4. Deleting KItems with the SDK#
In this tutorial we see how to delete new Kitems and their properties.
4.1. Setting up#
Before you run this tutorial: make sure to have access to a DSMS-instance of your interest, alongwith with installation of this package and have establised access to the DSMS through DSMS-SDK (refer to Connecting to DSMS)
Now let us import the needed classes and functions for this tutorial.
[1]:
from dsms import DSMS, KItem
Now source the environmental variables from an .env file and start the DSMS-session.
[2]:
dsms = DSMS(env=".env")
Then lets see the Kitem we are interested in to remove.
[3]:
item = dsms.get_kitems(limit=100)[-1]
4.2. Deletion of KItems and their properties#
We can also remove properties from the KItem without deleting the KItem itself.
For the list-like properties, we can use the standard list-methods from basic Python again (e.g. pop, remove, etc. or the del-operator).
For the other, non-list-like properties, we can simply use the attribute-assignment again.
When we only want single parts of the properties in the KItem, we can do it like this:
[4]:
item.attachments.pop(0)
item.annotations.pop(0)
item.external_links.pop(0)
item.contacts.pop(0)
[4]:
contact:
name: Specimen preparation
email: specimenpreparation@group.mail
user_id: null
However, we can also reset the entire property by setting it to e.g. an empty list again:
[5]:
item.affiliations = []
We can delete the custom properties by setting the property to an empty dict:
[6]:
item.custom_properties = {}
/app/dsms/knowledge/kitem.py:570: UserWarning: A flat dictionary was provided for custom properties.
Will be transformed into `KItemCustomPropertiesModel`.
warnings.warn(
Send the changes to the DSMS with the commit-method:
[7]:
dsms.commit()
See the changes:
[8]:
item
[8]:
kitem:
name: Specimen-123
id: 8ba20087-210d-482c-a847-6f80c20b7d51
ktype_id: specimen
in_backend: true
slug: specimen123-8ba20087
annotations: []
attachments:
- name: testfile.txt
content: null
linked_kitems: []
affiliations: []
authors:
- user_id: 7f0e5a37-353b-4bbc-b1f1-b6ad575f562d
avatar_exists: false
contacts:
- name: Specimen preparation
email: specimenpreparation@group.mail
user_id: null
created_at: 2025-01-17 10:44:42.478274
updated_at: 2025-01-17 10:51:55.054607
external_links:
- label: specimen-link
url: http://specimens.org
kitem_apps: []
user_groups: []
custom_properties:
sections:
- id: ida3c5c42685526
name: Untitled Section
entries:
- id: id175f885f8dda58
type: Slider
label: Width
value: 1
measurement_unit:
iri: http://qudt.org/vocab/unit/MilliM
label: Millimetre
namespace: http://qudt.org/vocab/unit
- id: idef5a37328789f
type: Slider
label: Length
value:
- 0.1
- 0.2
measurement_unit:
iri: http://qudt.org/vocab/unit/MilliM
label: Millimetre
namespace: http://qudt.org/vocab/unit
- id: id54decb9641f9a
type: Number
label: Radius
value: 10
measurement_unit:
iri: http://qudt.org/vocab/unit/MilliM
label: Millimetre
namespace: http://qudt.org/vocab/unit
rdf_exists: true
However, we can also delete the whole KItem from the DSMS by applying the del-operator to the dsms-object with the individual KItem-object:
[9]:
del dsms[item]
Commit the changes:
[10]:
dsms.commit()
Now to check if the particular kitem was removed, we can do this by using the command: dsms.kitems or by logging into the frontend dsms instance.