ai_v/venv/Lib/site-packages/jmespath-1.0.1.dist-info/METADATA

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feat(api): 实现图像生成及后台同步功能 - 新增图像生成接口,支持试用、积分和自定义API Key模式 - 实现生成图片结果异步上传至MinIO存储,带重试机制 - 优化积分预扣除和异常退还逻辑,保障用户积分准确 - 添加获取生成历史记录接口,支持时间范围和分页 - 提供本地字典配置接口,支持模型、比例、提示模板和尺寸 - 实现图片批量上传接口,支持S3兼容对象存储 feat(admin): 增加管理员角色管理与权限分配接口 - 实现角色列表查询、角色创建、更新及删除功能 - 增加权限列表查询接口 - 实现用户角色分配接口,便于统一管理用户权限 - 增加系统字典增删查改接口,支持分类过滤和排序 - 权限控制全面覆盖管理接口,保证安全访问 feat(auth): 完善用户登录注册及权限相关接口与页面 - 实现手机号验证码发送及校验功能,保障注册安全 - 支持手机号注册、登录及退出接口,集成日志记录 - 增加修改密码功能,验证原密码后更新 - 提供动态导航菜单接口,基于权限展示不同菜单 - 实现管理界面路由及日志、角色、字典管理页面访问权限控制 - 添加系统日志查询接口,支持关键词和等级筛选 feat(app): 初始化Flask应用并配置蓝图与数据库 - 创建应用程序工厂,加载配置,初始化数据库和Redis客户端 - 注册认证、API及管理员蓝图,整合路由 - 根路由渲染主页模板 - 应用上下文中自动创建数据库表,保证运行环境准备完毕 feat(database): 提供数据库创建与迁移支持脚本 - 新增数据库创建脚本,支持自动检测是否已存在 - 添加数据库表初始化脚本,支持创建和删除所有表 - 实现RBAC权限初始化,包含基础权限和角色创建 - 新增字段手动修复脚本,添加用户API Key和积分字段 - 强制迁移脚本支持清理连接和修复表结构,初始化默认数据及角色分配 feat(config): 新增系统配置参数 - 配置数据库、Redis、Session和MinIO相关参数 - 添加AI接口地址及试用Key配置 - 集成阿里云短信服务配置及开发模式相关参数 feat(extensions): 初始化数据库、Redis和MinIO客户端 - 创建全局SQLAlchemy数据库实例和Redis客户端 - 配置基于boto3的MinIO兼容S3客户端 chore(logs): 添加示例系统日志文件 - 记录用户请求、验证码发送成功与失败的日志信息
2026-01-12 00:53:31 +08:00
Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: jmespath
Version: 1.0.1
Summary: JSON Matching Expressions
Home-page: https://github.com/jmespath/jmespath.py
Author: James Saryerwinnie
Author-email: js@jamesls.com
License: MIT
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Natural Language :: English
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy
Requires-Python: >=3.7
JMESPath
========
.. image:: https://badges.gitter.im/Join Chat.svg
:target: https://gitter.im/jmespath/chat
JMESPath (pronounced "james path") allows you to declaratively specify how to
extract elements from a JSON document.
For example, given this document::
{"foo": {"bar": "baz"}}
The jmespath expression ``foo.bar`` will return "baz".
JMESPath also supports:
Referencing elements in a list. Given the data::
{"foo": {"bar": ["one", "two"]}}
The expression: ``foo.bar[0]`` will return "one".
You can also reference all the items in a list using the ``*``
syntax::
{"foo": {"bar": [{"name": "one"}, {"name": "two"}]}}
The expression: ``foo.bar[*].name`` will return ["one", "two"].
Negative indexing is also supported (-1 refers to the last element
in the list). Given the data above, the expression
``foo.bar[-1].name`` will return "two".
The ``*`` can also be used for hash types::
{"foo": {"bar": {"name": "one"}, "baz": {"name": "two"}}}
The expression: ``foo.*.name`` will return ["one", "two"].
Installation
============
You can install JMESPath from pypi with:
.. code:: bash
pip install jmespath
API
===
The ``jmespath.py`` library has two functions
that operate on python data structures. You can use ``search``
and give it the jmespath expression and the data:
.. code:: python
>>> import jmespath
>>> path = jmespath.search('foo.bar', {'foo': {'bar': 'baz'}})
'baz'
Similar to the ``re`` module, you can use the ``compile`` function
to compile the JMESPath expression and use this parsed expression
to perform repeated searches:
.. code:: python
>>> import jmespath
>>> expression = jmespath.compile('foo.bar')
>>> expression.search({'foo': {'bar': 'baz'}})
'baz'
>>> expression.search({'foo': {'bar': 'other'}})
'other'
This is useful if you're going to use the same jmespath expression to
search multiple documents. This avoids having to reparse the
JMESPath expression each time you search a new document.
Options
-------
You can provide an instance of ``jmespath.Options`` to control how
a JMESPath expression is evaluated. The most common scenario for
using an ``Options`` instance is if you want to have ordered output
of your dict keys. To do this you can use either of these options:
.. code:: python
>>> import jmespath
>>> jmespath.search('{a: a, b: b}',
... mydata,
... jmespath.Options(dict_cls=collections.OrderedDict))
>>> import jmespath
>>> parsed = jmespath.compile('{a: a, b: b}')
>>> parsed.search(mydata,
... jmespath.Options(dict_cls=collections.OrderedDict))
Custom Functions
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The JMESPath language has numerous
`built-in functions
<http://jmespath.org/specification.html#built-in-functions>`__, but it is
also possible to add your own custom functions. Keep in mind that
custom function support in jmespath.py is experimental and the API may
change based on feedback.
**If you have a custom function that you've found useful, consider submitting
it to jmespath.site and propose that it be added to the JMESPath language.**
You can submit proposals
`here <https://github.com/jmespath/jmespath.site/issues>`__.
To create custom functions:
* Create a subclass of ``jmespath.functions.Functions``.
* Create a method with the name ``_func_<your function name>``.
* Apply the ``jmespath.functions.signature`` decorator that indicates
the expected types of the function arguments.
* Provide an instance of your subclass in a ``jmespath.Options`` object.
Below are a few examples:
.. code:: python
import jmespath
from jmespath import functions
# 1. Create a subclass of functions.Functions.
# The function.Functions base class has logic
# that introspects all of its methods and automatically
# registers your custom functions in its function table.
class CustomFunctions(functions.Functions):
# 2 and 3. Create a function that starts with _func_
# and decorate it with @signature which indicates its
# expected types.
# In this example, we're creating a jmespath function
# called "unique_letters" that accepts a single argument
# with an expected type "string".
@functions.signature({'types': ['string']})
def _func_unique_letters(self, s):
# Given a string s, return a sorted
# string of unique letters: 'ccbbadd' -> 'abcd'
return ''.join(sorted(set(s)))
# Here's another example. This is creating
# a jmespath function called "my_add" that expects
# two arguments, both of which should be of type number.
@functions.signature({'types': ['number']}, {'types': ['number']})
def _func_my_add(self, x, y):
return x + y
# 4. Provide an instance of your subclass in a Options object.
options = jmespath.Options(custom_functions=CustomFunctions())
# Provide this value to jmespath.search:
# This will print 3
print(
jmespath.search(
'my_add(`1`, `2`)', {}, options=options)
)
# This will print "abcd"
print(
jmespath.search(
'foo.bar | unique_letters(@)',
{'foo': {'bar': 'ccbbadd'}},
options=options)
)
Again, if you come up with useful functions that you think make
sense in the JMESPath language (and make sense to implement in all
JMESPath libraries, not just python), please let us know at
`jmespath.site <https://github.com/jmespath/jmespath.site/issues>`__.
Specification
=============
If you'd like to learn more about the JMESPath language, you can check out
the `JMESPath tutorial <http://jmespath.org/tutorial.html>`__. Also check
out the `JMESPath examples page <http://jmespath.org/examples.html>`__ for
examples of more complex jmespath queries.
The grammar is specified using ABNF, as described in
`RFC4234 <http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4234.txt>`_.
You can find the most up to date
`grammar for JMESPath here <http://jmespath.org/specification.html#grammar>`__.
You can read the full
`JMESPath specification here <http://jmespath.org/specification.html>`__.
Testing
=======
In addition to the unit tests for the jmespath modules,
there is a ``tests/compliance`` directory that contains
.json files with test cases. This allows other implementations
to verify they are producing the correct output. Each json
file is grouped by feature.
Discuss
=======
Join us on our `Gitter channel <https://gitter.im/jmespath/chat>`__
if you want to chat or if you have any questions.