6.9 KiB
Extending Colander
You can extend Colander by defining a new type
or by defining a new
validator
.
Defining a New Type
A type is a class that inherits from colander.SchemaType
and implements these methods:
serialize
: converts a Python data structure (appstruct
) into a serialization (cstruct
).deserialize
: converts a serialized value (cstruct
) into a Python data structure (appstruct
).- If it contains child nodes, it must also implement
cstruct_children
,flatten
,unflatten
,set_value
andget_value
methods. It may inherit fromMapping
,Tuple
,Set
,List
orSequence
to obtain these methods, but only if the expected behavior is the same.
Note
See also: colander.interfaces.Type
.
Note
The cstruct_children
method became required in Colander
0.9.9.
An Example
Here's a type which implements boolean serialization and
deserialization. It serializes a boolean to the string
"true"
or "false"
or the special colander.null
sentinel; it
then deserializes a string (presumably "true"
or
"false"
, but allows some wiggle room for "t"
,
"on"
, "yes"
, "y"
, and
"1"
) to a boolean value.
from colander import SchemaType, Invalid, null
class Boolean(SchemaType):
def serialize(self, node, appstruct):
if appstruct is null:
return null
if not isinstance(appstruct, bool):
raise Invalid(node, '%r is not a boolean' % appstruct)
return appstruct and 'true' or 'false'
def deserialize(self, node, cstruct):
if cstruct is null:
return null
if not isinstance(cstruct, basestring):
raise Invalid(node, '%r is not a string' % cstruct)
= cstruct.lower()
value if value in ('true', 'yes', 'y', 'on', 't', '1'):
return True
return False
Here's how you would use the resulting class as part of a schema:
import colander
class Schema(colander.MappingSchema):
= colander.SchemaNode(Boolean()) interested
The above schema has a member named interested
which
will now be serialized and deserialized as a boolean, according to the
logic defined in the Boolean
type class.
Method Specifications
serialize
Arguments:
node
: theSchemaNode
associated with this typeappstruct
: theappstruct
value that needs to be serialized
If appstruct
is invalid, it should raise colander.Invalid
, passing
node
as the first constructor argument.
It must deal specially with the value colander.null
.
It must be able to make sense of any value generated by
deserialize
.
deserialize
Arguments:
node
: theSchemaNode
associated with this typecstruct
: thecstruct
value that needs to be deserialized
If cstruct
is invalid, it should raise colander.Invalid
, passing
node
as the first constructor argument.
It must deal specially with the value colander.null
.
It must be able to make sense of any value generated by
serialize
.
cstruct_children
Arguments:
node
: theSchemaNode
associated with this typecstruct
: thecstruct
that the caller wants to obtain child values for
You only need to define this method for complex types that have child nodes, such as mappings and sequences.
cstruct_children
should return a value based on
cstruct
for each child node in node
(or an
empty list if node
has no children). If
cstruct
does not contain a value for a particular child,
that child should be replaced with the colander.null
value
in the returned list.
cstruct_children
should never raise an
exception, even if it is passed a nonsensical cstruct
argument. In that case, it should return a sequence of as many
colander.null
values as there are child nodes.
Constructor (__init__
)
SchemaType does not define a constructor, and user code (not Colander) instantiates type objects, so custom types may define this method and use it for their own purposes.
Null Values
Both the serialize
and deserialize
methods
must be able to receive colander.null
values and handle them intelligently.
This will happen whenever the data structure being serialized or
deserialized does not provide a value for this node. In many cases,
serialize
or deserialize
should just return
colander.null
when
passed colander.null
.
A type might also choose to return colander.null
if the value it receives is
logically (but not literally) null. For example, colander.String
type
converts the empty string to colander.null
within its
deserialize
method.
def deserialize(self, node, cstruct):
if not cstruct:
return null
Defining a New Validator
A validator is a callable which accepts two positional arguments:
node
and value
. It returns None
if the value is valid. It raises a colander.Invalid
exception if the value is not
valid. Here's a validator that checks if the value is a valid credit
card number.
def luhnok(node, value):
""" checks to make sure that the value passes a luhn mod-10 checksum """
sum = 0
= len(value)
num_digits = num_digits & 1
oddeven
for count in range(0, num_digits):
= int(value[count])
digit
if not (( count & 1 ) ^ oddeven ):
= digit * 2
digit if digit > 9:
= digit - 9
digit
sum = sum + digit
if not (sum % 10) == 0:
raise Invalid(node,
'%r is not a valid credit card number' % value)
Here's how the resulting luhnok
validator might be used
in a schema:
import colander
class Schema(colander.MappingSchema):
= colander.SchemaNode(colander.String(), validator=lunhnok) cc_number
Note that the validator doesn't need to check if the
value
is a string: this has already been done as the result
of the type of the cc_number
schema node being colander.String
. Validators
are always passed the deserialized value when they are
invoked.
The node
value passed to the validator is a schema node
object; it must in turn be passed to the colander.Invalid
exception constructor if one needs to
be raised.
For a more formal definition of a the interface of a validator, see
colander.interfaces.Validator
.