Type, Union | |
from uuid import UUID | |
from .color import Color | |
from .networks import NameEmail | |
from .types import SecretBytes, SecretStr | |
__all__ = 'pydantic_encoder', 'custom_pydantic_encoder', 'timedelta_isoformat' | |
def isoformat(o: Union[datetime.date, datetime.time]) -> str: | |
return o.isoformat() | |
def decimal_encoder(dec_value: Decimal) -> Union[int, float]: | |
""" | |
Encodes a Decimal as int of there's no exponent, otherwise float | |
This is useful when we use ConstrainedDecimal to represent Numeric(x,0) | |
where a integer (but not int typed) is used. Encoding this as a float | |
results in failed round-tripping between encode and parse. | |
Our Id type is a prime example of this. | |
>>> decimal_encoder(Decimal("1.0")) | |
1.0 | |
>>> decimal_encoder(Decimal("1")) | |
1 | |
""" | |
if dec_value.as_tuple().exponent >= 0: | |
return int(dec_value) | |
else: | |
return float(dec_value) | |
ENCODERS_BY_TYPE: Dict[Type[Any], Callable[[Any], Any]] = { | |
bytes: lambda o: o.decode(), | |
Color: str, | |
datetime.date: isoformat, | |
datetime.datetime: isoformat, | |
datetime.time: isoformat, | |
datetime.timedelta: lambda td: td.total_seconds(), | |
Decimal: decimal_encoder, | |
Enum: lambda o: o.value, | |
frozenset: list, | |
deque: list, | |
GeneratorType: list, | |
IPv4Address: str, | |
IPv4Interface: str, | |
IPv4Network: str, | |
IPv6Address: str, | |
IPv6Interface: str, | |
IPv6Network: str, | |
NameEmail: str, | |
Path: str, | |
Pattern: lambda o: o.pattern, | |
SecretBytes: str, | |
SecretStr: str, | |
set: list, | |
UUID: str, | |
} | |
def pydantic_encoder(obj: Any) -> Any: | |
from dataclasses import asdict, is_dataclass | |
from .main import BaseModel | |
if isinstance(obj, BaseModel): | |
return obj.dict() | |
elif is_dataclass(obj): | |
return asdict(obj) | |
# Check the class type and its superclasses for a matching encoder | |
for base in obj.__class__.__mro__[:-1]: | |
try: | |
encoder = ENCODERS_BY_TYPE[base] | |
except KeyError: | |
continue | |
return encoder(obj) | |
else: # We have exited the for loop without finding a suitable encoder | |
raise TypeError(f"Object of type '{obj.__class__.__name__}' is not JSON serializable") | |
def custom_pydantic_encoder(type_encoders: Dict[Any, Callable[[Type[Any]], Any]], obj: Any) -> Any: | |
# Check the class type and its superclasses for a matching encoder | |
for base in obj.__class__.__mro__[:-1]: | |
try: | |
encoder = type_encoders[base] | |
except KeyError: | |
continue | |
return encoder(obj) | |
else: # We have exited the for loop without finding a suitable encoder | |
return pydantic_encoder(obj) | |
def timedelta_isoformat(td: datetime.timedelta) -> str: | |
""" | |
ISO 8601 encoding for Python timedelta object. | |
""" | |
minutes, seconds = divmod(td.seconds, 60) | |
hours, minutes = divmod(minutes, 60) | |
return f'{"-" if td.days < 0 else ""}P{abs(td.days)}DT{hours:d}H{minutes:d}M{seconds:d}.{td.microseconds:06d}S' | |