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Real-world match/case

Sunday 10 December 2023

Python 3.10 brought us structural pattern matching, better known as match/case. At first glance, it looks like a switch statement from C or JavaScript, but it’s very different.

You can use match/case to match specific literals, similar to how switch statements work, but their point is to match patterns in the structure of data, not just values. PEP 636: Structural Pattern Matching: Tutorial does a good job explaining the mechanics, but feels like a toy example.

Here’s a real-world use: at work we have a GitHub bot installed as a webhook. When something happens in one of our repos, GitHub sends a payload of JSON data to our bot. The bot has to examine the decoded payload to decide what to do.

These payloads are complex: they are dictionaries with only 6 or 8 keys, but they are deeply nested, eventually containing a few hundred pieces of data. Originally we were picking them apart to see what keys and values they had, but match/case made the job much simpler.

Here’s some of the code for determining what to do when we get a “comment created” event:

# Check the structure of the payload:
match event:
    case {
        "issue": {"closed_at": closed},
        "comment": {"created_at": commented},
        } if closed == commented:
        # This is a "Close with comment" comment. Don't do anything for the
        # comment, because we'll also get a "pull request closed" event at
        # the same time, and it will do whatever we need.
        pass

    case {"sender": {"login": who}} if who == get_bot_username():
        # When the bot comments on a pull request, it causes an event, which
        # gets sent to webhooks, including us.  We don't have to do anything
        # for our own comment events.
        pass

    case {"issue": {"pull_request": _}}:
        # The comment is on a pull request. Process it.
        return process_pull_request_comment(event)

The first case matches if the dict has an “issue” key containing a dict with a “closed_at” key and also a “comment” key containing a dict with a “created_at” key, and if those two leaves in the dict are equal. Writing out that condition without match/case would be more verbose and confusing.

The second case examines the event to see if the bot was the originator of the event. This one wouldn’t have been so hard to write in a different way, but match/case makes it nicer.

This is just what match/case is good at: checking patterns in the structure of data.

It’s also interesting to see the bytecode generated. For that first case, it looks like this:

  2           0 LOAD_GLOBAL              0 (event)

  3           2 MATCH_MAPPING
              4 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       67 (to 134)
              6 GET_LEN
              8 LOAD_CONST               1 (2)
             10 COMPARE_OP               5 (>=)
             12 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       67 (to 134)

  4          14 NOP

  5          16 NOP

  3          18 LOAD_CONST               8 (('issue', 'comment'))
             20 MATCH_KEYS
             22 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       65 (to 130)
             24 DUP_TOP
             26 LOAD_CONST               4 (0)
             28 BINARY_SUBSCR

  4          30 MATCH_MAPPING
             32 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       64 (to 128)
             34 GET_LEN
             36 LOAD_CONST               5 (1)
             38 COMPARE_OP               5 (>=)
             40 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       64 (to 128)
             42 LOAD_CONST               9 (('closed_at',))
             44 MATCH_KEYS
             46 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       62 (to 124)
             48 DUP_TOP
             50 LOAD_CONST               4 (0)
             52 BINARY_SUBSCR
             54 ROT_N                    7
             56 POP_TOP
             58 POP_TOP
             60 POP_TOP
             62 DUP_TOP
             64 LOAD_CONST               5 (1)
             66 BINARY_SUBSCR

  5          68 MATCH_MAPPING
             70 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       63 (to 126)
             72 GET_LEN
             74 LOAD_CONST               5 (1)
             76 COMPARE_OP               5 (>=)
             78 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       63 (to 126)
             80 LOAD_CONST              10 (('created_at',))
             82 MATCH_KEYS
             84 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       61 (to 122)
             86 DUP_TOP
             88 LOAD_CONST               4 (0)
             90 BINARY_SUBSCR
             92 ROT_N                    8
             94 POP_TOP
             96 POP_TOP
             98 POP_TOP
            100 POP_TOP
            102 POP_TOP
            104 POP_TOP
            106 STORE_FAST               0 (closed)
            108 STORE_FAST               1 (commented)

  6         110 LOAD_FAST                0 (closed)
            112 LOAD_FAST                1 (commented)
            114 COMPARE_OP               2 (==)
            116 POP_JUMP_IF_FALSE       70 (to 140)

 10         118 LOAD_CONST               0 (None)
            120 RETURN_VALUE

  3     >>  122 POP_TOP
        >>  124 POP_TOP
        >>  126 POP_TOP
        >>  128 POP_TOP
        >>  130 POP_TOP
            132 POP_TOP
        >>  134 POP_TOP
            136 LOAD_CONST               0 (None)
            138 RETURN_VALUE

  6     >>  140 LOAD_CONST               0 (None)
            142 RETURN_VALUE

That’s a lot, but you can see roughly what it’s doing: check if the value is a mapping (dict) with at least two keys (bytecodes 2–12), then check if it has the two specific keys we’ll be examining (18–22). Look at the value of the first key, check if it’s a dict with at least one key (24–40), etc, and so on.

Hand-writing these sorts of checks might result in shorter bytecode. For example, I already know the event value is a dict, since that is what the GitHub API promise me, so there’s no need to check it explicitly each time. But the Python code would be twistier and harder to get right. I was initially a skeptic about match/case, but this example shows a clear benefit.

Comments

[gravatar]

An interesting use of match I came across recently is matching on types:

match obj:
    case int(0): ...   # special case for 0
    case int(): ...    # any other int
    case float(): ...  # any float
    case _:            # anything else

Much nicer than isinstance checks.

[gravatar]

Thank you for a great example. Real-world code like is the best way to appreciate new features like structural pattern matching. It’s often difficult otherwise to see how some new technique is worth the cost of mastering it. I always perk up when I see one of your ‘real world’ example blog posts.

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