Convert a String representation of a Dictionary to a dictionary?
https://docs.python.org/3.8/library/json.html
JSON can solve this problem though its decoder wants double quotes around keys and values. If you don't mind a replace hack...
import json
s = "{'muffin' : 'lolz', 'foo' : 'kitty'}"
json_acceptable_string = s.replace("'", "\"")
d = json.loads(json_acceptable_string)
# d = {u'muffin': u'lolz', u'foo': u'kitty'}
NOTE that if you have single quotes as a part of your keys or values this will fail due to improper character replacement. This solution is only recommended if you have a strong aversion to the eval solution.
More about json single quote: jQuery.parseJSON throws “Invalid JSON” error due to escaped single quote in JSON
You can use the built-in ast.literal_eval
:
>>> import ast
>>> ast.literal_eval("{'muffin' : 'lolz', 'foo' : 'kitty'}")
{'muffin': 'lolz', 'foo': 'kitty'}
This is safer than using eval
. As its own docs say:
>>> help(ast.literal_eval) Help on function literal_eval in module ast: literal_eval(node_or_string) Safely evaluate an expression node or a string containing a Python expression. The string or node provided may only consist of the following Python literal structures: strings, numbers, tuples, lists, dicts, booleans, and None.
For example:
>>> eval("shutil.rmtree('mongo')")
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "/opt/Python-2.6.1/lib/python2.6/shutil.py", line 208, in rmtree
onerror(os.listdir, path, sys.exc_info())
File "/opt/Python-2.6.1/lib/python2.6/shutil.py", line 206, in rmtree
names = os.listdir(path)
OSError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: 'mongo'
>>> ast.literal_eval("shutil.rmtree('mongo')")
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
File "/opt/Python-2.6.1/lib/python2.6/ast.py", line 68, in literal_eval
return _convert(node_or_string)
File "/opt/Python-2.6.1/lib/python2.6/ast.py", line 67, in _convert
raise ValueError('malformed string')
ValueError: malformed string
using json.loads
:
>>> import json
>>> h = '{"foo":"bar", "foo2":"bar2"}'
>>> d = json.loads(h)
>>> d
{u'foo': u'bar', u'foo2': u'bar2'}
>>> type(d)
<type 'dict'>