How to serialize SqlAlchemy result to JSON?
You can convert a RowProxy to a dict like this:
d = dict(row.items())
Then serialize that to JSON ( you will have to specify an encoder for things like datetime
values )
It's not that hard if you just want one record ( and not a full hierarchy of related records ).
json.dumps([(dict(row.items())) for row in rs])
A flat implementation
You could use something like this:
from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import DeclarativeMeta
class AlchemyEncoder(json.JSONEncoder):
def default(self, obj):
if isinstance(obj.__class__, DeclarativeMeta):
# an SQLAlchemy class
fields = {}
for field in [x for x in dir(obj) if not x.startswith('_') and x != 'metadata']:
data = obj.__getattribute__(field)
try:
json.dumps(data) # this will fail on non-encodable values, like other classes
fields[field] = data
except TypeError:
fields[field] = None
# a json-encodable dict
return fields
return json.JSONEncoder.default(self, obj)
and then convert to JSON using:
c = YourAlchemyClass()
print json.dumps(c, cls=AlchemyEncoder)
It will ignore fields that are not encodable (set them to 'None').
It doesn't auto-expand relations (since this could lead to self-references, and loop forever).
A recursive, non-circular implementation
If, however, you'd rather loop forever, you could use:
from sqlalchemy.ext.declarative import DeclarativeMeta
def new_alchemy_encoder():
_visited_objs = []
class AlchemyEncoder(json.JSONEncoder):
def default(self, obj):
if isinstance(obj.__class__, DeclarativeMeta):
# don't re-visit self
if obj in _visited_objs:
return None
_visited_objs.append(obj)
# an SQLAlchemy class
fields = {}
for field in [x for x in dir(obj) if not x.startswith('_') and x != 'metadata']:
fields[field] = obj.__getattribute__(field)
# a json-encodable dict
return fields
return json.JSONEncoder.default(self, obj)
return AlchemyEncoder
And then encode objects using:
print json.dumps(e, cls=new_alchemy_encoder(), check_circular=False)
This would encode all children, and all their children, and all their children... Potentially encode your entire database, basically. When it reaches something its encoded before, it will encode it as 'None'.
A recursive, possibly-circular, selective implementation
Another alternative, probably better, is to be able to specify the fields you want to expand:
def new_alchemy_encoder(revisit_self = False, fields_to_expand = []):
_visited_objs = []
class AlchemyEncoder(json.JSONEncoder):
def default(self, obj):
if isinstance(obj.__class__, DeclarativeMeta):
# don't re-visit self
if revisit_self:
if obj in _visited_objs:
return None
_visited_objs.append(obj)
# go through each field in this SQLalchemy class
fields = {}
for field in [x for x in dir(obj) if not x.startswith('_') and x != 'metadata']:
val = obj.__getattribute__(field)
# is this field another SQLalchemy object, or a list of SQLalchemy objects?
if isinstance(val.__class__, DeclarativeMeta) or (isinstance(val, list) and len(val) > 0 and isinstance(val[0].__class__, DeclarativeMeta)):
# unless we're expanding this field, stop here
if field not in fields_to_expand:
# not expanding this field: set it to None and continue
fields[field] = None
continue
fields[field] = val
# a json-encodable dict
return fields
return json.JSONEncoder.default(self, obj)
return AlchemyEncoder
You can now call it with:
print json.dumps(e, cls=new_alchemy_encoder(False, ['parents']), check_circular=False)
To only expand SQLAlchemy fields called 'parents', for example.
You could just output your object as a dictionary:
class User:
def as_dict(self):
return {c.name: getattr(self, c.name) for c in self.__table__.columns}
And then you use User.as_dict()
to serialize your object.
As explained in Convert sqlalchemy row object to python dict
Python 3.7+ and Flask 1.1+ can use the built-in dataclasses package
from dataclasses import dataclass
from datetime import datetime
from flask import Flask, jsonify
from flask_sqlalchemy import SQLAlchemy
app = Flask(__name__)
db = SQLAlchemy(app)
@dataclass
class User(db.Model):
id: int
email: str
id = db.Column(db.Integer, primary_key=True, auto_increment=True)
email = db.Column(db.String(200), unique=True)
@app.route('/users/')
def users():
users = User.query.all()
return jsonify(users)
if __name__ == "__main__":
users = User(email="[email protected]"), User(email="[email protected]")
db.create_all()
db.session.add_all(users)
db.session.commit()
app.run()
The /users/
route will now return a list of users.
[
{"email": "[email protected]", "id": 1},
{"email": "[email protected]", "id": 2}
]
Auto-serialize related models
@dataclass
class Account(db.Model):
id: int
users: User
id = db.Column(db.Integer)
users = db.relationship(User) # User model would need a db.ForeignKey field
The response from jsonify(account)
would be this.
{
"id":1,
"users":[
{
"email":"[email protected]",
"id":1
},
{
"email":"[email protected]",
"id":2
}
]
}
Overwrite the default JSON Encoder
from flask.json import JSONEncoder
class CustomJSONEncoder(JSONEncoder):
"Add support for serializing timedeltas"
def default(o):
if type(o) == datetime.timedelta:
return str(o)
elif type(o) == datetime.datetime:
return o.isoformat()
else:
return super().default(o)
app.json_encoder = CustomJSONEncoder