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Struct module
Overview ¶
The @ytt:struct
module provides functions for constructing and deconstructing struct
values.
To use these functions, include the @ytt:struct
module:
load("@ytt:struct", "struct")
struct.decode() ¶
Deconstructs a given value into plain/Starlark values, recursively.
struct.decode(struct_val)
struct_val
(struct
) — the value to decompose.struct
values are converted intodict
values where each attribute in thestruct
becomes a key on thedict
.- if the value of an attribute is a
struct
, it is likewise converted to adict
. - all other values are copied, as is.
Example ¶
load("@ytt:struct", "struct")
foo = struct.encode({"a": [1,2,3,{"c":456}], "b": "str"})
bar = struct.decode(foo)
bar["a"] # <== [1, 2, 3, {"c": 456}]
struct.encode() ¶
Makes a struct
of a given value, recursively.
struct.encode(value)
value
(dict
|list
| scalar) — the value to encode.dict
values are converted intostruct
s where each key in thedict
becomes an attribute on thestruct
. Keys of the items indict
values must be strings.- if a
dict
orlist
contains a value that is adict
, it is likewise converted to astruct
.
Notes:
encode()
cannot encode functions nor YAML Fragments. If you wish to make a struct that contains attributes that hold these types, considermake()
.
Example: Data structure from a dictionary ¶
load("@ytt:struct", "struct")
d = struct.encode({"a": [1,2,3,{"c":456}], "b": "str"})
d.a # <== [1, 2, 3, c: (struct...)]
d.a[3].c # <== 456
bar["b"] # <== "str"
struct.make() ¶
Instantiates a struct
based on the key/value pairs provided.
struct.make(key1=value1, key2=value2, ...)
keyN
(keyword argument name) — becomes the name of the Nth attribute in the constructedstruct
.=valueN
(any
) — becomes the value of the Nth attribute in the constructedstruct
.
Notes:
make()
does not modifyvalues
in any way (e.g. ifvalueN
is a dictionary, it is not converted into astruct
). To recursively build a hierarchy ofstruct
s fromdict
,list
, and scalars, seestruct.encode()
.
Example 1: Scalar values ¶
For visually pleasing collections of fields
load("@ytt:struct", "struct")
consts = struct.make(version="0.39.0", service_name="prometheus")
consts.version # <== "0.39.0"
consts.service_name # <== "prometheus"
Example 2: Data structures ¶
Dictionaries values remain instances of dict
.
load("@ytt:struct", "struct")
consts = struct.make(service={"version": "0.39.0", "name": "prometheus"})
consts.service["version"] # <== "0.39.0"
consts.service["name"] # <== "prometheus"
# const.service.version # Error! "dict has no .version field or method"
Example 3: Nested structs ¶
Nested invocations of make()
to retain dot expression access.
load("@ytt:struct", "struct")
consts = struct.make(service=struct.make(version="0.39.0", name="prometheus"))
consts.service.version # <== "0.39.0"
consts.service.name # <== "prometheus"
See also: struct.encode()
to convert all dict
values to struct
s, recursively.
Example 4: Collection of functions ¶
“Export” a set of functions from a library file.
urls.star
load("@ytt:struct", "struct")
def _valid_port(port):
...
end
def _url_encode(url):
...
end
urls = struct.make(valid_port= _valid_port, encode= _url_encode, ...)
#@ load("urls.star", "urls")
#@ if/end urls.valid_port(...):
encoded: #@ urls.encode("encode_url")
struct.make_and_bind() ¶
Binds one or more function(s) to a struct
, making them method(s) on that struct.
This allows struct
s to carry both data and behavior related to that data.
struct.make_and_bind(receiver, method_name1=function1, ...)
receiver
(struct
) — “object” to attach the function(s) to.method_nameN
(keyword argument name) — the name that callers will specify to invoke the method.functionN
(function
) — the function value (either the name of afunction
or alambda
expression) that will be bound toreceiver
by the namemethod_nameN
.- the first parameter of
functionN
isreceiver
, implicitly. - the remaining parameters of
functionN
become the parameters ofreceiver.method_nameN()
- the first parameter of
Notes:
- Binding is useful for cases where a commonly desired value is a calculation of two or more
values on
receiver
.
Example 1: Binding a function value ¶
load("@ytt:struct", "struct")
conn = struct.make(hostname="svc.example.com", default_port=1022, protocol="https")
def _url(self, port=None):
port = port or self.default_port
return "{}://{}:{}".format(self.protocol, self.hostname, port)
end
conn = struct.make_and_bind(conn, url=_url)
conn.url() # ==> https://svc.example.com:1022
conn.url(8080) # ==> https://svc.example.com:8080
Example 2: Binding a lambda expression ¶
load("@ytt:struct", "struct")
_conn_data = struct.make(hostname="svc.example.com", default_port=1022, protocol="https")
conn = struct.make_and_bind(_conn_data, url=lambda self, port=None: "{}://{}:{}".format(self.protocol, self.hostname, port or self.default_port))
conn.url() # ==> https://svc.example.com:1022
conn.url(8080) # ==> https://svc.example.com:8080
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