%global _empty_manifest_terminate_build 0 Name: python-marshmallow-toplevel Version: 0.1.3 Release: 1 Summary: Validate top-level lists with all the power of marshmallow License: MIT URL: https://github.com/and-semakin/marshmallow-toplevel Source0: https://mirrors.aliyun.com/pypi/web/packages/cf/6a/34ec3695b91a32cc06721500b86d467e89a4537df3247dfcf58b45af7a4d/marshmallow-toplevel-0.1.3.tar.gz BuildArch: noarch Requires: python3-marshmallow %description # marshmallow-toplevel Load and validate top-level lists with all the power of [marshmallow](https://github.com/marshmallow-code/marshmallow). ## Installation ```sh pip install marshmallow-toplevel ``` ## Usage ```python from marshmallow import fields from marshmallow_toplevel import TopLevelSchema class BatchOfSomething(TopLevelSchema): _toplevel = fields.Nested( SomethingSchema, required=True, many=True, validate=any_validation_logic_applied_to_list ) ``` ## Rationale Imagine that you have an API endpoint (or any other program that accepts user input), which is intended to accept multiple blog articles and save them to a database. Semantically, your data is a list of dictionaries: ```python [ {"id": 1, "title": "Hello World!"}, {"id": 2, "title": "Yet another awesome article."}, ... ] ``` You describe article object schema and put constraints on your data: ```python from marshmallow import Schema, fields, validate class ArticleSchema(Schema): id = fields.Int(required=True) title = fields.Str(required=True, validate=validate.Length(min=2, max=256)) ``` But you also want to put some constraints onto outer list itself, for example, you want it to have length between 1 and 10. How do you describe it in terms of `marshmallow`? ### Obvious solution: nest your data ```python class BatchOfArticles(Schema): articles = fields.Nested( ArticleSchema, required=True, many=True, validate=validate.Length(1, 10) ) ``` But now a client have to send data this way, with this extra dictionary around: ```python { "articles": [ {"id": 1, "title": "Hello World!"}, {"id": 2, "title": "Yet another awesome article."}, ... ] } ``` It makes your API not so beautiful and user-friendly. ### Good solution: use marshmallow-toplevel With `marshmallow-toplevel` you can describe you data this way: ```python from marshmallow_toplevel import TopLevelSchema class BatchOfArticles(TopLevelSchema): _toplevel = fields.Nested( ArticleSchema, required=True, many=True, validate=validate.Length(1, 10) ) ``` Notice that schema inherits from `TopLevelSchema` and uses this special `_toplevel` key. It means that the field under this key describes top level object. You can define any constrains that you can define in `marshmallow` and it will just work: ```python schema = BatchOfArticles() # validation should fail errors = schema.validate([]) assert errors # length < 1 errors = schema.validate([{"id": i, "title": "title"} for i in range(100)]) assert errors # length > 10 # validation should succeed errors = schema.validate([{"id": i, "title": "title"} for i in range(5)]) assert not errors ``` You can also use `load` for this schema as usual: ```python data = schema.load([{"id": "10", "title": "wow!"}]) print(data) # [{"id": 10, "title": "wow!"}] ``` Now a client can send data as a list without redundancy. %package -n python3-marshmallow-toplevel Summary: Validate top-level lists with all the power of marshmallow Provides: python-marshmallow-toplevel BuildRequires: python3-devel BuildRequires: python3-setuptools BuildRequires: python3-pip %description -n python3-marshmallow-toplevel # marshmallow-toplevel Load and validate top-level lists with all the power of [marshmallow](https://github.com/marshmallow-code/marshmallow). ## Installation ```sh pip install marshmallow-toplevel ``` ## Usage ```python from marshmallow import fields from marshmallow_toplevel import TopLevelSchema class BatchOfSomething(TopLevelSchema): _toplevel = fields.Nested( SomethingSchema, required=True, many=True, validate=any_validation_logic_applied_to_list ) ``` ## Rationale Imagine that you have an API endpoint (or any other program that accepts user input), which is intended to accept multiple blog articles and save them to a database. Semantically, your data is a list of dictionaries: ```python [ {"id": 1, "title": "Hello World!"}, {"id": 2, "title": "Yet another awesome article."}, ... ] ``` You describe article object schema and put constraints on your data: ```python from marshmallow import Schema, fields, validate class ArticleSchema(Schema): id = fields.Int(required=True) title = fields.Str(required=True, validate=validate.Length(min=2, max=256)) ``` But you also want to put some constraints onto outer list itself, for example, you want it to have length between 1 and 10. How do you describe it in terms of `marshmallow`? ### Obvious solution: nest your data ```python class BatchOfArticles(Schema): articles = fields.Nested( ArticleSchema, required=True, many=True, validate=validate.Length(1, 10) ) ``` But now a client have to send data this way, with this extra dictionary around: ```python { "articles": [ {"id": 1, "title": "Hello World!"}, {"id": 2, "title": "Yet another awesome article."}, ... ] } ``` It makes your API not so beautiful and user-friendly. ### Good solution: use marshmallow-toplevel With `marshmallow-toplevel` you can describe you data this way: ```python from marshmallow_toplevel import TopLevelSchema class BatchOfArticles(TopLevelSchema): _toplevel = fields.Nested( ArticleSchema, required=True, many=True, validate=validate.Length(1, 10) ) ``` Notice that schema inherits from `TopLevelSchema` and uses this special `_toplevel` key. It means that the field under this key describes top level object. You can define any constrains that you can define in `marshmallow` and it will just work: ```python schema = BatchOfArticles() # validation should fail errors = schema.validate([]) assert errors # length < 1 errors = schema.validate([{"id": i, "title": "title"} for i in range(100)]) assert errors # length > 10 # validation should succeed errors = schema.validate([{"id": i, "title": "title"} for i in range(5)]) assert not errors ``` You can also use `load` for this schema as usual: ```python data = schema.load([{"id": "10", "title": "wow!"}]) print(data) # [{"id": 10, "title": "wow!"}] ``` Now a client can send data as a list without redundancy. %package help Summary: Development documents and examples for marshmallow-toplevel Provides: python3-marshmallow-toplevel-doc %description help # marshmallow-toplevel Load and validate top-level lists with all the power of [marshmallow](https://github.com/marshmallow-code/marshmallow). ## Installation ```sh pip install marshmallow-toplevel ``` ## Usage ```python from marshmallow import fields from marshmallow_toplevel import TopLevelSchema class BatchOfSomething(TopLevelSchema): _toplevel = fields.Nested( SomethingSchema, required=True, many=True, validate=any_validation_logic_applied_to_list ) ``` ## Rationale Imagine that you have an API endpoint (or any other program that accepts user input), which is intended to accept multiple blog articles and save them to a database. Semantically, your data is a list of dictionaries: ```python [ {"id": 1, "title": "Hello World!"}, {"id": 2, "title": "Yet another awesome article."}, ... ] ``` You describe article object schema and put constraints on your data: ```python from marshmallow import Schema, fields, validate class ArticleSchema(Schema): id = fields.Int(required=True) title = fields.Str(required=True, validate=validate.Length(min=2, max=256)) ``` But you also want to put some constraints onto outer list itself, for example, you want it to have length between 1 and 10. How do you describe it in terms of `marshmallow`? ### Obvious solution: nest your data ```python class BatchOfArticles(Schema): articles = fields.Nested( ArticleSchema, required=True, many=True, validate=validate.Length(1, 10) ) ``` But now a client have to send data this way, with this extra dictionary around: ```python { "articles": [ {"id": 1, "title": "Hello World!"}, {"id": 2, "title": "Yet another awesome article."}, ... ] } ``` It makes your API not so beautiful and user-friendly. ### Good solution: use marshmallow-toplevel With `marshmallow-toplevel` you can describe you data this way: ```python from marshmallow_toplevel import TopLevelSchema class BatchOfArticles(TopLevelSchema): _toplevel = fields.Nested( ArticleSchema, required=True, many=True, validate=validate.Length(1, 10) ) ``` Notice that schema inherits from `TopLevelSchema` and uses this special `_toplevel` key. It means that the field under this key describes top level object. You can define any constrains that you can define in `marshmallow` and it will just work: ```python schema = BatchOfArticles() # validation should fail errors = schema.validate([]) assert errors # length < 1 errors = schema.validate([{"id": i, "title": "title"} for i in range(100)]) assert errors # length > 10 # validation should succeed errors = schema.validate([{"id": i, "title": "title"} for i in range(5)]) assert not errors ``` You can also use `load` for this schema as usual: ```python data = schema.load([{"id": "10", "title": "wow!"}]) print(data) # [{"id": 10, "title": "wow!"}] ``` Now a client can send data as a list without redundancy. %prep %autosetup -n marshmallow-toplevel-0.1.3 %build %py3_build %install %py3_install install -d -m755 %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir} if [ -d doc ]; then cp -arf doc %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi if [ -d docs ]; then cp -arf docs %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi if [ -d example ]; then cp -arf example %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi if [ -d examples ]; then cp -arf examples %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi pushd %{buildroot} if [ -d usr/lib ]; then find usr/lib -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f\"\n" >> filelist.lst fi if [ -d usr/lib64 ]; then find usr/lib64 -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f\"\n" >> filelist.lst fi if [ -d usr/bin ]; then find usr/bin -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f\"\n" >> filelist.lst fi if [ -d usr/sbin ]; then find usr/sbin -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f\"\n" >> filelist.lst fi touch doclist.lst if [ -d usr/share/man ]; then find usr/share/man -type f -printf "\"/%h/%f.gz\"\n" >> doclist.lst fi popd mv %{buildroot}/filelist.lst . mv %{buildroot}/doclist.lst . %files -n python3-marshmallow-toplevel -f filelist.lst %dir %{python3_sitelib}/* %files help -f doclist.lst %{_docdir}/* %changelog * Thu Jun 08 2023 Python_Bot - 0.1.3-1 - Package Spec generated