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Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: srsly
Version: 1.0.1
Summary: Modern high-performance serialization utilities for Python
Home-page: https://explosion.ai
Author: Explosion AI
Author-email: contact@explosion.ai
License: MIT
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Environment :: Console
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Science/Research
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Operating System :: POSIX :: Linux
Classifier: Operating System :: MacOS :: MacOS X
Classifier: Operating System :: Microsoft :: Windows
Classifier: Programming Language :: Cython
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
Requires-Dist: pathlib (==1.0.1); python_version < "3.4"
<a href="https://explosion.ai"><img src="https://explosion.ai/assets/img/logo.svg" width="125" height="125" align="right" /></a>
# srsly: Modern high-performance serialization utilities for Python
This package bundles some of the best Python serialization libraries into one
standalone package, with a high-level API that makes it easy to write code
that's correct across platforms and Pythons. This allows us to provide all the
serialization utilities we need in a single binary wheel.
[![Azure Pipelines](https://img.shields.io/azure-devops/build/explosion-ai/public/4/master.svg?logo=azure-pipelines&style=flat-square)](https://dev.azure.com/explosion-ai/public/_build?definitionId=4)
[![PyPi](https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/srsly.svg?style=flat-square&logo=pypi&logoColor=white)](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/srsly)
[![conda](https://img.shields.io/conda/vn/conda-forge/srsly.svg?style=flat-square&logo=conda-forge&logoColor=white)](https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/srsly)
[![GitHub](https://img.shields.io/github/release/explosion/srsly/all.svg?style=flat-square&logo=github)](https://github.com/explosion/srsly)
[![Python wheels](https://img.shields.io/badge/wheels-%E2%9C%93-4c1.svg?longCache=true&style=flat-square&logo=python&logoColor=white)](https://github.com/explosion/wheelwright/releases)
## Motivation
Serialization is hard, especially across Python versions and multiple platforms.
After dealing with many subtle bugs over the years (encodings, locales, large
files) our libraries like [spaCy](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy) and
[Prodigy](https://prodi.gy) have steadily grown a number of utility functions to
wrap the multiple serialization formats we need to support (especially `json`,
`msgpack` and `pickle`). These wrapping functions ended up duplicated across our
codebases, so we wanted to put them in one place.
At the same time, we noticed that having a lot of small dependencies was making
maintenance harder, and making installation slower. To solve this, we've made
`srsly` standalone, by including the component packages directly within it. This
way we can provide all the serialization utilities we need in a single binary
wheel.
`srsly` currently includes forks of the following packages:
- [`ujson`](https://github.com/esnme/ultrajson)
- [`msgpack`](https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack-python)
- [`msgpack-numpy`](https://github.com/lebedov/msgpack-numpy)
- [`cloudpickle`](https://github.com/cloudpipe/cloudpickle)
## Installation
`srsly` can be installed from pip:
```bash
pip install srsly
```
Or from conda via conda-forge:
```bash
conda install -c conda-forge srsly
```
Alternatively, you can also compile the library from source. You'll need to make
sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution
including header files, a compiler (XCode command-line tools on macOS / OS X or
Visual C++ build tools on Windows), pip, virtualenv and git installed.
```bash
pip install -r requirements.txt # install development dependencies
python setup.py build_ext --inplace # compile the library
```
## API
### JSON
> 📦 The underlying module is exposed via `srsly.ujson`. However, we normally
> interact with it via the utility functions only.
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.json_dumps`
Serialize an object to a JSON string. Takes care of Python 2/3 compatibility and
falls back to `json` if `sort_keys=True` is used (until it's fixed in `ujson`).
```python
data = {"foo": "bar", "baz": 123}
json_string = srsly.json_dumps(data)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | ------- | ------------------------------------------------------ |
| `data` | - | The JSON-serializable data to output. |
| `indent` | int | Number of spaces used to indent JSON. Defaults to `0`. |
| `sort_keys` | bool | Sort dictionary keys. Defaults to `False`. |
| **RETURNS** | unicode | The serialized string. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.json_loads`
Deserialize unicode or bytes to a Python object.
```python
data = '{"foo": "bar", "baz": 123}'
obj = srsly.json_loads(data)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | --------------- | ------------------------------- |
| `data` | unicode / bytes | The data to deserialize. |
| **RETURNS** | - | The deserialized Python object. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.write_json`
Create a JSON file and dump contents or write to standard output.
```python
data = {"foo": "bar", "baz": 123}
srsly.write_json("/path/to/file.json", data)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ---------- | ---------------- | ------------------------------------------------------ |
| `location` | unicode / `Path` | The file path or `"-"` to write to stdout. |
| `data` | - | The JSON-serializable data to output. |
| `indent` | int | Number of spaces used to indent JSON. Defaults to `2`. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.read_json`
Load JSON from a file or standard input.
```python
data = srsly.read_json("/path/to/file.json")
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | ---------------- | ------------------------------------------ |
| `location` | unicode / `Path` | The file path or `"-"` to read from stdin. |
| **RETURNS** | dict / list | The loaded JSON content. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.write_gzip_json`
Create a gzipped JSON file and dump contents.
```python
data = {"foo": "bar", "baz": 123}
srsly.write_gzip_json("/path/to/file.json.gz", data)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ---------- | ---------------- | ------------------------------------------------------ |
| `location` | unicode / `Path` | The file path. |
| `data` | - | The JSON-serializable data to output. |
| `indent` | int | Number of spaces used to indent JSON. Defaults to `2`. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.read_gzip_json`
Load gzipped JSON from a file.
```python
data = srsly.read_gzip_json("/path/to/file.json.gz")
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | ---------------- | ------------------------ |
| `location` | unicode / `Path` | The file path. |
| **RETURNS** | dict / list | The loaded JSON content. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.write_jsonl`
Create a JSONL file (newline-delimited JSON) and dump contents line by line, or
write to standard output.
```python
data = [{"foo": "bar"}, {"baz": 123}]
srsly.write_jsonl("/path/to/file.jsonl", data)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ---------- | ---------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `location` | unicode / `Path` | The file path or `"-"` to write to stdout. |
| `lines` | iterable | The JSON-serializable lines. |
| `append` | bool | Append to an existing file. Will open it in `"a"` mode and insert a newline before writing lines. Defaults to `False`. |
| `append_new_line` | bool | Defines whether a new line should first be written when appending to an existing file. Defaults to `True`. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.read_jsonl`
Read a JSONL file (newline-delimited JSON) or from JSONL data from standard
input and yield contents line by line. Blank lines will always be skipped.
```python
data = srsly.read_jsonl("/path/to/file.jsonl")
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ---------- | -------------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `location` | unicode / Path | The file path or `"-"` to read from stdin. |
| `skip` | bool | Skip broken lines and don't raise `ValueError`. Defaults to `False`. |
| **YIELDS** | - | The loaded JSON contents of each line. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.is_json_serializable`
Check if a Python object is JSON-serializable.
```python
assert srsly.is_json_serializable({"hello": "world"}) is True
assert srsly.is_json_serializable(lambda x: x) is False
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | ---- | ---------------------------------------- |
| `obj` | - | The object to check. |
| **RETURNS** | bool | Whether the object is JSON-serializable. |
### msgpack
> 📦 The underlying module is exposed via `srsly.msgpack`. However, we normally
> interact with it via the utility functions only.
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.msgpack_dumps`
Serialize an object to a msgpack byte string.
```python
data = {"foo": "bar", "baz": 123}
msg = srsly.msgpack_dumps(data)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | ----- | ---------------------- |
| `data` | - | The data to serialize. |
| **RETURNS** | bytes | The serialized bytes. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.msgpack_loads`
Deserialize msgpack bytes to a Python object.
```python
msg = b"\x82\xa3foo\xa3bar\xa3baz{"
data = srsly.msgpack_loads(msg)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | ----- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `data` | bytes | The data to deserialize. |
| `use_list` | bool | Don't use tuples instead of lists. Can make deserialization slower. Defaults to `True`. |
| **RETURNS** | - | The deserialized Python object. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.write_msgpack`
Create a msgpack file and dump contents.
```python
data = {"foo": "bar", "baz": 123}
srsly.write_msgpack("/path/to/file.msg", data)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ---------- | ---------------- | ---------------------- |
| `location` | unicode / `Path` | The file path. |
| `data` | - | The data to serialize. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.read_msgpack`
Load a msgpack file.
```python
data = srsly.read_msgpack("/path/to/file.msg")
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | ---------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `location` | unicode / `Path` | The file path. |
| `use_list` | bool | Don't use tuples instead of lists. Can make deserialization slower. Defaults to `True`. |
| **RETURNS** | - | The loaded and deserialized content. |
### pickle
> 📦 The underlying module is exposed via `srsly.cloudpickle`. However, we
> normally interact with it via the utility functions only.
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.pickle_dumps`
Serialize a Python object with pickle.
```python
data = {"foo": "bar", "baz": 123}
pickled_data = srsly.pickle_dumps(data)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | ----- | ------------------------------------------------------ |
| `data` | - | The object to serialize. |
| `protocol` | int | Protocol to use. `-1` for highest. Defaults to `None`. |
| **RETURNS** | bytes | The serialized object. |
#### <kbd>function</kbd> `srsly.pickle_loads`
Deserialize bytes with pickle.
```python
pickled_data = b"\x80\x04\x95\x19\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00\x00}\x94(\x8c\x03foo\x94\x8c\x03bar\x94\x8c\x03baz\x94K{u."
data = srsly.pickle_loads(pickled_data)
```
| Argument | Type | Description |
| ----------- | ----- | ------------------------------- |
| `data` | bytes | The data to deserialize. |
| **RETURNS** | - | The deserialized Python object. |