stouputils.typing module#
This module provides utilities for typing enhancements such as JSON type aliases:
- ClassInfo = ClassInfo[source]#
A type alias for class information used in isinstance checks, including unions and tuples of classes
- is_generic_instance(
- obj: Any,
- type_hint: type[T],
- is_generic_instance(
- obj: Any,
- type_hint: UnionType,
- is_generic_instance(
- obj: Any,
- type_hint: T,
- is_generic_instance(
- obj: Any,
- type_hint: T,
- is_generic_instance(
- obj: Any,
- type_hint: Any,
Runtime equivalent of isinstance() for generic type hints. If you want to check types in a dict, you can use this function
is_generic_instance(my_dict, dict[str, int])to check if my_dict is a dictionary with string keys and integer values.### Note: this function is not a perfect replacement for static type checking and may not cover all edge cases or complex type hints.
- Parameters:
obj (Any) – The object to check.
type_hint (Any) – The type hint to check against.
- Returns:
True if obj matches type_hint, False otherwise.
Examples
>>> is_generic_instance(5, int) True >>> is_generic_instance("hello", str) True >>> is_generic_instance([1, 2, 3], list) True >>> is_generic_instance([1, 2, 3], list[int]) True >>> is_generic_instance([1, 2, 3], list[str]) False >>> is_generic_instance({"a": 1}, dict[str, int]) True >>> is_generic_instance({"a": 1}, dict[str, int] | Mapping) True >>> is_generic_instance({"a": 1}, dict[str, int] | Mapping | JsonDict) True >>> is_generic_instance({"a": 1}, (dict[str, int], Mapping, JsonDict)) True >>> is_generic_instance([1, 2, 3], dict[str, int]) False >>> is_generic_instance({"a": 1}, "dict[str, int] | Mapping | JsonDict") True
- convert_to_serializable(obj: Any) Any[source]#
Recursively convert objects to JSON-serializable forms.
Objects with a to_dict() or asdict() method are converted to their dictionary representation. Dictionaries and lists are recursively processed.
Can also be used to convert nested structures containing custom objects, such as defaultdict, dataclasses, or other user-defined types.
- Parameters:
obj (Any) – The object to convert
- Returns:
The JSON-serializable version of the object
- Return type:
Any
Examples
>>> from typing import defaultdict >>> my_dict = defaultdict(lambda: defaultdict(int)) >>> my_dict['a']['b'] += 6 >>> my_dict['c']['d'] = 4 >>> my_dict['a'] defaultdict(<class 'int'>, {'b': 6}) >>> my_dict['c'] defaultdict(<class 'int'>, {'d': 4}) >>> convert_to_serializable(my_dict) {'a': {'b': 6}, 'c': {'d': 4}}
>>> from dataclasses import dataclass >>> @dataclass ... class Point: ... x: int ... y: int ... some_list: list[int] >>> convert_to_serializable(Point(3, 4, [1, 2, 3])) {'x': 3, 'y': 4, 'some_list': [1, 2, 3]}