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jsonpath-ngvsxhtml2pdf

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May 19 2011 1.1 million (month) 0.2.16(6 months ago)

jsonpath-ng is a Python library for parsing and querying JSON data.
It is a powerful tool for extracting and manipulating data from JSON structures,

The library uses a syntax similar to XPath, which is a well-known language for querying and manipulating XML data, to query and extract data from JSON structures. This makes it familiar and intuitive for many developers who have worked with XML in the past. JSONPath implementation in Python.

JSONPath is a JSON query path language inspired by XPath (path language for querying XML/HTML). For more see the initial syntax proposal.

jsonpath-ng is implemented in pure Python and can be easily extended with additional python functions if needed. Most commonly used JSONPath feature in web scraping is the recursive key lookup ($..key) which is a convenient way to find specific data fields in large datasets.

xhtml2pdf is a Python library that allows you to convert HTML and CSS documents to PDF files. It is built on top of ReportLab, a powerful PDF generation library for Python.

xhtml2pdf makes it easy to convert HTML and CSS documents to PDF by using ReportLab's powerful layout engine to handle the rendering of the document.

The library supports a wide variety of HTML and CSS features, including tables, lists, images, and links. It also supports several popular CSS frameworks such as Bootstrap and Foundation.

To use xhtml2pdf, you first need to install it via pip by running `pip install xhtml2pdf``. Once it is installed, you can use the xhtml2pdf.pisa.pisaDocument() function to convert an HTML file to a PDF.

Example Use


from jsonpath_ng import jsonpath, parse

# A robust parser, not just a regex. (Makes powerful extensions possible; see below)
jsonpath_expr = parse('foo[*].baz')

# Extracting values is easy
[match.value for match in jsonpath_expr.find({'foo': [{'baz': 1}, {'baz': 2}]})]
[1, 2]

# Matches remember where they came from
[str(match.full_path) for match in jsonpath_expr.find({'foo': [{'baz': 1}, {'baz': 2}]})]
['foo.[0].baz', 'foo.[1].baz']

# And this can be useful for automatically providing ids for bits of data that do not have them (currently a global switch)
jsonpath.auto_id_field = 'id'
[match.value for match in parse('foo[*].id').find({'foo': [{'id': 'bizzle'}, {'baz': 3}]})]
['foo.bizzle', 'foo.[1]']

# A handy extension: named operators like `parent`
[match.value for match in parse('a.*.b.`parent`.c').find({'a': {'x': {'b': 1, 'c': 'number one'}, 'y': {'b': 2, 'c': 'number two'}}})]
['number two', 'number one']

# You can also build expressions directly quite easily
from jsonpath_ng.jsonpath import Fields
from jsonpath_ng.jsonpath import Slice

jsonpath_expr_direct = Fields('foo').child(Slice('*')).child(Fields('baz'))  # This is equivalent
from xhtml2pdf import pisa

with open('input.html', 'r') as html_file:
    html = html_file.read()

with open('output.pdf', 'wb') as pdf_file:
    pisa.pisaDocument(html, pdf_file)

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