JSON serialize a dictionary with tuples as key

Question:

Is there a way in Python to serialize a dictionary that is using a tuple as key?

e.g.

a = {(1, 2): 'a'}

simply using json.dumps(a) raises this error:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/json/__init__.py", line 230, in dumps
    return _default_encoder.encode(obj)
  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/json/encoder.py", line 367, in encode
    chunks = list(self.iterencode(o))
  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/json/encoder.py", line 309, in _iterencode
    for chunk in self._iterencode_dict(o, markers):
  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/json/encoder.py", line 268, in _iterencode_dict
    raise TypeError("key {0!r} is not a string".format(key))
TypeError: key (1, 2) is not a string
Asked By: Roberto

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Answers:

JSON only supports strings as keys. You’ll need to choose a way to represent those tuples as strings.

Answered By: Ned Batchelder

You can’t serialize that as json, json has a much less flexible idea about what counts as a dict key than python.

You could transform the mapping into a sequence of key, value pairs, something like this:

import json
def remap_keys(mapping):
    return [{'key':k, 'value': v} for k, v in mapping.iteritems()]
... 
json.dumps(remap_keys({(1, 2): 'foo'}))
>>> '[{"value": "foo", "key": [1, 2]}]'

Here is one way to do it. It will require the key to be json decoded after the main dictionary is decoded and the whole dictionary re-sequenced, but it is doable:

    import json

    def jsonEncodeTupleKeyDict(data):
        ndict = dict()
        # creates new dictionary with the original tuple converted to json string
        for key,value in data.iteritems():
            nkey = json.dumps(key)
            ndict[nkey] =  value

        # now encode the new dictionary and return that
        return json.dumps(ndict)

    def main():
        tdict = dict()
        for i in range(10):
            key = (i,"data",5*i)
            tdict[key] = i*i

        try:
            print json.dumps(tdict)
        except TypeError,e:
            print "JSON Encode Failed!",e

        print jsonEncodeTupleKeyDict(tdict)

    if __name__ == '__main__':
        main()

I make no claim to any efficiency of this method. I needed this for saving some joystick mapping data to a file. I wanted to use something that would create a semi-human readable format so it could be edited if needed.

Answered By: Demolishun

You could just use str((1,2)) as key because json only expects the keys as strings but if you use this you’ll have to use a[str((1,2))] to get the value.

Answered By: Dhiraj Thakur

json can only accept strings as keys for dict,
what you can do, is to replace the tuple keys with string like so

with open("file", "w") as f:
    k = dic.keys() 
    v = dic.values() 
    k1 = [str(i) for i in k]
    json.dump(json.dumps(dict(zip(*[k1,v]))),f) 

And than when you want to read it, you can change the keys back to tuples using

with open("file", r) as f:
    data = json.load(f)
    dic = json.loads(data)
    k = dic.keys() 
    v = dic.values() 
    k1 = [eval(i) for i in k] 
    return dict(zip(*[k1,v])) 
Answered By: thebeancounter
from json import loads, dumps
from ast import literal_eval

x = {(0, 1): 'la-la la', (0, 2): 'extricate'}

# save: convert each tuple key to a string before saving as json object
s = dumps({str(k): v for k, v in x.items()})

# load in two stages:
# (i) load json object
obj = loads(s)

# (ii) convert loaded keys from string back to tuple
d = {literal_eval(k): v for k, v in obj.items()}

See https://stackoverflow.com/a/12337657/2455413.

Answered By: markling

You can actually not serialize tuples as key to json, but you can convert the tuple to a string and recover it, after you have deserialized the file.

with_tuple = {(0.1, 0.1): 3.14} ## this will work in python but is not serializable in json
{(0.1, 0.1): 3.14}

But you cannot serialize it with json. However, you can use

with_string = {str((0.1, 0.1))[1:-1]: 3.14} ## the expression [1,-1] removes the parenthesis surrounding the tuples in python. 

{'0.1, 0.1': 3.14} # This is serializable

With a bit of cheating, you will recover the original tuple (after having deserialized the whole file) by treating each key (as str) separately

tuple(json.loads("["+'0.1, 0.1'+"]")) ## will recover the tuple from string
(0.1, 0.1)

It is a bit of overload to convert a string to a tuple using json.loads, but it will work. Encapsulate it and you are done.

Peace out and happy coding!

Nicolas

Answered By: Nicolas Windt

Here’s a complete example to encode/decode nested dictionaries with tuple keys and values into/from json. tuple key will be a string in JSON.

values of types tuple or set will be converted to list

def JSdecoded(item:dict, dict_key=False):
    if isinstance(item, list):
        return [ JSdecoded(e) for e in item ]
    elif isinstance(item, dict):
        return { literal_eval(key) : value for key, value in item.items() }
    return item

def JSencoded(item, dict_key=False):
    if isinstance(item, tuple):
        if dict_key:
            return str(item)
        else:
            return list(item)
    elif isinstance(item, list):
        return [JSencoded(e) for e in item]
    elif isinstance(item, dict):
        return { JSencoded(key, True) : JSencoded(value) for key, value in item.items() }
    elif isinstance(item, set):
        return list(item)
    return item

usage

import json
pydata = [
    { ('Apple','Green') : "Tree",
      ('Orange','Yellow'):"Orchard",
      ('John Doe', 1945) : "New York" }
    ]
jsstr= json.dumps(JSencoded(pydata), indent='t')
print(jsstr)
#[
#   {
#       "('Apple', 'Green')": "Tree",
#       "('Orange', 'Yellow')": "Orchard",
#       "('John Doe', 1945)": "New York"
#   }
#]
data = json.loads(jsstr) #string keys
newdata = JSdecoded(data) #tuple keys
print(newdata)
#[{('Apple', 'Green'): 'Tree', ('Orange', 'Yellow'): 'Orchard', ('John Doe', 1945): 'New York'}]
Answered By: Steve

This solution:

  • Avoids the security risk of eval().
  • Is short.
  • Is copy-pastable as save and load functions.
  • Keeps the structure of tuple as the key, in case you are editing the JSON by hand.
  • Adds ugly " to the tuple representation, which is worse than the other str()/eval() methods here.
  • Can only handle tuples as keys at the first level for nested dicts (as of this writing no other solution here can do better)
def json_dumps_tuple_keys(mapping):
    string_keys = {json.dumps(k): v for k, v in mapping.items()}
    return json.dumps(string_keys)

def json_loads_tuple_keys(string):
    mapping = json.loads(string)
    return {tuple(json.loads(k)): v for k, v in mapping.items()}

m = {(0,"a"): "first", (1, "b"): [9, 8, 7]}
print(m)      # {(0, 'a'): 'first', (1, 'b'): [9, 8, 7]}
s = json_dumps_tuple_keys(m)
print(s)      # {"[0, "a"]": "first", "[1, "b"]": [9, 8, 7]}
m2 = json_loads_tuple_keys(s)
print(m2)     # {(0, 'a'): 'first', (1, 'b'): [9, 8, 7]}
print(m==m2)  # True
Answered By: Nick Crews

Here are two functions you could use to convert a dict_having_tuple_as_key into a json_array_having_key_and_value_as_keys and then de-convert it the way back

import json

def json_dumps_dict_having_tuple_as_key(dict_having_tuple_as_key):
    if not isinstance(dict_having_tuple_as_key, dict):
        raise Exception('Error using json_dumps_dict_having_tuple_as_key: The input variable is not a dictionary.')  
    list_of_dicts_having_key_and_value_as_keys = [{'key': k, 'value': v} for k, v in dict_having_tuple_as_key.items()]
    json_array_having_key_and_value_as_keys = json.dumps(list_of_dicts_having_key_and_value_as_keys)
    return json_array_having_key_and_value_as_keys

def json_loads_dictionary_split_into_key_and_value_as_keys_and_underwent_json_dumps(json_array_having_key_and_value_as_keys):
    list_of_dicts_having_key_and_value_as_keys = json.loads(json_array_having_key_and_value_as_keys)
    if not all(['key' in diz for diz in list_of_dicts_having_key_and_value_as_keys]) and all(['value' in diz for diz in list_of_dicts_having_key_and_value_as_keys]):
        raise Exception('Error using json_loads_dictionary_split_into_key_and_value_as_keys_and_underwent_json_dumps: at least one dictionary in list_of_dicts_having_key_and_value_as_keys ismissing key "key" or key "value".')
    dict_having_tuple_as_key = {}
    for dict_having_key_and_value_as_keys in list_of_dicts_having_key_and_value_as_keys:
        dict_having_tuple_as_key[ tuple(dict_having_key_and_value_as_keys['key']) ] = dict_having_key_and_value_as_keys['value']
    return dict_having_tuple_as_key

usage example:

my_dict = {
    ('1', '1001', '2021-12-21', '1', '484'): {"name": "Carl", "surname": "Black", "score": 0},
    ('1', '1001', '2021-12-22', '1', '485'): {"name": "Joe", "id_number": 134, "percentage": 11}
}

my_json = json_dumps_dict_having_tuple_as_key(my_dict)
print(my_json)
[{'key': ['1', '1001', '2021-12-21', '1', '484'], 'value': {'name': 'Carl', 'surname': 'Black', 'score': 0}}, 
 {'key': ['1', '1001', '2021-12-22', '1', '485'],  'value': {'name': 'Joe', 'id_number': 134, 'percentage': 11}}]
my_dict_reconverted = json_loads_dictionary_split_into_key_and_value_as_keys_and_underwent_json_dumps(my_json)
print(my_dict_reconverted)
{('1', '1001', '2021-12-21', '1', '484'): {'name': 'Carl', 'surname': 'Black', 'score': 0}, 
 ('1', '1001', '2021-12-22', '1', '485'): {'name': 'Joe', 'id_number': 134, 'percentage': 11}}
# proof of working 1

my_dict == my_dict_reconverted
True
# proof of working 2

my_dict == json_loads_dictionary_split_into_key_and_value_as_keys_and_underwent_json_dumps(
json_dumps_dict_having_tuple_as_key(my_dict)
)
True

(Using concepts expressed by @SingleNegationElimination to answer @Kvothe comment)

Answered By: Tms91
def stringify_keys(d):
    if isinstance(d, dict):
        return {str(k): stringify_keys(v) for k, v in d.items()}
    if isinstance(d, (list, tuple)):
        return type(d)(stringify_keys(v) for v in d)
    return d

json.dumps(stringify_keys(mydict))
Answered By: John Jiang
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