Use when modifying, converting, or transforming structured data with dasel v3 — in-place mutations, format conversion, batch operations, array manipulation, object construction, and merge patterns across JSON, YAML, TOML, XML, CSV, HCL, INI
Resources
1Install
npx skillscat add jamie-bitflight/claude-skills/data-transformation Install via the SkillsCat registry.
Data Transformation with Dasel v3
Activate this skill when:
- Modifying values in config files (YAML, TOML, JSON, XML, HCL, INI)
- Converting between data formats (JSON to YAML, TOML to JSON, etc.)
- Batch-updating array elements (prices, versions, flags)
- Appending, removing, or reshaping data structures
- Merging objects or constructing new structures from existing data
Safety Rules
NEVER redirect output to the same input file. This truncates the file before dasel reads it, resulting in data loss:
# WRONG — destroys input
dasel -f config.yaml --root 'port = 9090' > config.yaml
# CORRECT — write to temp, then rename
dasel -f config.yaml --root 'port = 9090' > config_tmp.yaml && mv config_tmp.yaml config.yamlAlways verify before overwriting. Preview the transformation output first, then redirect:
# Preview
dasel -f config.yaml --root 'server.port = 9090'
# Apply
dasel -f config.yaml --root 'server.port = 9090' > config_tmp.yaml && mv config_tmp.yaml config.yaml
Core Modification Syntax
In dasel v3, put and delete subcommands do not exist. All modifications use assignment expressions with --root to output the full document.
Set a Value
# Output full document with one field changed
dasel -f config.yaml --root 'server.port = 9090'
# Numeric, boolean, and string assignments
echo '{"count": 1}' | dasel -i json --root 'count = 42'
echo '{"enabled": false}' | dasel -i json --root 'enabled = true'
echo '{"name": "old"}' | dasel -i json --root 'name = "new"'Set Nested Values
dasel -f config.yaml --root 'database.connection.host = "db.example.com"'
dasel -f config.yaml --root 'database.connection.port = 5432'In-Place Modification (Safe Pattern)
# Single field update
dasel -f config.yaml --root 'server.port = 9090' > config_tmp.yaml && mv config_tmp.yaml config.yaml
# Multiple fields — chain with semicolons
dasel -f config.yaml --root 'server.port = 9090; server.host = "0.0.0.0"' > config_tmp.yaml && mv config_tmp.yaml config.yamlFormat Conversion
Pipe through dasel with different input/output format flags:
# JSON to YAML
cat data.json | dasel -i json -o yaml > data.yaml
# YAML to TOML
cat config.yaml | dasel -i yaml -o toml > config.toml
# JSON to XML
cat data.json | dasel -i json -o xml > data.xml
# TOML to JSON
cat config.toml | dasel -i toml -o json > config.json
# CSV to JSON
cat data.csv | dasel -i csv -o json > data.jsonArray Operations
Append to Array
# Add element to end of array
echo '[1,2,3]' | dasel -i json --root '[$this..., 4]'
# Output: [1, 2, 3, 4]
# Append object to array
dasel -f data.json --root 'items = [$root.items..., {"name": "new", "value": 42}]'Batch Update with each
# Multiply all prices by 1.1 (10% increase)
dasel -f data.json --root 'items.each(price = price * 1.1)'
# Set a flag on all elements
dasel -f data.json --root 'users.each(active = true)'
# Increment all values
echo '[1,2,3]' | dasel -i json --root 'each($this = $this + 1)'Filter Then Transform
# Get only active users, then extract names
dasel -f data.json 'users.filter(active == true).map(name)'Object Operations
Merge via Spread
# Add new key to existing object
dasel -f base.json --root '{ $root..., "newKey": "value" }'
# Merge two objects
dasel -f base.json --root '{ $root..., "extra": true, "version": 2 }'Field Deletion via Reconstruction
Since v3 has no delete command, remove fields by constructing a new object with only the desired keys:
# Keep only "name" and "email", drop everything else
echo '{"name":"a","email":"b","password":"c"}' | dasel -i json --root '{ name, email }'Field Rename via Reconstruction
echo '{"old_name": "value"}' | dasel -i json --root '{ "new_name": old_name }'Multi-Step Transformations
Use variable assignment and semicolons for complex operations:
# Store intermediate result in variable, then transform
dasel -f data.json '$active = users.filter(active == true); $active.map(name)'
# Multiple variables
dasel -f data.json '$a = items.filter(price > 100); $b = $a.map(name); $b'Conditional Transformation
# Set value based on condition
dasel -f data.json --root 'if(count > 5) { status = "many" } else { status = "few" }'Transformation Patterns
For detailed per-use-case transformation patterns (config updates, batch processing, format migration, data reshaping, error handling), see Transformation Patterns.
References
- Dasel v3 Documentation (fetched 2026-02-19)
- Dasel Spread Operator (fetched 2026-02-19)
- Dasel each() Function (fetched 2026-02-19)
- Dasel filter() Function (fetched 2026-02-19)
- Dasel CHANGELOG (fetched 2026-02-19)