Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
84 lines (60 loc) · 2.68 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

84 lines (60 loc) · 2.68 KB

Reasoner-Pydantic

Test status via GitHub Actions ℹ️

Pydantic models for the Reasoner API data formats.

These models are very handy when setting up a Reasoner API with FastAPI.

Example usage

from reasoner_pydantic import (
    Query,
    Message,
    QNode,
    KnowledgeGraph,
    Node,
    Result,
    NodeBinding,
)


def add_result_to_query(query_dict):
    query = Query.parse_obj(query_dict)
    message: Message = query.message

    # get query graph node
    qnode_id = next(iter(message.query_graph.nodes))

    # add knowledge graph node
    knode = Node.parse_obj({"categories": ["biolink:FooBar"]})
    knode_id = "foo:bar"
    message.knowledge_graph.nodes[knode_id] = knode

    # add result
    result: Result = Result.parse_obj(
        {
            "node_bindings": {qnode_id: [{"id": knode_id}]}
        }
    )

    message.results.add(result)

    return message.json()


add_result_to_query({
    "message": {
        "query_graph": {"nodes": {"n0": {}}, "edges": {}},
        "knowledge_graph": {"nodes": {}, "edges": {}},
        "results" : []
    }
})

Validation Usage

Because of performance concerns, as well as how types are implemented in Python, there is no assignment validation enforced on these models. For example:

from reasoner_pydantic import KnowledgeGraph

# This will not throw an error
kg = KnowledgeGraph(nodes = "hi")

This is especially important to keep in mind when constructing objects that use containers. This library uses custom container types: HashableMapping, HashableSequence, HashableSet:

from reasoner_pydantic import KnowledgeGraph, Node, CURIE

# This is not correct and will not throw an error, but will cause problems later
kg = KnowledgeGraph(nodes = {})

# Instead, if you would like to build models this way, use a typed container constructor
kg = KnowledgeGraph(nodes = HashableMapping[CURIE, Node](__root__ = {}))

For this reason, we recommend one of the following options:

  1. Use parse_obj exclusively for constructing models. This will perform validation for you. This option is best if performance is not important.
  2. Use a static type checker to ensure that models are being constructed correctly. Constructing objects this way is more performant, and the static type checker will ensure that it is done correctly. We recommend using pyright in your editor.