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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T14:33:59+00:00 2026-05-14T14:33:59+00:00

I am trying to iterate through a JSON object to import data, i.e. title

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I am trying to iterate through a JSON object to import data, i.e. title and link. I can’t seem to get to the content that is past the :.

JSON:

[
    {
        "title": "Baby (Feat. Ludacris) - Justin Bieber",
        "description": "Baby (Feat. Ludacris) by Justin Bieber on Grooveshark",
        "link": "http://listen.grooveshark.com/s/Baby+Feat+Ludacris+/2Bqvdq",
        "pubDate": "Wed, 28 Apr 2010 02:37:53 -0400",
        "pubTime": 1272436673,
        "TinyLink": "http://tinysong.com/d3wI",
        "SongID": "24447862",
        "SongName": "Baby (Feat. Ludacris)",
        "ArtistID": "1118876",
        "ArtistName": "Justin Bieber",
        "AlbumID": "4104002",
        "AlbumName": "My World (Part II);\nhttp://tinysong.com/gQsw",
        "LongLink": "11578982",
        "GroovesharkLink": "11578982",
        "Link": "http://tinysong.com/d3wI"
    },
    {
        "title": "Feel Good Inc - Gorillaz",
        "description": "Feel Good Inc by Gorillaz on Grooveshark",
        "link": "http://listen.grooveshark.com/s/Feel+Good+Inc/1UksmI",
        "pubDate": "Wed, 28 Apr 2010 02:25:30 -0400",
        "pubTime": 1272435930
    }
]

I tried using a dictionary:

def getLastSong(user,limit):
    base_url = 'http://gsuser.com/lastSong/'
    user_url = base_url + str(user) + '/' + str(limit) + "/"
    raw = urllib.urlopen(user_url)
    json_raw= raw.readlines()
    json_object = json.loads(json_raw[0])

    #filtering and making it look good.
    gsongs = []
    print json_object
    for song in json_object[0]:   
        print song

This code only prints the information before :.
(ignore the Justin Bieber track :))

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T14:33:59+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 2:33 pm

    Your loading of the JSON data is a little fragile. Instead of:

    json_raw= raw.readlines()
    json_object = json.loads(json_raw[0])
    

    you should really just do:

    json_object = json.load(raw)
    

    You shouldn’t think of what you get as a “JSON object”. What you have is a list. The list contains two dicts. The dicts contain various key/value pairs, all strings. When you do json_object[0], you’re asking for the first dict in the list. When you iterate over that, with for song in json_object[0]:, you iterate over the keys of the dict. Because that’s what you get when you iterate over the dict. If you want to access the value associated with the key in that dict, you would use, for example, json_object[0][song].

    None of this is specific to JSON. It’s just basic Python types, with their basic operations as covered in any tutorial.

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