176 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
176 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
> The name `json2` was chosen to avoid any unwanted potential conflicts with the
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> existing codegen tailored for the main `json` module which is powered by CJSON.
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`x.json2` is an experimental JSON parser written from scratch on V.
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## Usage
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```v oksyntax
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import x.json2
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import net.http
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fn main() {
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// Decoding
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resp := http.get('https://example.com') ?
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// raw decode
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raw_person := json2.raw_decode(resp.text) ?
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// Casting `Any` type / Navigating
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person := raw_person.as_map()
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name := person['name'].str() // Bob
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age := person['age'].int() // 19
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pi := person['pi'].f64() // 3.14....
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// Constructing an `Any` type
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mut me := map[string]json2.Any{}
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me['name'] = 'Bob'
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me['age'] = 18
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mut arr := []json2.Any{}
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arr << 'rock'
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arr << 'papers'
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arr << json2.null
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arr << 12
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me['interests'] = arr
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mut pets := map[string]json2.Any{}
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pets['Sam'] = 'Maltese Shitzu'
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me['pets'] = pets
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// Stringify to JSON
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println(me.str())
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//{
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// "name":"Bob",
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// "age":18,
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// "interests":["rock","papers","scissors",null,12],
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// "pets":{"Sam":"Maltese"}
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//}
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// Encode a struct/type to JSON
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encoded_json := json2.encode<Person>(person2)
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}
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```
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## Using `decode<T>` and `encode<T>`
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> Codegen for this feature is still WIP.
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> You need to manually define the methods before using the module to structs.
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In order to use the `decode<T>` and `encode<T>` function, you need to explicitly define
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two methods: `from_json` and `to_json`. `from_json` accepts a `json2.Any` argument
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and inside of it you need to map the fields you're going to put into the type.
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As for `to_json` method, you just need to map the values into `json2.Any`
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and turn it into a string.
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```v ignore
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struct Person {
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mut:
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name string
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age int = 20
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pets []string
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}
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fn (mut p Person) from_json(f json2.Any) {
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obj := f.as_map()
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for k, v in obj {
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match k {
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'name' { p.name = v.str() }
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'age' { p.age = v.int() }
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'pets' { p.pets = v.arr().map(it.str()) }
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else {}
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}
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}
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}
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fn (p Person) to_json() string {
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mut obj := map[string]json2.Any
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obj['name'] = p.name
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obj['age'] = p.age
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obj['pets'] = p.pets
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return obj.str()
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}
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fn main() {
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resp := os.read_file('./person.json')?
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person := json2.decode<Person>(resp)?
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println(person) // Person{name: 'Bob', age: 28, pets: ['Floof']}
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person_json := json2.encode<Person>(person)
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println(person_json) // {"name": "Bob", "age": 28, "pets": ["Floof"]}
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}
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```
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## Using struct tags
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`x.json2` can access and use the struct field tags similar to the
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`json` module by using the comp-time `$for` for structs.
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```v ignore
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fn (mut p Person) from_json(f json2.Any) {
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mp := an.as_map()
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mut js_field_name := ''
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$for field in Person.fields {
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js_field_name = field.name
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for attr in field.attrs {
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if attr.starts_with('json:') {
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js_field_name = attr.all_after('json:').trim_left(' ')
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break
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}
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}
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match field.name {
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'name' { p.name = mp[js_field_name].str() }
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'age' { u.age = mp[js_field_name].int() }
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'pets' { u.pets = mp[js_field_name].arr().map(it.str()) }
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else {}
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}
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}
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}
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```
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### Null Values
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`x.json2` has a separate `null` type for differentiating an undefined value and a null value.
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To verify that the field you're accessing is a `null`, use `<typ> is json2.Null`.
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```v ignore
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fn (mut p Person) from_json(f json2.Any) {
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obj := f.as_map()
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if obj['age'] is json2.Null {
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// use a default value
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p.age = 10
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}
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}
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```
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### Custom field names
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Aside from using struct tags, you can also just simply cast the base field into a map (`as_map()`)
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and access the field you wish to put into the struct/type.
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```v ignore
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fn (mut p Person) from_json(f json2.Any) {
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obj := f.as_map()
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p.name = obj['nickname'].str()
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}
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```
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```v oksyntax
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fn (mut p Person) to_json() string {
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obj := f.as_map()
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obj['nickname'] = p.name
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return obj.str()
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}
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```
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### Undefined Values
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Getting undefined values has the same behavior as regular V types.
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If you're casting a base field into `map[string]json2.Any` and fetch an undefined entry/value,
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it simply returns empty. As for the `[]json2.Any`, it returns an index error.
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## Casting a value to an incompatible type
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`x.json2` provides methods for turning `Any` types into usable types.
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The following list shows the possible outputs when casting a value to an incompatible type.
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1. Casting non-array values as array (`arr()`) will return an array with the value as the content.
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2. Casting non-map values as map (`as_map()`) will return a map with the value as the content.
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3. Casting non-string values to string (`str()`) will return the
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JSON string representation of the value.
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4. Casting non-numeric values to int/float (`int()`/`i64()`/`f32()`/`f64()`) will return zero.
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