The python module pprint is used for giving proper printing formats to various data objects in python. Those data objects can represent a dictionary data type or even a data object containing the JSON data. In the below example we see how that data looks before applying the pprint module and after applying it.
import pprint student_dict = {'Name': 'Tusar', 'Class': 'XII', 'Address': {'FLAT ':1308, 'BLOCK ':'A', 'LANE ':2, 'CITY ': 'HYD'}} print student_dict print "\n" print "***With Pretty Print***" print "-----------------------" pprint.pprint(student_dict,width=-1)
When we run the above program, we get the following output −
{'Address': {'FLAT ': 1308, 'LANE ': 2, 'CITY ': 'HYD', 'BLOCK ': 'A'}, 'Name': 'Tusar', 'Class': 'XII'} ***With Pretty Print*** ----------------------- {'Address': {'BLOCK ': 'A', 'CITY ': 'HYD', 'FLAT ': 1308, 'LANE ': 2}, 'Class': 'XII', 'Name': 'Tusar'}
Pprint can also handle JSON data by formatting them to a more readable format.
import pprint emp = {"Name":["Rick","Dan","Michelle","Ryan","Gary","Nina","Simon","Guru" ], "Salary":["623.3","515.2","611","729","843.25","578","632.8","722.5" ], "StartDate":[ "1/1/2012","9/23/2013","11/15/2014","5/11/2014","3/27/2015","5/21/2013", "7/30/2013","6/17/2014"], "Dept":[ "IT","Operations","IT","HR","Finance","IT","Operations","Finance"] } x= pprint.pformat(emp, indent=2) print x
When we run the above program, we get the following output −
{ 'Dept': [ 'IT', 'Operations', 'IT', 'HR', 'Finance', 'IT', 'Operations', 'Finance'], 'Name': ['Rick', 'Dan', 'Michelle', 'Ryan', 'Gary', 'Nina', 'Simon', 'Guru'], 'Salary': [ '623.3', '515.2', '611', '729', '843.25', '578', '632.8', '722.5'], 'StartDate': [ '1/1/2012', '9/23/2013', '11/15/2014', '5/11/2014', '3/27/2015', '5/21/2013', '7/30/2013', '6/17/2014']}