I have a string, something like this: "[['Cheese', 72], ['Milk', 45], ['Bread', 22]]"
.
I want to convert this to a list. I know I can use eval(string) to get the list, but eval scares me because of its potential for catastrophe (and because I can get a non-list as valid output). Is there another saner/safer way to turn this string into a list? I know it's a list and anything that isn't a list is invalid data (and should be checked for and/or throw an error).
If you insist on doing it this way, you can use the ast.literal_eval function.
>>> import ast
>>> foo = "[['Cheese', 72], ['Milk', 45], ['Bread', 22]]"
>>> ast.literal_eval(foo)
[['Cheese', 72], ['Milk', 45], ['Bread', 22]]
I'm sure others will tell you that you're likely doing something wrong, or to use a library like JSON to transport arbitrary data structures like this one, and I wouldn't disagree.
Try to use the json
module:
import json
s = "[['Cheese', 72], ['Milk', 45], ['Bread', 22]]"
s = s.replace("'", '"')
print json.loads(s)
You might consider using the json
module to deserialize and making sure your strings are in json format.
See http://docs.python.org/2/library/json.html for details about using this module.
Here's one way:
exec("list = "+foo)
This should make a variable 'list' with the list in string converted to a real list.
This also works for dictionaries, arrays, bools, etc in strings.