| /* |
| __ _____ _____ _____ |
| __| | __| | | | JSON for Modern C++ |
| | | |__ | | | | | | version 3.9.1 |
| |_____|_____|_____|_|___| https://github.com/nlohmann/json |
| |
| Licensed under the MIT License <http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT>. |
| SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT |
| Copyright (c) 2013-2019 Niels Lohmann <http://nlohmann.me>. |
| |
| Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy |
| of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal |
| in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights |
| to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell |
| copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is |
| furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: |
| |
| The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all |
| copies or substantial portions of the Software. |
| |
| THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR |
| IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, |
| FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE |
| AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER |
| LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, |
| OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE |
| SOFTWARE. |
| */ |
| |
| #ifndef INCLUDE_NLOHMANN_JSON_HPP_ |
| #define INCLUDE_NLOHMANN_JSON_HPP_ |
| |
| #define NLOHMANN_JSON_VERSION_MAJOR 3 |
| #define NLOHMANN_JSON_VERSION_MINOR 9 |
| #define NLOHMANN_JSON_VERSION_PATCH 1 |
| |
| #include <algorithm> // all_of, find, for_each |
| #include <cstddef> // nullptr_t, ptrdiff_t, size_t |
| #include <functional> // hash, less |
| #include <initializer_list> // initializer_list |
| #include <iosfwd> // istream, ostream |
| #include <iterator> // random_access_iterator_tag |
| #include <memory> // unique_ptr |
| #include <numeric> // accumulate |
| #include <string> // string, stoi, to_string |
| #include <utility> // declval, forward, move, pair, swap |
| #include <vector> // vector |
| |
| #include <nlohmann/adl_serializer.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/byte_container_with_subtype.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/conversions/from_json.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/conversions/to_json.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/exceptions.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/hash.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/input/binary_reader.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/input/input_adapters.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/input/lexer.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/input/parser.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/iterators/internal_iterator.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/iterators/iter_impl.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/iterators/iteration_proxy.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/iterators/json_reverse_iterator.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/iterators/primitive_iterator.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/json_pointer.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/json_ref.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/macro_scope.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/meta/cpp_future.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/meta/type_traits.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/output/binary_writer.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/output/output_adapters.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/output/serializer.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/value_t.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/json_fwd.hpp> |
| #include <nlohmann/ordered_map.hpp> |
| |
| #if defined(JSON_HAS_CPP_17) |
| #include <string_view> |
| #endif |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief namespace for Niels Lohmann |
| @see https://github.com/nlohmann |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| namespace nlohmann |
| { |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief a class to store JSON values |
| |
| @tparam ObjectType type for JSON objects (`std::map` by default; will be used |
| in @ref object_t) |
| @tparam ArrayType type for JSON arrays (`std::vector` by default; will be used |
| in @ref array_t) |
| @tparam StringType type for JSON strings and object keys (`std::string` by |
| default; will be used in @ref string_t) |
| @tparam BooleanType type for JSON booleans (`bool` by default; will be used |
| in @ref boolean_t) |
| @tparam NumberIntegerType type for JSON integer numbers (`int64_t` by |
| default; will be used in @ref number_integer_t) |
| @tparam NumberUnsignedType type for JSON unsigned integer numbers (@c |
| `uint64_t` by default; will be used in @ref number_unsigned_t) |
| @tparam NumberFloatType type for JSON floating-point numbers (`double` by |
| default; will be used in @ref number_float_t) |
| @tparam BinaryType type for packed binary data for compatibility with binary |
| serialization formats (`std::vector<std::uint8_t>` by default; will be used in |
| @ref binary_t) |
| @tparam AllocatorType type of the allocator to use (`std::allocator` by |
| default) |
| @tparam JSONSerializer the serializer to resolve internal calls to `to_json()` |
| and `from_json()` (@ref adl_serializer by default) |
| |
| @requirement The class satisfies the following concept requirements: |
| - Basic |
| - [DefaultConstructible](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/DefaultConstructible): |
| JSON values can be default constructed. The result will be a JSON null |
| value. |
| - [MoveConstructible](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/MoveConstructible): |
| A JSON value can be constructed from an rvalue argument. |
| - [CopyConstructible](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/CopyConstructible): |
| A JSON value can be copy-constructed from an lvalue expression. |
| - [MoveAssignable](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/MoveAssignable): |
| A JSON value van be assigned from an rvalue argument. |
| - [CopyAssignable](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/CopyAssignable): |
| A JSON value can be copy-assigned from an lvalue expression. |
| - [Destructible](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Destructible): |
| JSON values can be destructed. |
| - Layout |
| - [StandardLayoutType](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/StandardLayoutType): |
| JSON values have |
| [standard layout](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/data_members#Standard_layout): |
| All non-static data members are private and standard layout types, the |
| class has no virtual functions or (virtual) base classes. |
| - Library-wide |
| - [EqualityComparable](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/EqualityComparable): |
| JSON values can be compared with `==`, see @ref |
| operator==(const_reference,const_reference). |
| - [LessThanComparable](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/LessThanComparable): |
| JSON values can be compared with `<`, see @ref |
| operator<(const_reference,const_reference). |
| - [Swappable](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Swappable): |
| Any JSON lvalue or rvalue of can be swapped with any lvalue or rvalue of |
| other compatible types, using unqualified function call @ref swap(). |
| - [NullablePointer](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/NullablePointer): |
| JSON values can be compared against `std::nullptr_t` objects which are used |
| to model the `null` value. |
| - Container |
| - [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container): |
| JSON values can be used like STL containers and provide iterator access. |
| - [ReversibleContainer](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/ReversibleContainer); |
| JSON values can be used like STL containers and provide reverse iterator |
| access. |
| |
| @invariant The member variables @a m_value and @a m_type have the following |
| relationship: |
| - If `m_type == value_t::object`, then `m_value.object != nullptr`. |
| - If `m_type == value_t::array`, then `m_value.array != nullptr`. |
| - If `m_type == value_t::string`, then `m_value.string != nullptr`. |
| The invariants are checked by member function assert_invariant(). |
| |
| @internal |
| @note ObjectType trick from https://stackoverflow.com/a/9860911 |
| @endinternal |
| |
| @see [RFC 7159: The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange |
| Format](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| |
| @nosubgrouping |
| */ |
| NLOHMANN_BASIC_JSON_TPL_DECLARATION |
| class basic_json |
| { |
| private: |
| template<detail::value_t> friend struct detail::external_constructor; |
| friend ::nlohmann::json_pointer<basic_json>; |
| |
| template<typename BasicJsonType, typename InputType> |
| friend class ::nlohmann::detail::parser; |
| friend ::nlohmann::detail::serializer<basic_json>; |
| template<typename BasicJsonType> |
| friend class ::nlohmann::detail::iter_impl; |
| template<typename BasicJsonType, typename CharType> |
| friend class ::nlohmann::detail::binary_writer; |
| template<typename BasicJsonType, typename InputType, typename SAX> |
| friend class ::nlohmann::detail::binary_reader; |
| template<typename BasicJsonType> |
| friend class ::nlohmann::detail::json_sax_dom_parser; |
| template<typename BasicJsonType> |
| friend class ::nlohmann::detail::json_sax_dom_callback_parser; |
| |
| /// workaround type for MSVC |
| using basic_json_t = NLOHMANN_BASIC_JSON_TPL; |
| |
| JSON_PRIVATE_UNLESS_TESTED: |
| // convenience aliases for types residing in namespace detail; |
| using lexer = ::nlohmann::detail::lexer_base<basic_json>; |
| |
| template<typename InputAdapterType> |
| static ::nlohmann::detail::parser<basic_json, InputAdapterType> parser( |
| InputAdapterType adapter, |
| detail::parser_callback_t<basic_json>cb = nullptr, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false |
| ) |
| { |
| return ::nlohmann::detail::parser<basic_json, InputAdapterType>(std::move(adapter), |
| std::move(cb), allow_exceptions, ignore_comments); |
| } |
| |
| private: |
| using primitive_iterator_t = ::nlohmann::detail::primitive_iterator_t; |
| template<typename BasicJsonType> |
| using internal_iterator = ::nlohmann::detail::internal_iterator<BasicJsonType>; |
| template<typename BasicJsonType> |
| using iter_impl = ::nlohmann::detail::iter_impl<BasicJsonType>; |
| template<typename Iterator> |
| using iteration_proxy = ::nlohmann::detail::iteration_proxy<Iterator>; |
| template<typename Base> using json_reverse_iterator = ::nlohmann::detail::json_reverse_iterator<Base>; |
| |
| template<typename CharType> |
| using output_adapter_t = ::nlohmann::detail::output_adapter_t<CharType>; |
| |
| template<typename InputType> |
| using binary_reader = ::nlohmann::detail::binary_reader<basic_json, InputType>; |
| template<typename CharType> using binary_writer = ::nlohmann::detail::binary_writer<basic_json, CharType>; |
| |
| JSON_PRIVATE_UNLESS_TESTED: |
| using serializer = ::nlohmann::detail::serializer<basic_json>; |
| |
| public: |
| using value_t = detail::value_t; |
| /// JSON Pointer, see @ref nlohmann::json_pointer |
| using json_pointer = ::nlohmann::json_pointer<basic_json>; |
| template<typename T, typename SFINAE> |
| using json_serializer = JSONSerializer<T, SFINAE>; |
| /// how to treat decoding errors |
| using error_handler_t = detail::error_handler_t; |
| /// how to treat CBOR tags |
| using cbor_tag_handler_t = detail::cbor_tag_handler_t; |
| /// helper type for initializer lists of basic_json values |
| using initializer_list_t = std::initializer_list<detail::json_ref<basic_json>>; |
| |
| using input_format_t = detail::input_format_t; |
| /// SAX interface type, see @ref nlohmann::json_sax |
| using json_sax_t = json_sax<basic_json>; |
| |
| //////////////// |
| // exceptions // |
| //////////////// |
| |
| /// @name exceptions |
| /// Classes to implement user-defined exceptions. |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /// @copydoc detail::exception |
| using exception = detail::exception; |
| /// @copydoc detail::parse_error |
| using parse_error = detail::parse_error; |
| /// @copydoc detail::invalid_iterator |
| using invalid_iterator = detail::invalid_iterator; |
| /// @copydoc detail::type_error |
| using type_error = detail::type_error; |
| /// @copydoc detail::out_of_range |
| using out_of_range = detail::out_of_range; |
| /// @copydoc detail::other_error |
| using other_error = detail::other_error; |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| |
| ///////////////////// |
| // container types // |
| ///////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name container types |
| /// The canonic container types to use @ref basic_json like any other STL |
| /// container. |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /// the type of elements in a basic_json container |
| using value_type = basic_json; |
| |
| /// the type of an element reference |
| using reference = value_type&; |
| /// the type of an element const reference |
| using const_reference = const value_type&; |
| |
| /// a type to represent differences between iterators |
| using difference_type = std::ptrdiff_t; |
| /// a type to represent container sizes |
| using size_type = std::size_t; |
| |
| /// the allocator type |
| using allocator_type = AllocatorType<basic_json>; |
| |
| /// the type of an element pointer |
| using pointer = typename std::allocator_traits<allocator_type>::pointer; |
| /// the type of an element const pointer |
| using const_pointer = typename std::allocator_traits<allocator_type>::const_pointer; |
| |
| /// an iterator for a basic_json container |
| using iterator = iter_impl<basic_json>; |
| /// a const iterator for a basic_json container |
| using const_iterator = iter_impl<const basic_json>; |
| /// a reverse iterator for a basic_json container |
| using reverse_iterator = json_reverse_iterator<typename basic_json::iterator>; |
| /// a const reverse iterator for a basic_json container |
| using const_reverse_iterator = json_reverse_iterator<typename basic_json::const_iterator>; |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns the allocator associated with the container |
| */ |
| static allocator_type get_allocator() |
| { |
| return allocator_type(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns version information on the library |
| |
| This function returns a JSON object with information about the library, |
| including the version number and information on the platform and compiler. |
| |
| @return JSON object holding version information |
| key | description |
| ----------- | --------------- |
| `compiler` | Information on the used compiler. It is an object with the following keys: `c++` (the used C++ standard), `family` (the compiler family; possible values are `clang`, `icc`, `gcc`, `ilecpp`, `msvc`, `pgcpp`, `sunpro`, and `unknown`), and `version` (the compiler version). |
| `copyright` | The copyright line for the library as string. |
| `name` | The name of the library as string. |
| `platform` | The used platform as string. Possible values are `win32`, `linux`, `apple`, `unix`, and `unknown`. |
| `url` | The URL of the project as string. |
| `version` | The version of the library. It is an object with the following keys: `major`, `minor`, and `patch` as defined by [Semantic Versioning](http://semver.org), and `string` (the version string). |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example output of the `meta()` |
| function.,meta} |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @since 2.1.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json meta() |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| |
| result["copyright"] = "(C) 2013-2021 Niels Lohmann"; |
| result["name"] = "JSON for Modern C++"; |
| result["url"] = "https://github.com/nlohmann/json"; |
| result["version"]["string"] = |
| std::to_string(NLOHMANN_JSON_VERSION_MAJOR) + "." + |
| std::to_string(NLOHMANN_JSON_VERSION_MINOR) + "." + |
| std::to_string(NLOHMANN_JSON_VERSION_PATCH); |
| result["version"]["major"] = NLOHMANN_JSON_VERSION_MAJOR; |
| result["version"]["minor"] = NLOHMANN_JSON_VERSION_MINOR; |
| result["version"]["patch"] = NLOHMANN_JSON_VERSION_PATCH; |
| |
| #ifdef _WIN32 |
| result["platform"] = "win32"; |
| #elif defined __linux__ |
| result["platform"] = "linux"; |
| #elif defined __APPLE__ |
| result["platform"] = "apple"; |
| #elif defined __unix__ |
| result["platform"] = "unix"; |
| #else |
| result["platform"] = "unknown"; |
| #endif |
| |
| #if defined(__ICC) || defined(__INTEL_COMPILER) |
| result["compiler"] = {{"family", "icc"}, {"version", __INTEL_COMPILER}}; |
| #elif defined(__clang__) |
| result["compiler"] = {{"family", "clang"}, {"version", __clang_version__}}; |
| #elif defined(__GNUC__) || defined(__GNUG__) |
| result["compiler"] = {{"family", "gcc"}, {"version", std::to_string(__GNUC__) + "." + std::to_string(__GNUC_MINOR__) + "." + std::to_string(__GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__)}}; |
| #elif defined(__HP_cc) || defined(__HP_aCC) |
| result["compiler"] = "hp" |
| #elif defined(__IBMCPP__) |
| result["compiler"] = {{"family", "ilecpp"}, {"version", __IBMCPP__}}; |
| #elif defined(_MSC_VER) |
| result["compiler"] = {{"family", "msvc"}, {"version", _MSC_VER}}; |
| #elif defined(__PGI) |
| result["compiler"] = {{"family", "pgcpp"}, {"version", __PGI}}; |
| #elif defined(__SUNPRO_CC) |
| result["compiler"] = {{"family", "sunpro"}, {"version", __SUNPRO_CC}}; |
| #else |
| result["compiler"] = {{"family", "unknown"}, {"version", "unknown"}}; |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef __cplusplus |
| result["compiler"]["c++"] = std::to_string(__cplusplus); |
| #else |
| result["compiler"]["c++"] = "unknown"; |
| #endif |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /////////////////////////// |
| // JSON value data types // |
| /////////////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name JSON value data types |
| /// The data types to store a JSON value. These types are derived from |
| /// the template arguments passed to class @ref basic_json. |
| /// @{ |
| |
| #if defined(JSON_HAS_CPP_14) |
| // Use transparent comparator if possible, combined with perfect forwarding |
| // on find() and count() calls prevents unnecessary string construction. |
| using object_comparator_t = std::less<>; |
| #else |
| using object_comparator_t = std::less<StringType>; |
| #endif |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief a type for an object |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) describes JSON objects as follows: |
| > An object is an unordered collection of zero or more name/value pairs, |
| > where a name is a string and a value is a string, number, boolean, null, |
| > object, or array. |
| |
| To store objects in C++, a type is defined by the template parameters |
| described below. |
| |
| @tparam ObjectType the container to store objects (e.g., `std::map` or |
| `std::unordered_map`) |
| @tparam StringType the type of the keys or names (e.g., `std::string`). |
| The comparison function `std::less<StringType>` is used to order elements |
| inside the container. |
| @tparam AllocatorType the allocator to use for objects (e.g., |
| `std::allocator`) |
| |
| #### Default type |
| |
| With the default values for @a ObjectType (`std::map`), @a StringType |
| (`std::string`), and @a AllocatorType (`std::allocator`), the default |
| value for @a object_t is: |
| |
| @code {.cpp} |
| std::map< |
| std::string, // key_type |
| basic_json, // value_type |
| std::less<std::string>, // key_compare |
| std::allocator<std::pair<const std::string, basic_json>> // allocator_type |
| > |
| @endcode |
| |
| #### Behavior |
| |
| The choice of @a object_t influences the behavior of the JSON class. With |
| the default type, objects have the following behavior: |
| |
| - When all names are unique, objects will be interoperable in the sense |
| that all software implementations receiving that object will agree on |
| the name-value mappings. |
| - When the names within an object are not unique, it is unspecified which |
| one of the values for a given key will be chosen. For instance, |
| `{"key": 2, "key": 1}` could be equal to either `{"key": 1}` or |
| `{"key": 2}`. |
| - Internally, name/value pairs are stored in lexicographical order of the |
| names. Objects will also be serialized (see @ref dump) in this order. |
| For instance, `{"b": 1, "a": 2}` and `{"a": 2, "b": 1}` will be stored |
| and serialized as `{"a": 2, "b": 1}`. |
| - When comparing objects, the order of the name/value pairs is irrelevant. |
| This makes objects interoperable in the sense that they will not be |
| affected by these differences. For instance, `{"b": 1, "a": 2}` and |
| `{"a": 2, "b": 1}` will be treated as equal. |
| |
| #### Limits |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) specifies: |
| > An implementation may set limits on the maximum depth of nesting. |
| |
| In this class, the object's limit of nesting is not explicitly constrained. |
| However, a maximum depth of nesting may be introduced by the compiler or |
| runtime environment. A theoretical limit can be queried by calling the |
| @ref max_size function of a JSON object. |
| |
| #### Storage |
| |
| Objects are stored as pointers in a @ref basic_json type. That is, for any |
| access to object values, a pointer of type `object_t*` must be |
| dereferenced. |
| |
| @sa @ref array_t -- type for an array value |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| |
| @note The order name/value pairs are added to the object is *not* |
| preserved by the library. Therefore, iterating an object may return |
| name/value pairs in a different order than they were originally stored. In |
| fact, keys will be traversed in alphabetical order as `std::map` with |
| `std::less` is used by default. Please note this behavior conforms to [RFC |
| 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159), because any order implements the |
| specified "unordered" nature of JSON objects. |
| */ |
| using object_t = ObjectType<StringType, |
| basic_json, |
| object_comparator_t, |
| AllocatorType<std::pair<const StringType, |
| basic_json>>>; |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief a type for an array |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) describes JSON arrays as follows: |
| > An array is an ordered sequence of zero or more values. |
| |
| To store objects in C++, a type is defined by the template parameters |
| explained below. |
| |
| @tparam ArrayType container type to store arrays (e.g., `std::vector` or |
| `std::list`) |
| @tparam AllocatorType allocator to use for arrays (e.g., `std::allocator`) |
| |
| #### Default type |
| |
| With the default values for @a ArrayType (`std::vector`) and @a |
| AllocatorType (`std::allocator`), the default value for @a array_t is: |
| |
| @code {.cpp} |
| std::vector< |
| basic_json, // value_type |
| std::allocator<basic_json> // allocator_type |
| > |
| @endcode |
| |
| #### Limits |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) specifies: |
| > An implementation may set limits on the maximum depth of nesting. |
| |
| In this class, the array's limit of nesting is not explicitly constrained. |
| However, a maximum depth of nesting may be introduced by the compiler or |
| runtime environment. A theoretical limit can be queried by calling the |
| @ref max_size function of a JSON array. |
| |
| #### Storage |
| |
| Arrays are stored as pointers in a @ref basic_json type. That is, for any |
| access to array values, a pointer of type `array_t*` must be dereferenced. |
| |
| @sa @ref object_t -- type for an object value |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| using array_t = ArrayType<basic_json, AllocatorType<basic_json>>; |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief a type for a string |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) describes JSON strings as follows: |
| > A string is a sequence of zero or more Unicode characters. |
| |
| To store objects in C++, a type is defined by the template parameter |
| described below. Unicode values are split by the JSON class into |
| byte-sized characters during deserialization. |
| |
| @tparam StringType the container to store strings (e.g., `std::string`). |
| Note this container is used for keys/names in objects, see @ref object_t. |
| |
| #### Default type |
| |
| With the default values for @a StringType (`std::string`), the default |
| value for @a string_t is: |
| |
| @code {.cpp} |
| std::string |
| @endcode |
| |
| #### Encoding |
| |
| Strings are stored in UTF-8 encoding. Therefore, functions like |
| `std::string::size()` or `std::string::length()` return the number of |
| bytes in the string rather than the number of characters or glyphs. |
| |
| #### String comparison |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) states: |
| > Software implementations are typically required to test names of object |
| > members for equality. Implementations that transform the textual |
| > representation into sequences of Unicode code units and then perform the |
| > comparison numerically, code unit by code unit, are interoperable in the |
| > sense that implementations will agree in all cases on equality or |
| > inequality of two strings. For example, implementations that compare |
| > strings with escaped characters unconverted may incorrectly find that |
| > `"a\\b"` and `"a\u005Cb"` are not equal. |
| |
| This implementation is interoperable as it does compare strings code unit |
| by code unit. |
| |
| #### Storage |
| |
| String values are stored as pointers in a @ref basic_json type. That is, |
| for any access to string values, a pointer of type `string_t*` must be |
| dereferenced. |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| using string_t = StringType; |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief a type for a boolean |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) implicitly describes a boolean as a |
| type which differentiates the two literals `true` and `false`. |
| |
| To store objects in C++, a type is defined by the template parameter @a |
| BooleanType which chooses the type to use. |
| |
| #### Default type |
| |
| With the default values for @a BooleanType (`bool`), the default value for |
| @a boolean_t is: |
| |
| @code {.cpp} |
| bool |
| @endcode |
| |
| #### Storage |
| |
| Boolean values are stored directly inside a @ref basic_json type. |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| using boolean_t = BooleanType; |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief a type for a number (integer) |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) describes numbers as follows: |
| > The representation of numbers is similar to that used in most |
| > programming languages. A number is represented in base 10 using decimal |
| > digits. It contains an integer component that may be prefixed with an |
| > optional minus sign, which may be followed by a fraction part and/or an |
| > exponent part. Leading zeros are not allowed. (...) Numeric values that |
| > cannot be represented in the grammar below (such as Infinity and NaN) |
| > are not permitted. |
| |
| This description includes both integer and floating-point numbers. |
| However, C++ allows more precise storage if it is known whether the number |
| is a signed integer, an unsigned integer or a floating-point number. |
| Therefore, three different types, @ref number_integer_t, @ref |
| number_unsigned_t and @ref number_float_t are used. |
| |
| To store integer numbers in C++, a type is defined by the template |
| parameter @a NumberIntegerType which chooses the type to use. |
| |
| #### Default type |
| |
| With the default values for @a NumberIntegerType (`int64_t`), the default |
| value for @a number_integer_t is: |
| |
| @code {.cpp} |
| int64_t |
| @endcode |
| |
| #### Default behavior |
| |
| - The restrictions about leading zeros is not enforced in C++. Instead, |
| leading zeros in integer literals lead to an interpretation as octal |
| number. Internally, the value will be stored as decimal number. For |
| instance, the C++ integer literal `010` will be serialized to `8`. |
| During deserialization, leading zeros yield an error. |
| - Not-a-number (NaN) values will be serialized to `null`. |
| |
| #### Limits |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) specifies: |
| > An implementation may set limits on the range and precision of numbers. |
| |
| When the default type is used, the maximal integer number that can be |
| stored is `9223372036854775807` (INT64_MAX) and the minimal integer number |
| that can be stored is `-9223372036854775808` (INT64_MIN). Integer numbers |
| that are out of range will yield over/underflow when used in a |
| constructor. During deserialization, too large or small integer numbers |
| will be automatically be stored as @ref number_unsigned_t or @ref |
| number_float_t. |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) further states: |
| > Note that when such software is used, numbers that are integers and are |
| > in the range \f$[-2^{53}+1, 2^{53}-1]\f$ are interoperable in the sense |
| > that implementations will agree exactly on their numeric values. |
| |
| As this range is a subrange of the exactly supported range [INT64_MIN, |
| INT64_MAX], this class's integer type is interoperable. |
| |
| #### Storage |
| |
| Integer number values are stored directly inside a @ref basic_json type. |
| |
| @sa @ref number_float_t -- type for number values (floating-point) |
| |
| @sa @ref number_unsigned_t -- type for number values (unsigned integer) |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| using number_integer_t = NumberIntegerType; |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief a type for a number (unsigned) |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) describes numbers as follows: |
| > The representation of numbers is similar to that used in most |
| > programming languages. A number is represented in base 10 using decimal |
| > digits. It contains an integer component that may be prefixed with an |
| > optional minus sign, which may be followed by a fraction part and/or an |
| > exponent part. Leading zeros are not allowed. (...) Numeric values that |
| > cannot be represented in the grammar below (such as Infinity and NaN) |
| > are not permitted. |
| |
| This description includes both integer and floating-point numbers. |
| However, C++ allows more precise storage if it is known whether the number |
| is a signed integer, an unsigned integer or a floating-point number. |
| Therefore, three different types, @ref number_integer_t, @ref |
| number_unsigned_t and @ref number_float_t are used. |
| |
| To store unsigned integer numbers in C++, a type is defined by the |
| template parameter @a NumberUnsignedType which chooses the type to use. |
| |
| #### Default type |
| |
| With the default values for @a NumberUnsignedType (`uint64_t`), the |
| default value for @a number_unsigned_t is: |
| |
| @code {.cpp} |
| uint64_t |
| @endcode |
| |
| #### Default behavior |
| |
| - The restrictions about leading zeros is not enforced in C++. Instead, |
| leading zeros in integer literals lead to an interpretation as octal |
| number. Internally, the value will be stored as decimal number. For |
| instance, the C++ integer literal `010` will be serialized to `8`. |
| During deserialization, leading zeros yield an error. |
| - Not-a-number (NaN) values will be serialized to `null`. |
| |
| #### Limits |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) specifies: |
| > An implementation may set limits on the range and precision of numbers. |
| |
| When the default type is used, the maximal integer number that can be |
| stored is `18446744073709551615` (UINT64_MAX) and the minimal integer |
| number that can be stored is `0`. Integer numbers that are out of range |
| will yield over/underflow when used in a constructor. During |
| deserialization, too large or small integer numbers will be automatically |
| be stored as @ref number_integer_t or @ref number_float_t. |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) further states: |
| > Note that when such software is used, numbers that are integers and are |
| > in the range \f$[-2^{53}+1, 2^{53}-1]\f$ are interoperable in the sense |
| > that implementations will agree exactly on their numeric values. |
| |
| As this range is a subrange (when considered in conjunction with the |
| number_integer_t type) of the exactly supported range [0, UINT64_MAX], |
| this class's integer type is interoperable. |
| |
| #### Storage |
| |
| Integer number values are stored directly inside a @ref basic_json type. |
| |
| @sa @ref number_float_t -- type for number values (floating-point) |
| @sa @ref number_integer_t -- type for number values (integer) |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| */ |
| using number_unsigned_t = NumberUnsignedType; |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief a type for a number (floating-point) |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) describes numbers as follows: |
| > The representation of numbers is similar to that used in most |
| > programming languages. A number is represented in base 10 using decimal |
| > digits. It contains an integer component that may be prefixed with an |
| > optional minus sign, which may be followed by a fraction part and/or an |
| > exponent part. Leading zeros are not allowed. (...) Numeric values that |
| > cannot be represented in the grammar below (such as Infinity and NaN) |
| > are not permitted. |
| |
| This description includes both integer and floating-point numbers. |
| However, C++ allows more precise storage if it is known whether the number |
| is a signed integer, an unsigned integer or a floating-point number. |
| Therefore, three different types, @ref number_integer_t, @ref |
| number_unsigned_t and @ref number_float_t are used. |
| |
| To store floating-point numbers in C++, a type is defined by the template |
| parameter @a NumberFloatType which chooses the type to use. |
| |
| #### Default type |
| |
| With the default values for @a NumberFloatType (`double`), the default |
| value for @a number_float_t is: |
| |
| @code {.cpp} |
| double |
| @endcode |
| |
| #### Default behavior |
| |
| - The restrictions about leading zeros is not enforced in C++. Instead, |
| leading zeros in floating-point literals will be ignored. Internally, |
| the value will be stored as decimal number. For instance, the C++ |
| floating-point literal `01.2` will be serialized to `1.2`. During |
| deserialization, leading zeros yield an error. |
| - Not-a-number (NaN) values will be serialized to `null`. |
| |
| #### Limits |
| |
| [RFC 7159](http://rfc7159.net/rfc7159) states: |
| > This specification allows implementations to set limits on the range and |
| > precision of numbers accepted. Since software that implements IEEE |
| > 754-2008 binary64 (double precision) numbers is generally available and |
| > widely used, good interoperability can be achieved by implementations |
| > that expect no more precision or range than these provide, in the sense |
| > that implementations will approximate JSON numbers within the expected |
| > precision. |
| |
| This implementation does exactly follow this approach, as it uses double |
| precision floating-point numbers. Note values smaller than |
| `-1.79769313486232e+308` and values greater than `1.79769313486232e+308` |
| will be stored as NaN internally and be serialized to `null`. |
| |
| #### Storage |
| |
| Floating-point number values are stored directly inside a @ref basic_json |
| type. |
| |
| @sa @ref number_integer_t -- type for number values (integer) |
| |
| @sa @ref number_unsigned_t -- type for number values (unsigned integer) |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| using number_float_t = NumberFloatType; |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief a type for a packed binary type |
| |
| This type is a type designed to carry binary data that appears in various |
| serialized formats, such as CBOR's Major Type 2, MessagePack's bin, and |
| BSON's generic binary subtype. This type is NOT a part of standard JSON and |
| exists solely for compatibility with these binary types. As such, it is |
| simply defined as an ordered sequence of zero or more byte values. |
| |
| Additionally, as an implementation detail, the subtype of the binary data is |
| carried around as a `std::uint8_t`, which is compatible with both of the |
| binary data formats that use binary subtyping, (though the specific |
| numbering is incompatible with each other, and it is up to the user to |
| translate between them). |
| |
| [CBOR's RFC 7049](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7049) describes this type |
| as: |
| > Major type 2: a byte string. The string's length in bytes is represented |
| > following the rules for positive integers (major type 0). |
| |
| [MessagePack's documentation on the bin type |
| family](https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack/blob/master/spec.md#bin-format-family) |
| describes this type as: |
| > Bin format family stores an byte array in 2, 3, or 5 bytes of extra bytes |
| > in addition to the size of the byte array. |
| |
| [BSON's specifications](http://bsonspec.org/spec.html) describe several |
| binary types; however, this type is intended to represent the generic binary |
| type which has the description: |
| > Generic binary subtype - This is the most commonly used binary subtype and |
| > should be the 'default' for drivers and tools. |
| |
| None of these impose any limitations on the internal representation other |
| than the basic unit of storage be some type of array whose parts are |
| decomposable into bytes. |
| |
| The default representation of this binary format is a |
| `std::vector<std::uint8_t>`, which is a very common way to represent a byte |
| array in modern C++. |
| |
| #### Default type |
| |
| The default values for @a BinaryType is `std::vector<std::uint8_t>` |
| |
| #### Storage |
| |
| Binary Arrays are stored as pointers in a @ref basic_json type. That is, |
| for any access to array values, a pointer of the type `binary_t*` must be |
| dereferenced. |
| |
| #### Notes on subtypes |
| |
| - CBOR |
| - Binary values are represented as byte strings. No subtypes are |
| supported and will be ignored when CBOR is written. |
| - MessagePack |
| - If a subtype is given and the binary array contains exactly 1, 2, 4, 8, |
| or 16 elements, the fixext family (fixext1, fixext2, fixext4, fixext8) |
| is used. For other sizes, the ext family (ext8, ext16, ext32) is used. |
| The subtype is then added as singed 8-bit integer. |
| - If no subtype is given, the bin family (bin8, bin16, bin32) is used. |
| - BSON |
| - If a subtype is given, it is used and added as unsigned 8-bit integer. |
| - If no subtype is given, the generic binary subtype 0x00 is used. |
| |
| @sa @ref binary -- create a binary array |
| |
| @since version 3.8.0 |
| */ |
| using binary_t = nlohmann::byte_container_with_subtype<BinaryType>; |
| /// @} |
| |
| private: |
| |
| /// helper for exception-safe object creation |
| template<typename T, typename... Args> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_RETURNS_NON_NULL |
| static T* create(Args&& ... args) |
| { |
| AllocatorType<T> alloc; |
| using AllocatorTraits = std::allocator_traits<AllocatorType<T>>; |
| |
| auto deleter = [&](T * obj) |
| { |
| AllocatorTraits::deallocate(alloc, obj, 1); |
| }; |
| std::unique_ptr<T, decltype(deleter)> obj(AllocatorTraits::allocate(alloc, 1), deleter); |
| AllocatorTraits::construct(alloc, obj.get(), std::forward<Args>(args)...); |
| JSON_ASSERT(obj != nullptr); |
| return obj.release(); |
| } |
| |
| //////////////////////// |
| // JSON value storage // |
| //////////////////////// |
| |
| JSON_PRIVATE_UNLESS_TESTED: |
| /*! |
| @brief a JSON value |
| |
| The actual storage for a JSON value of the @ref basic_json class. This |
| union combines the different storage types for the JSON value types |
| defined in @ref value_t. |
| |
| JSON type | value_t type | used type |
| --------- | --------------- | ------------------------ |
| object | object | pointer to @ref object_t |
| array | array | pointer to @ref array_t |
| string | string | pointer to @ref string_t |
| boolean | boolean | @ref boolean_t |
| number | number_integer | @ref number_integer_t |
| number | number_unsigned | @ref number_unsigned_t |
| number | number_float | @ref number_float_t |
| binary | binary | pointer to @ref binary_t |
| null | null | *no value is stored* |
| |
| @note Variable-length types (objects, arrays, and strings) are stored as |
| pointers. The size of the union should not exceed 64 bits if the default |
| value types are used. |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| union json_value |
| { |
| /// object (stored with pointer to save storage) |
| object_t* object; |
| /// array (stored with pointer to save storage) |
| array_t* array; |
| /// string (stored with pointer to save storage) |
| string_t* string; |
| /// binary (stored with pointer to save storage) |
| binary_t* binary; |
| /// boolean |
| boolean_t boolean; |
| /// number (integer) |
| number_integer_t number_integer; |
| /// number (unsigned integer) |
| number_unsigned_t number_unsigned; |
| /// number (floating-point) |
| number_float_t number_float; |
| |
| /// default constructor (for null values) |
| json_value() = default; |
| /// constructor for booleans |
| json_value(boolean_t v) noexcept : boolean(v) {} |
| /// constructor for numbers (integer) |
| json_value(number_integer_t v) noexcept : number_integer(v) {} |
| /// constructor for numbers (unsigned) |
| json_value(number_unsigned_t v) noexcept : number_unsigned(v) {} |
| /// constructor for numbers (floating-point) |
| json_value(number_float_t v) noexcept : number_float(v) {} |
| /// constructor for empty values of a given type |
| json_value(value_t t) |
| { |
| switch (t) |
| { |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| object = create<object_t>(); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| array = create<array_t>(); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::string: |
| { |
| string = create<string_t>(""); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::binary: |
| { |
| binary = create<binary_t>(); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| { |
| boolean = boolean_t(false); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| { |
| number_integer = number_integer_t(0); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| { |
| number_unsigned = number_unsigned_t(0); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| { |
| number_float = number_float_t(0.0); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::null: |
| { |
| object = nullptr; // silence warning, see #821 |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| { |
| object = nullptr; // silence warning, see #821 |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(t == value_t::null)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(other_error::create(500, "961c151d2e87f2686a955a9be24d316f1362bf21 3.9.1")); // LCOV_EXCL_LINE |
| } |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for strings |
| json_value(const string_t& value) |
| { |
| string = create<string_t>(value); |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for rvalue strings |
| json_value(string_t&& value) |
| { |
| string = create<string_t>(std::move(value)); |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for objects |
| json_value(const object_t& value) |
| { |
| object = create<object_t>(value); |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for rvalue objects |
| json_value(object_t&& value) |
| { |
| object = create<object_t>(std::move(value)); |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for arrays |
| json_value(const array_t& value) |
| { |
| array = create<array_t>(value); |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for rvalue arrays |
| json_value(array_t&& value) |
| { |
| array = create<array_t>(std::move(value)); |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for binary arrays |
| json_value(const typename binary_t::container_type& value) |
| { |
| binary = create<binary_t>(value); |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for rvalue binary arrays |
| json_value(typename binary_t::container_type&& value) |
| { |
| binary = create<binary_t>(std::move(value)); |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for binary arrays (internal type) |
| json_value(const binary_t& value) |
| { |
| binary = create<binary_t>(value); |
| } |
| |
| /// constructor for rvalue binary arrays (internal type) |
| json_value(binary_t&& value) |
| { |
| binary = create<binary_t>(std::move(value)); |
| } |
| |
| void destroy(value_t t) noexcept |
| { |
| // flatten the current json_value to a heap-allocated stack |
| std::vector<basic_json> stack; |
| |
| // move the top-level items to stack |
| if (t == value_t::array) |
| { |
| stack.reserve(array->size()); |
| std::move(array->begin(), array->end(), std::back_inserter(stack)); |
| } |
| else if (t == value_t::object) |
| { |
| stack.reserve(object->size()); |
| for (auto&& it : *object) |
| { |
| stack.push_back(std::move(it.second)); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| while (!stack.empty()) |
| { |
| // move the last item to local variable to be processed |
| basic_json current_item(std::move(stack.back())); |
| stack.pop_back(); |
| |
| // if current_item is array/object, move |
| // its children to the stack to be processed later |
| if (current_item.is_array()) |
| { |
| std::move(current_item.m_value.array->begin(), current_item.m_value.array->end(), |
| std::back_inserter(stack)); |
| |
| current_item.m_value.array->clear(); |
| } |
| else if (current_item.is_object()) |
| { |
| for (auto&& it : *current_item.m_value.object) |
| { |
| stack.push_back(std::move(it.second)); |
| } |
| |
| current_item.m_value.object->clear(); |
| } |
| |
| // it's now safe that current_item get destructed |
| // since it doesn't have any children |
| } |
| |
| switch (t) |
| { |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| AllocatorType<object_t> alloc; |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::destroy(alloc, object); |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::deallocate(alloc, object, 1); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| AllocatorType<array_t> alloc; |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::destroy(alloc, array); |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::deallocate(alloc, array, 1); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::string: |
| { |
| AllocatorType<string_t> alloc; |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::destroy(alloc, string); |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::deallocate(alloc, string, 1); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::binary: |
| { |
| AllocatorType<binary_t> alloc; |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::destroy(alloc, binary); |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::deallocate(alloc, binary, 1); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| { |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| private: |
| /*! |
| @brief checks the class invariants |
| |
| This function asserts the class invariants. It needs to be called at the |
| end of every constructor to make sure that created objects respect the |
| invariant. Furthermore, it has to be called each time the type of a JSON |
| value is changed, because the invariant expresses a relationship between |
| @a m_type and @a m_value. |
| */ |
| void assert_invariant() const noexcept |
| { |
| JSON_ASSERT(m_type != value_t::object || m_value.object != nullptr); |
| JSON_ASSERT(m_type != value_t::array || m_value.array != nullptr); |
| JSON_ASSERT(m_type != value_t::string || m_value.string != nullptr); |
| JSON_ASSERT(m_type != value_t::binary || m_value.binary != nullptr); |
| } |
| |
| public: |
| ////////////////////////// |
| // JSON parser callback // |
| ////////////////////////// |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief parser event types |
| |
| The parser callback distinguishes the following events: |
| - `object_start`: the parser read `{` and started to process a JSON object |
| - `key`: the parser read a key of a value in an object |
| - `object_end`: the parser read `}` and finished processing a JSON object |
| - `array_start`: the parser read `[` and started to process a JSON array |
| - `array_end`: the parser read `]` and finished processing a JSON array |
| - `value`: the parser finished reading a JSON value |
| |
| @image html callback_events.png "Example when certain parse events are triggered" |
| |
| @sa @ref parser_callback_t for more information and examples |
| */ |
| using parse_event_t = detail::parse_event_t; |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief per-element parser callback type |
| |
| With a parser callback function, the result of parsing a JSON text can be |
| influenced. When passed to @ref parse, it is called on certain events |
| (passed as @ref parse_event_t via parameter @a event) with a set recursion |
| depth @a depth and context JSON value @a parsed. The return value of the |
| callback function is a boolean indicating whether the element that emitted |
| the callback shall be kept or not. |
| |
| We distinguish six scenarios (determined by the event type) in which the |
| callback function can be called. The following table describes the values |
| of the parameters @a depth, @a event, and @a parsed. |
| |
| parameter @a event | description | parameter @a depth | parameter @a parsed |
| ------------------ | ----------- | ------------------ | ------------------- |
| parse_event_t::object_start | the parser read `{` and started to process a JSON object | depth of the parent of the JSON object | a JSON value with type discarded |
| parse_event_t::key | the parser read a key of a value in an object | depth of the currently parsed JSON object | a JSON string containing the key |
| parse_event_t::object_end | the parser read `}` and finished processing a JSON object | depth of the parent of the JSON object | the parsed JSON object |
| parse_event_t::array_start | the parser read `[` and started to process a JSON array | depth of the parent of the JSON array | a JSON value with type discarded |
| parse_event_t::array_end | the parser read `]` and finished processing a JSON array | depth of the parent of the JSON array | the parsed JSON array |
| parse_event_t::value | the parser finished reading a JSON value | depth of the value | the parsed JSON value |
| |
| @image html callback_events.png "Example when certain parse events are triggered" |
| |
| Discarding a value (i.e., returning `false`) has different effects |
| depending on the context in which function was called: |
| |
| - Discarded values in structured types are skipped. That is, the parser |
| will behave as if the discarded value was never read. |
| - In case a value outside a structured type is skipped, it is replaced |
| with `null`. This case happens if the top-level element is skipped. |
| |
| @param[in] depth the depth of the recursion during parsing |
| |
| @param[in] event an event of type parse_event_t indicating the context in |
| the callback function has been called |
| |
| @param[in,out] parsed the current intermediate parse result; note that |
| writing to this value has no effect for parse_event_t::key events |
| |
| @return Whether the JSON value which called the function during parsing |
| should be kept (`true`) or not (`false`). In the latter case, it is either |
| skipped completely or replaced by an empty discarded object. |
| |
| @sa @ref parse for examples |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| using parser_callback_t = detail::parser_callback_t<basic_json>; |
| |
| ////////////////// |
| // constructors // |
| ////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name constructors and destructors |
| /// Constructors of class @ref basic_json, copy/move constructor, copy |
| /// assignment, static functions creating objects, and the destructor. |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create an empty value with a given type |
| |
| Create an empty JSON value with a given type. The value will be default |
| initialized with an empty value which depends on the type: |
| |
| Value type | initial value |
| ----------- | ------------- |
| null | `null` |
| boolean | `false` |
| string | `""` |
| number | `0` |
| object | `{}` |
| array | `[]` |
| binary | empty array |
| |
| @param[in] v the type of the value to create |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows the constructor for different @ref |
| value_t values,basic_json__value_t} |
| |
| @sa @ref clear() -- restores the postcondition of this constructor |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json(const value_t v) |
| : m_type(v), m_value(v) |
| { |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create a null object |
| |
| Create a `null` JSON value. It either takes a null pointer as parameter |
| (explicitly creating `null`) or no parameter (implicitly creating `null`). |
| The passed null pointer itself is not read -- it is only used to choose |
| the right constructor. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this constructor never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows the constructor with and without a |
| null pointer parameter.,basic_json__nullptr_t} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json(std::nullptr_t = nullptr) noexcept |
| : basic_json(value_t::null) |
| { |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create a JSON value |
| |
| This is a "catch all" constructor for all compatible JSON types; that is, |
| types for which a `to_json()` method exists. The constructor forwards the |
| parameter @a val to that method (to `json_serializer<U>::to_json` method |
| with `U = uncvref_t<CompatibleType>`, to be exact). |
| |
| Template type @a CompatibleType includes, but is not limited to, the |
| following types: |
| - **arrays**: @ref array_t and all kinds of compatible containers such as |
| `std::vector`, `std::deque`, `std::list`, `std::forward_list`, |
| `std::array`, `std::valarray`, `std::set`, `std::unordered_set`, |
| `std::multiset`, and `std::unordered_multiset` with a `value_type` from |
| which a @ref basic_json value can be constructed. |
| - **objects**: @ref object_t and all kinds of compatible associative |
| containers such as `std::map`, `std::unordered_map`, `std::multimap`, |
| and `std::unordered_multimap` with a `key_type` compatible to |
| @ref string_t and a `value_type` from which a @ref basic_json value can |
| be constructed. |
| - **strings**: @ref string_t, string literals, and all compatible string |
| containers can be used. |
| - **numbers**: @ref number_integer_t, @ref number_unsigned_t, |
| @ref number_float_t, and all convertible number types such as `int`, |
| `size_t`, `int64_t`, `float` or `double` can be used. |
| - **boolean**: @ref boolean_t / `bool` can be used. |
| - **binary**: @ref binary_t / `std::vector<uint8_t>` may be used, |
| unfortunately because string literals cannot be distinguished from binary |
| character arrays by the C++ type system, all types compatible with `const |
| char*` will be directed to the string constructor instead. This is both |
| for backwards compatibility, and due to the fact that a binary type is not |
| a standard JSON type. |
| |
| See the examples below. |
| |
| @tparam CompatibleType a type such that: |
| - @a CompatibleType is not derived from `std::istream`, |
| - @a CompatibleType is not @ref basic_json (to avoid hijacking copy/move |
| constructors), |
| - @a CompatibleType is not a different @ref basic_json type (i.e. with different template arguments) |
| - @a CompatibleType is not a @ref basic_json nested type (e.g., |
| @ref json_pointer, @ref iterator, etc ...) |
| - @ref @ref json_serializer<U> has a |
| `to_json(basic_json_t&, CompatibleType&&)` method |
| |
| @tparam U = `uncvref_t<CompatibleType>` |
| |
| @param[in] val the value to be forwarded to the respective constructor |
| |
| @complexity Usually linear in the size of the passed @a val, also |
| depending on the implementation of the called `to_json()` |
| method. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Depends on the called constructor. For types directly |
| supported by the library (i.e., all types for which no `to_json()` function |
| was provided), strong guarantee holds: if an exception is thrown, there are |
| no changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows the constructor with several |
| compatible types.,basic_json__CompatibleType} |
| |
| @since version 2.1.0 |
| */ |
| template < typename CompatibleType, |
| typename U = detail::uncvref_t<CompatibleType>, |
| detail::enable_if_t < |
| !detail::is_basic_json<U>::value && detail::is_compatible_type<basic_json_t, U>::value, int > = 0 > |
| basic_json(CompatibleType && val) noexcept(noexcept( |
| JSONSerializer<U>::to_json(std::declval<basic_json_t&>(), |
| std::forward<CompatibleType>(val)))) |
| { |
| JSONSerializer<U>::to_json(*this, std::forward<CompatibleType>(val)); |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create a JSON value from an existing one |
| |
| This is a constructor for existing @ref basic_json types. |
| It does not hijack copy/move constructors, since the parameter has different |
| template arguments than the current ones. |
| |
| The constructor tries to convert the internal @ref m_value of the parameter. |
| |
| @tparam BasicJsonType a type such that: |
| - @a BasicJsonType is a @ref basic_json type. |
| - @a BasicJsonType has different template arguments than @ref basic_json_t. |
| |
| @param[in] val the @ref basic_json value to be converted. |
| |
| @complexity Usually linear in the size of the passed @a val, also |
| depending on the implementation of the called `to_json()` |
| method. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Depends on the called constructor. For types directly |
| supported by the library (i.e., all types for which no `to_json()` function |
| was provided), strong guarantee holds: if an exception is thrown, there are |
| no changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @since version 3.2.0 |
| */ |
| template < typename BasicJsonType, |
| detail::enable_if_t < |
| detail::is_basic_json<BasicJsonType>::value&& !std::is_same<basic_json, BasicJsonType>::value, int > = 0 > |
| basic_json(const BasicJsonType& val) |
| { |
| using other_boolean_t = typename BasicJsonType::boolean_t; |
| using other_number_float_t = typename BasicJsonType::number_float_t; |
| using other_number_integer_t = typename BasicJsonType::number_integer_t; |
| using other_number_unsigned_t = typename BasicJsonType::number_unsigned_t; |
| using other_string_t = typename BasicJsonType::string_t; |
| using other_object_t = typename BasicJsonType::object_t; |
| using other_array_t = typename BasicJsonType::array_t; |
| using other_binary_t = typename BasicJsonType::binary_t; |
| |
| switch (val.type()) |
| { |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| JSONSerializer<other_boolean_t>::to_json(*this, val.template get<other_boolean_t>()); |
| break; |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| JSONSerializer<other_number_float_t>::to_json(*this, val.template get<other_number_float_t>()); |
| break; |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| JSONSerializer<other_number_integer_t>::to_json(*this, val.template get<other_number_integer_t>()); |
| break; |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| JSONSerializer<other_number_unsigned_t>::to_json(*this, val.template get<other_number_unsigned_t>()); |
| break; |
| case value_t::string: |
| JSONSerializer<other_string_t>::to_json(*this, val.template get_ref<const other_string_t&>()); |
| break; |
| case value_t::object: |
| JSONSerializer<other_object_t>::to_json(*this, val.template get_ref<const other_object_t&>()); |
| break; |
| case value_t::array: |
| JSONSerializer<other_array_t>::to_json(*this, val.template get_ref<const other_array_t&>()); |
| break; |
| case value_t::binary: |
| JSONSerializer<other_binary_t>::to_json(*this, val.template get_ref<const other_binary_t&>()); |
| break; |
| case value_t::null: |
| *this = nullptr; |
| break; |
| case value_t::discarded: |
| m_type = value_t::discarded; |
| break; |
| default: // LCOV_EXCL_LINE |
| JSON_ASSERT(false); // LCOV_EXCL_LINE |
| } |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create a container (array or object) from an initializer list |
| |
| Creates a JSON value of type array or object from the passed initializer |
| list @a init. In case @a type_deduction is `true` (default), the type of |
| the JSON value to be created is deducted from the initializer list @a init |
| according to the following rules: |
| |
| 1. If the list is empty, an empty JSON object value `{}` is created. |
| 2. If the list consists of pairs whose first element is a string, a JSON |
| object value is created where the first elements of the pairs are |
| treated as keys and the second elements are as values. |
| 3. In all other cases, an array is created. |
| |
| The rules aim to create the best fit between a C++ initializer list and |
| JSON values. The rationale is as follows: |
| |
| 1. The empty initializer list is written as `{}` which is exactly an empty |
| JSON object. |
| 2. C++ has no way of describing mapped types other than to list a list of |
| pairs. As JSON requires that keys must be of type string, rule 2 is the |
| weakest constraint one can pose on initializer lists to interpret them |
| as an object. |
| 3. In all other cases, the initializer list could not be interpreted as |
| JSON object type, so interpreting it as JSON array type is safe. |
| |
| With the rules described above, the following JSON values cannot be |
| expressed by an initializer list: |
| |
| - the empty array (`[]`): use @ref array(initializer_list_t) |
| with an empty initializer list in this case |
| - arrays whose elements satisfy rule 2: use @ref |
| array(initializer_list_t) with the same initializer list |
| in this case |
| |
| @note When used without parentheses around an empty initializer list, @ref |
| basic_json() is called instead of this function, yielding the JSON null |
| value. |
| |
| @param[in] init initializer list with JSON values |
| |
| @param[in] type_deduction internal parameter; when set to `true`, the type |
| of the JSON value is deducted from the initializer list @a init; when set |
| to `false`, the type provided via @a manual_type is forced. This mode is |
| used by the functions @ref array(initializer_list_t) and |
| @ref object(initializer_list_t). |
| |
| @param[in] manual_type internal parameter; when @a type_deduction is set |
| to `false`, the created JSON value will use the provided type (only @ref |
| value_t::array and @ref value_t::object are valid); when @a type_deduction |
| is set to `true`, this parameter has no effect |
| |
| @throw type_error.301 if @a type_deduction is `false`, @a manual_type is |
| `value_t::object`, but @a init contains an element which is not a pair |
| whose first element is a string. In this case, the constructor could not |
| create an object. If @a type_deduction would have be `true`, an array |
| would have been created. See @ref object(initializer_list_t) |
| for an example. |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the initializer list @a init. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how JSON values are created from |
| initializer lists.,basic_json__list_init_t} |
| |
| @sa @ref array(initializer_list_t) -- create a JSON array |
| value from an initializer list |
| @sa @ref object(initializer_list_t) -- create a JSON object |
| value from an initializer list |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json(initializer_list_t init, |
| bool type_deduction = true, |
| value_t manual_type = value_t::array) |
| { |
| // check if each element is an array with two elements whose first |
| // element is a string |
| bool is_an_object = std::all_of(init.begin(), init.end(), |
| [](const detail::json_ref<basic_json>& element_ref) |
| { |
| return element_ref->is_array() && element_ref->size() == 2 && (*element_ref)[0].is_string(); |
| }); |
| |
| // adjust type if type deduction is not wanted |
| if (!type_deduction) |
| { |
| // if array is wanted, do not create an object though possible |
| if (manual_type == value_t::array) |
| { |
| is_an_object = false; |
| } |
| |
| // if object is wanted but impossible, throw an exception |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(manual_type == value_t::object && !is_an_object)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(301, "cannot create object from initializer list")); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| if (is_an_object) |
| { |
| // the initializer list is a list of pairs -> create object |
| m_type = value_t::object; |
| m_value = value_t::object; |
| |
| std::for_each(init.begin(), init.end(), [this](const detail::json_ref<basic_json>& element_ref) |
| { |
| auto element = element_ref.moved_or_copied(); |
| m_value.object->emplace( |
| std::move(*((*element.m_value.array)[0].m_value.string)), |
| std::move((*element.m_value.array)[1])); |
| }); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| // the initializer list describes an array -> create array |
| m_type = value_t::array; |
| m_value.array = create<array_t>(init.begin(), init.end()); |
| } |
| |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief explicitly create a binary array (without subtype) |
| |
| Creates a JSON binary array value from a given binary container. Binary |
| values are part of various binary formats, such as CBOR, MessagePack, and |
| BSON. This constructor is used to create a value for serialization to those |
| formats. |
| |
| @note Note, this function exists because of the difficulty in correctly |
| specifying the correct template overload in the standard value ctor, as both |
| JSON arrays and JSON binary arrays are backed with some form of a |
| `std::vector`. Because JSON binary arrays are a non-standard extension it |
| was decided that it would be best to prevent automatic initialization of a |
| binary array type, for backwards compatibility and so it does not happen on |
| accident. |
| |
| @param[in] init container containing bytes to use as binary type |
| |
| @return JSON binary array value |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of @a init. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @since version 3.8.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json binary(const typename binary_t::container_type& init) |
| { |
| auto res = basic_json(); |
| res.m_type = value_t::binary; |
| res.m_value = init; |
| return res; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief explicitly create a binary array (with subtype) |
| |
| Creates a JSON binary array value from a given binary container. Binary |
| values are part of various binary formats, such as CBOR, MessagePack, and |
| BSON. This constructor is used to create a value for serialization to those |
| formats. |
| |
| @note Note, this function exists because of the difficulty in correctly |
| specifying the correct template overload in the standard value ctor, as both |
| JSON arrays and JSON binary arrays are backed with some form of a |
| `std::vector`. Because JSON binary arrays are a non-standard extension it |
| was decided that it would be best to prevent automatic initialization of a |
| binary array type, for backwards compatibility and so it does not happen on |
| accident. |
| |
| @param[in] init container containing bytes to use as binary type |
| @param[in] subtype subtype to use in MessagePack and BSON |
| |
| @return JSON binary array value |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of @a init. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @since version 3.8.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json binary(const typename binary_t::container_type& init, std::uint8_t subtype) |
| { |
| auto res = basic_json(); |
| res.m_type = value_t::binary; |
| res.m_value = binary_t(init, subtype); |
| return res; |
| } |
| |
| /// @copydoc binary(const typename binary_t::container_type&) |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json binary(typename binary_t::container_type&& init) |
| { |
| auto res = basic_json(); |
| res.m_type = value_t::binary; |
| res.m_value = std::move(init); |
| return res; |
| } |
| |
| /// @copydoc binary(const typename binary_t::container_type&, std::uint8_t) |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json binary(typename binary_t::container_type&& init, std::uint8_t subtype) |
| { |
| auto res = basic_json(); |
| res.m_type = value_t::binary; |
| res.m_value = binary_t(std::move(init), subtype); |
| return res; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief explicitly create an array from an initializer list |
| |
| Creates a JSON array value from a given initializer list. That is, given a |
| list of values `a, b, c`, creates the JSON value `[a, b, c]`. If the |
| initializer list is empty, the empty array `[]` is created. |
| |
| @note This function is only needed to express two edge cases that cannot |
| be realized with the initializer list constructor (@ref |
| basic_json(initializer_list_t, bool, value_t)). These cases |
| are: |
| 1. creating an array whose elements are all pairs whose first element is a |
| string -- in this case, the initializer list constructor would create an |
| object, taking the first elements as keys |
| 2. creating an empty array -- passing the empty initializer list to the |
| initializer list constructor yields an empty object |
| |
| @param[in] init initializer list with JSON values to create an array from |
| (optional) |
| |
| @return JSON array value |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of @a init. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for the `array` |
| function.,array} |
| |
| @sa @ref basic_json(initializer_list_t, bool, value_t) -- |
| create a JSON value from an initializer list |
| @sa @ref object(initializer_list_t) -- create a JSON object |
| value from an initializer list |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json array(initializer_list_t init = {}) |
| { |
| return basic_json(init, false, value_t::array); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief explicitly create an object from an initializer list |
| |
| Creates a JSON object value from a given initializer list. The initializer |
| lists elements must be pairs, and their first elements must be strings. If |
| the initializer list is empty, the empty object `{}` is created. |
| |
| @note This function is only added for symmetry reasons. In contrast to the |
| related function @ref array(initializer_list_t), there are |
| no cases which can only be expressed by this function. That is, any |
| initializer list @a init can also be passed to the initializer list |
| constructor @ref basic_json(initializer_list_t, bool, value_t). |
| |
| @param[in] init initializer list to create an object from (optional) |
| |
| @return JSON object value |
| |
| @throw type_error.301 if @a init is not a list of pairs whose first |
| elements are strings. In this case, no object can be created. When such a |
| value is passed to @ref basic_json(initializer_list_t, bool, value_t), |
| an array would have been created from the passed initializer list @a init. |
| See example below. |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of @a init. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for the `object` |
| function.,object} |
| |
| @sa @ref basic_json(initializer_list_t, bool, value_t) -- |
| create a JSON value from an initializer list |
| @sa @ref array(initializer_list_t) -- create a JSON array |
| value from an initializer list |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json object(initializer_list_t init = {}) |
| { |
| return basic_json(init, false, value_t::object); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief construct an array with count copies of given value |
| |
| Constructs a JSON array value by creating @a cnt copies of a passed value. |
| In case @a cnt is `0`, an empty array is created. |
| |
| @param[in] cnt the number of JSON copies of @a val to create |
| @param[in] val the JSON value to copy |
| |
| @post `std::distance(begin(),end()) == cnt` holds. |
| |
| @complexity Linear in @a cnt. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows examples for the @ref |
| basic_json(size_type\, const basic_json&) |
| constructor.,basic_json__size_type_basic_json} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json(size_type cnt, const basic_json& val) |
| : m_type(value_t::array) |
| { |
| m_value.array = create<array_t>(cnt, val); |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief construct a JSON container given an iterator range |
| |
| Constructs the JSON value with the contents of the range `[first, last)`. |
| The semantics depends on the different types a JSON value can have: |
| - In case of a null type, invalid_iterator.206 is thrown. |
| - In case of other primitive types (number, boolean, or string), @a first |
| must be `begin()` and @a last must be `end()`. In this case, the value is |
| copied. Otherwise, invalid_iterator.204 is thrown. |
| - In case of structured types (array, object), the constructor behaves as |
| similar versions for `std::vector` or `std::map`; that is, a JSON array |
| or object is constructed from the values in the range. |
| |
| @tparam InputIT an input iterator type (@ref iterator or @ref |
| const_iterator) |
| |
| @param[in] first begin of the range to copy from (included) |
| @param[in] last end of the range to copy from (excluded) |
| |
| @pre Iterators @a first and @a last must be initialized. **This |
| precondition is enforced with an assertion (see warning).** If |
| assertions are switched off, a violation of this precondition yields |
| undefined behavior. |
| |
| @pre Range `[first, last)` is valid. Usually, this precondition cannot be |
| checked efficiently. Only certain edge cases are detected; see the |
| description of the exceptions below. A violation of this precondition |
| yields undefined behavior. |
| |
| @warning A precondition is enforced with a runtime assertion that will |
| result in calling `std::abort` if this precondition is not met. |
| Assertions can be disabled by defining `NDEBUG` at compile time. |
| See https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/error/assert for more |
| information. |
| |
| @throw invalid_iterator.201 if iterators @a first and @a last are not |
| compatible (i.e., do not belong to the same JSON value). In this case, |
| the range `[first, last)` is undefined. |
| @throw invalid_iterator.204 if iterators @a first and @a last belong to a |
| primitive type (number, boolean, or string), but @a first does not point |
| to the first element any more. In this case, the range `[first, last)` is |
| undefined. See example code below. |
| @throw invalid_iterator.206 if iterators @a first and @a last belong to a |
| null value. In this case, the range `[first, last)` is undefined. |
| |
| @complexity Linear in distance between @a first and @a last. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows several ways to create JSON values by |
| specifying a subrange with iterators.,basic_json__InputIt_InputIt} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| template < class InputIT, typename std::enable_if < |
| std::is_same<InputIT, typename basic_json_t::iterator>::value || |
| std::is_same<InputIT, typename basic_json_t::const_iterator>::value, int >::type = 0 > |
| basic_json(InputIT first, InputIT last) |
| { |
| JSON_ASSERT(first.m_object != nullptr); |
| JSON_ASSERT(last.m_object != nullptr); |
| |
| // make sure iterator fits the current value |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(first.m_object != last.m_object)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(201, "iterators are not compatible")); |
| } |
| |
| // copy type from first iterator |
| m_type = first.m_object->m_type; |
| |
| // check if iterator range is complete for primitive values |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| case value_t::string: |
| { |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!first.m_it.primitive_iterator.is_begin() |
| || !last.m_it.primitive_iterator.is_end())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(204, "iterators out of range")); |
| } |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| { |
| m_value.number_integer = first.m_object->m_value.number_integer; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| { |
| m_value.number_unsigned = first.m_object->m_value.number_unsigned; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| { |
| m_value.number_float = first.m_object->m_value.number_float; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| { |
| m_value.boolean = first.m_object->m_value.boolean; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::string: |
| { |
| m_value = *first.m_object->m_value.string; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| m_value.object = create<object_t>(first.m_it.object_iterator, |
| last.m_it.object_iterator); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| m_value.array = create<array_t>(first.m_it.array_iterator, |
| last.m_it.array_iterator); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::binary: |
| { |
| m_value = *first.m_object->m_value.binary; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(206, "cannot construct with iterators from " + |
| std::string(first.m_object->type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /////////////////////////////////////// |
| // other constructors and destructor // |
| /////////////////////////////////////// |
| |
| template<typename JsonRef, |
| detail::enable_if_t<detail::conjunction<detail::is_json_ref<JsonRef>, |
| std::is_same<typename JsonRef::value_type, basic_json>>::value, int> = 0 > |
| basic_json(const JsonRef& ref) : basic_json(ref.moved_or_copied()) {} |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief copy constructor |
| |
| Creates a copy of a given JSON value. |
| |
| @param[in] other the JSON value to copy |
| |
| @post `*this == other` |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of @a other. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes to any JSON value. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is linear. |
| - As postcondition, it holds: `other == basic_json(other)`. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for the copy |
| constructor.,basic_json__basic_json} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json(const basic_json& other) |
| : m_type(other.m_type) |
| { |
| // check of passed value is valid |
| other.assert_invariant(); |
| |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| m_value = *other.m_value.object; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| m_value = *other.m_value.array; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::string: |
| { |
| m_value = *other.m_value.string; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| { |
| m_value = other.m_value.boolean; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| { |
| m_value = other.m_value.number_integer; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| { |
| m_value = other.m_value.number_unsigned; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| { |
| m_value = other.m_value.number_float; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::binary: |
| { |
| m_value = *other.m_value.binary; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief move constructor |
| |
| Move constructor. Constructs a JSON value with the contents of the given |
| value @a other using move semantics. It "steals" the resources from @a |
| other and leaves it as JSON null value. |
| |
| @param[in,out] other value to move to this object |
| |
| @post `*this` has the same value as @a other before the call. |
| @post @a other is a JSON null value. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this constructor never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [MoveConstructible](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/MoveConstructible) |
| requirements. |
| |
| @liveexample{The code below shows the move constructor explicitly called |
| via std::move.,basic_json__moveconstructor} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json(basic_json&& other) noexcept |
| : m_type(std::move(other.m_type)), |
| m_value(std::move(other.m_value)) |
| { |
| // check that passed value is valid |
| other.assert_invariant(); |
| |
| // invalidate payload |
| other.m_type = value_t::null; |
| other.m_value = {}; |
| |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief copy assignment |
| |
| Copy assignment operator. Copies a JSON value via the "copy and swap" |
| strategy: It is expressed in terms of the copy constructor, destructor, |
| and the `swap()` member function. |
| |
| @param[in] other value to copy from |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is linear. |
| |
| @liveexample{The code below shows and example for the copy assignment. It |
| creates a copy of value `a` which is then swapped with `b`. Finally\, the |
| copy of `a` (which is the null value after the swap) is |
| destroyed.,basic_json__copyassignment} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json& operator=(basic_json other) noexcept ( |
| std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<value_t>::value&& |
| std::is_nothrow_move_assignable<value_t>::value&& |
| std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<json_value>::value&& |
| std::is_nothrow_move_assignable<json_value>::value |
| ) |
| { |
| // check that passed value is valid |
| other.assert_invariant(); |
| |
| using std::swap; |
| swap(m_type, other.m_type); |
| swap(m_value, other.m_value); |
| |
| assert_invariant(); |
| return *this; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief destructor |
| |
| Destroys the JSON value and frees all allocated memory. |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is linear. |
| - All stored elements are destroyed and all memory is freed. |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| ~basic_json() noexcept |
| { |
| assert_invariant(); |
| m_value.destroy(m_type); |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| public: |
| /////////////////////// |
| // object inspection // |
| /////////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name object inspection |
| /// Functions to inspect the type of a JSON value. |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief serialization |
| |
| Serialization function for JSON values. The function tries to mimic |
| Python's `json.dumps()` function, and currently supports its @a indent |
| and @a ensure_ascii parameters. |
| |
| @param[in] indent If indent is nonnegative, then array elements and object |
| members will be pretty-printed with that indent level. An indent level of |
| `0` will only insert newlines. `-1` (the default) selects the most compact |
| representation. |
| @param[in] indent_char The character to use for indentation if @a indent is |
| greater than `0`. The default is ` ` (space). |
| @param[in] ensure_ascii If @a ensure_ascii is true, all non-ASCII characters |
| in the output are escaped with `\uXXXX` sequences, and the result consists |
| of ASCII characters only. |
| @param[in] error_handler how to react on decoding errors; there are three |
| possible values: `strict` (throws and exception in case a decoding error |
| occurs; default), `replace` (replace invalid UTF-8 sequences with U+FFFD), |
| and `ignore` (ignore invalid UTF-8 sequences during serialization; all |
| bytes are copied to the output unchanged). |
| |
| @return string containing the serialization of the JSON value |
| |
| @throw type_error.316 if a string stored inside the JSON value is not |
| UTF-8 encoded and @a error_handler is set to strict |
| |
| @note Binary values are serialized as object containing two keys: |
| - "bytes": an array of bytes as integers |
| - "subtype": the subtype as integer or "null" if the binary has no subtype |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes in the JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following example shows the effect of different @a indent\, |
| @a indent_char\, and @a ensure_ascii parameters to the result of the |
| serialization.,dump} |
| |
| @see https://docs.python.org/2/library/json.html#json.dump |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0; indentation character @a indent_char, option |
| @a ensure_ascii and exceptions added in version 3.0.0; error |
| handlers added in version 3.4.0; serialization of binary values added |
| in version 3.8.0. |
| */ |
| string_t dump(const int indent = -1, |
| const char indent_char = ' ', |
| const bool ensure_ascii = false, |
| const error_handler_t error_handler = error_handler_t::strict) const |
| { |
| string_t result; |
| serializer s(detail::output_adapter<char, string_t>(result), indent_char, error_handler); |
| |
| if (indent >= 0) |
| { |
| s.dump(*this, true, ensure_ascii, static_cast<unsigned int>(indent)); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| s.dump(*this, false, ensure_ascii, 0); |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return the type of the JSON value (explicit) |
| |
| Return the type of the JSON value as a value from the @ref value_t |
| enumeration. |
| |
| @return the type of the JSON value |
| Value type | return value |
| ------------------------- | ------------------------- |
| null | value_t::null |
| boolean | value_t::boolean |
| string | value_t::string |
| number (integer) | value_t::number_integer |
| number (unsigned integer) | value_t::number_unsigned |
| number (floating-point) | value_t::number_float |
| object | value_t::object |
| array | value_t::array |
| binary | value_t::binary |
| discarded | value_t::discarded |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `type()` for all JSON |
| types.,type} |
| |
| @sa @ref operator value_t() -- return the type of the JSON value (implicit) |
| @sa @ref type_name() -- return the type as string |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr value_t type() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether type is primitive |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON type is primitive |
| (string, number, boolean, or null). |
| |
| @return `true` if type is primitive (string, number, boolean, or null), |
| `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_primitive()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_primitive} |
| |
| @sa @ref is_structured() -- returns whether JSON value is structured |
| @sa @ref is_null() -- returns whether JSON value is `null` |
| @sa @ref is_string() -- returns whether JSON value is a string |
| @sa @ref is_boolean() -- returns whether JSON value is a boolean |
| @sa @ref is_number() -- returns whether JSON value is a number |
| @sa @ref is_binary() -- returns whether JSON value is a binary array |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_primitive() const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_null() || is_string() || is_boolean() || is_number() || is_binary(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether type is structured |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON type is structured |
| (array or object). |
| |
| @return `true` if type is structured (array or object), `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_structured()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_structured} |
| |
| @sa @ref is_primitive() -- returns whether value is primitive |
| @sa @ref is_array() -- returns whether value is an array |
| @sa @ref is_object() -- returns whether value is an object |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_structured() const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_array() || is_object(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is null |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is null. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is null, `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_null()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_null} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_null() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::null; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is a boolean |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is a boolean. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is boolean, `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_boolean()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_boolean} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_boolean() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::boolean; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is a number |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is a number. This |
| includes both integer (signed and unsigned) and floating-point values. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is number (regardless whether integer, unsigned |
| integer or floating-type), `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_number()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_number} |
| |
| @sa @ref is_number_integer() -- check if value is an integer or unsigned |
| integer number |
| @sa @ref is_number_unsigned() -- check if value is an unsigned integer |
| number |
| @sa @ref is_number_float() -- check if value is a floating-point number |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_number() const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_number_integer() || is_number_float(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is an integer number |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is a signed or |
| unsigned integer number. This excludes floating-point values. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is an integer or unsigned integer number, `false` |
| otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_number_integer()` for all |
| JSON types.,is_number_integer} |
| |
| @sa @ref is_number() -- check if value is a number |
| @sa @ref is_number_unsigned() -- check if value is an unsigned integer |
| number |
| @sa @ref is_number_float() -- check if value is a floating-point number |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_number_integer() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::number_integer || m_type == value_t::number_unsigned; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is an unsigned integer number |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is an unsigned |
| integer number. This excludes floating-point and signed integer values. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is an unsigned integer number, `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_number_unsigned()` for all |
| JSON types.,is_number_unsigned} |
| |
| @sa @ref is_number() -- check if value is a number |
| @sa @ref is_number_integer() -- check if value is an integer or unsigned |
| integer number |
| @sa @ref is_number_float() -- check if value is a floating-point number |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_number_unsigned() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::number_unsigned; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is a floating-point number |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is a |
| floating-point number. This excludes signed and unsigned integer values. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is a floating-point number, `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_number_float()` for all |
| JSON types.,is_number_float} |
| |
| @sa @ref is_number() -- check if value is number |
| @sa @ref is_number_integer() -- check if value is an integer number |
| @sa @ref is_number_unsigned() -- check if value is an unsigned integer |
| number |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_number_float() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::number_float; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is an object |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is an object. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is object, `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_object()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_object} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_object() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::object; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is an array |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is an array. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is array, `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_array()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_array} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_array() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::array; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is a string |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is a string. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is string, `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_string()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_string} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_string() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::string; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is a binary array |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value is a binary array. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is binary array, `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_binary()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_binary} |
| |
| @since version 3.8.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_binary() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::binary; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return whether value is discarded |
| |
| This function returns true if and only if the JSON value was discarded |
| during parsing with a callback function (see @ref parser_callback_t). |
| |
| @note This function will always be `false` for JSON values after parsing. |
| That is, discarded values can only occur during parsing, but will be |
| removed when inside a structured value or replaced by null in other cases. |
| |
| @return `true` if type is discarded, `false` otherwise. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `is_discarded()` for all JSON |
| types.,is_discarded} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr bool is_discarded() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type == value_t::discarded; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return the type of the JSON value (implicit) |
| |
| Implicitly return the type of the JSON value as a value from the @ref |
| value_t enumeration. |
| |
| @return the type of the JSON value |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this member function never throws |
| exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies the @ref value_t operator for |
| all JSON types.,operator__value_t} |
| |
| @sa @ref type() -- return the type of the JSON value (explicit) |
| @sa @ref type_name() -- return the type as string |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| constexpr operator value_t() const noexcept |
| { |
| return m_type; |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| private: |
| ////////////////// |
| // value access // |
| ////////////////// |
| |
| /// get a boolean (explicit) |
| boolean_t get_impl(boolean_t* /*unused*/) const |
| { |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_boolean())) |
| { |
| return m_value.boolean; |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(302, "type must be boolean, but is " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (object) |
| object_t* get_impl_ptr(object_t* /*unused*/) noexcept |
| { |
| return is_object() ? m_value.object : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (object) |
| constexpr const object_t* get_impl_ptr(const object_t* /*unused*/) const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_object() ? m_value.object : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (array) |
| array_t* get_impl_ptr(array_t* /*unused*/) noexcept |
| { |
| return is_array() ? m_value.array : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (array) |
| constexpr const array_t* get_impl_ptr(const array_t* /*unused*/) const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_array() ? m_value.array : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (string) |
| string_t* get_impl_ptr(string_t* /*unused*/) noexcept |
| { |
| return is_string() ? m_value.string : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (string) |
| constexpr const string_t* get_impl_ptr(const string_t* /*unused*/) const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_string() ? m_value.string : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (boolean) |
| boolean_t* get_impl_ptr(boolean_t* /*unused*/) noexcept |
| { |
| return is_boolean() ? &m_value.boolean : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (boolean) |
| constexpr const boolean_t* get_impl_ptr(const boolean_t* /*unused*/) const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_boolean() ? &m_value.boolean : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (integer number) |
| number_integer_t* get_impl_ptr(number_integer_t* /*unused*/) noexcept |
| { |
| return is_number_integer() ? &m_value.number_integer : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (integer number) |
| constexpr const number_integer_t* get_impl_ptr(const number_integer_t* /*unused*/) const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_number_integer() ? &m_value.number_integer : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (unsigned number) |
| number_unsigned_t* get_impl_ptr(number_unsigned_t* /*unused*/) noexcept |
| { |
| return is_number_unsigned() ? &m_value.number_unsigned : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (unsigned number) |
| constexpr const number_unsigned_t* get_impl_ptr(const number_unsigned_t* /*unused*/) const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_number_unsigned() ? &m_value.number_unsigned : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (floating-point number) |
| number_float_t* get_impl_ptr(number_float_t* /*unused*/) noexcept |
| { |
| return is_number_float() ? &m_value.number_float : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (floating-point number) |
| constexpr const number_float_t* get_impl_ptr(const number_float_t* /*unused*/) const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_number_float() ? &m_value.number_float : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (binary) |
| binary_t* get_impl_ptr(binary_t* /*unused*/) noexcept |
| { |
| return is_binary() ? m_value.binary : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /// get a pointer to the value (binary) |
| constexpr const binary_t* get_impl_ptr(const binary_t* /*unused*/) const noexcept |
| { |
| return is_binary() ? m_value.binary : nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief helper function to implement get_ref() |
| |
| This function helps to implement get_ref() without code duplication for |
| const and non-const overloads |
| |
| @tparam ThisType will be deduced as `basic_json` or `const basic_json` |
| |
| @throw type_error.303 if ReferenceType does not match underlying value |
| type of the current JSON |
| */ |
| template<typename ReferenceType, typename ThisType> |
| static ReferenceType get_ref_impl(ThisType& obj) |
| { |
| // delegate the call to get_ptr<>() |
| auto ptr = obj.template get_ptr<typename std::add_pointer<ReferenceType>::type>(); |
| |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(ptr != nullptr)) |
| { |
| return *ptr; |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(303, "incompatible ReferenceType for get_ref, actual type is " + std::string(obj.type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| public: |
| /// @name value access |
| /// Direct access to the stored value of a JSON value. |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get special-case overload |
| |
| This overloads avoids a lot of template boilerplate, it can be seen as the |
| identity method |
| |
| @tparam BasicJsonType == @ref basic_json |
| |
| @return a copy of *this |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @since version 2.1.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename BasicJsonType, detail::enable_if_t< |
| std::is_same<typename std::remove_const<BasicJsonType>::type, basic_json_t>::value, |
| int> = 0> |
| basic_json get() const |
| { |
| return *this; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get special-case overload |
| |
| This overloads converts the current @ref basic_json in a different |
| @ref basic_json type |
| |
| @tparam BasicJsonType == @ref basic_json |
| |
| @return a copy of *this, converted into @tparam BasicJsonType |
| |
| @complexity Depending on the implementation of the called `from_json()` |
| method. |
| |
| @since version 3.2.0 |
| */ |
| template < typename BasicJsonType, detail::enable_if_t < |
| !std::is_same<BasicJsonType, basic_json>::value&& |
| detail::is_basic_json<BasicJsonType>::value, int > = 0 > |
| BasicJsonType get() const |
| { |
| return *this; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a value (explicit) |
| |
| Explicit type conversion between the JSON value and a compatible value |
| which is [CopyConstructible](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/CopyConstructible) |
| and [DefaultConstructible](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/DefaultConstructible). |
| The value is converted by calling the @ref json_serializer<ValueType> |
| `from_json()` method. |
| |
| The function is equivalent to executing |
| @code {.cpp} |
| ValueType ret; |
| JSONSerializer<ValueType>::from_json(*this, ret); |
| return ret; |
| @endcode |
| |
| This overloads is chosen if: |
| - @a ValueType is not @ref basic_json, |
| - @ref json_serializer<ValueType> has a `from_json()` method of the form |
| `void from_json(const basic_json&, ValueType&)`, and |
| - @ref json_serializer<ValueType> does not have a `from_json()` method of |
| the form `ValueType from_json(const basic_json&)` |
| |
| @tparam ValueTypeCV the provided value type |
| @tparam ValueType the returned value type |
| |
| @return copy of the JSON value, converted to @a ValueType |
| |
| @throw what @ref json_serializer<ValueType> `from_json()` method throws |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows several conversions from JSON values |
| to other types. There a few things to note: (1) Floating-point numbers can |
| be converted to integers\, (2) A JSON array can be converted to a standard |
| `std::vector<short>`\, (3) A JSON object can be converted to C++ |
| associative containers such as `std::unordered_map<std::string\, |
| json>`.,get__ValueType_const} |
| |
| @since version 2.1.0 |
| */ |
| template < typename ValueTypeCV, typename ValueType = detail::uncvref_t<ValueTypeCV>, |
| detail::enable_if_t < |
| !detail::is_basic_json<ValueType>::value && |
| detail::has_from_json<basic_json_t, ValueType>::value && |
| !detail::has_non_default_from_json<basic_json_t, ValueType>::value, |
| int > = 0 > |
| ValueType get() const noexcept(noexcept( |
| JSONSerializer<ValueType>::from_json(std::declval<const basic_json_t&>(), std::declval<ValueType&>()))) |
| { |
| // we cannot static_assert on ValueTypeCV being non-const, because |
| // there is support for get<const basic_json_t>(), which is why we |
| // still need the uncvref |
| static_assert(!std::is_reference<ValueTypeCV>::value, |
| "get() cannot be used with reference types, you might want to use get_ref()"); |
| static_assert(std::is_default_constructible<ValueType>::value, |
| "types must be DefaultConstructible when used with get()"); |
| |
| ValueType ret; |
| JSONSerializer<ValueType>::from_json(*this, ret); |
| return ret; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a value (explicit); special case |
| |
| Explicit type conversion between the JSON value and a compatible value |
| which is **not** [CopyConstructible](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/CopyConstructible) |
| and **not** [DefaultConstructible](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/DefaultConstructible). |
| The value is converted by calling the @ref json_serializer<ValueType> |
| `from_json()` method. |
| |
| The function is equivalent to executing |
| @code {.cpp} |
| return JSONSerializer<ValueTypeCV>::from_json(*this); |
| @endcode |
| |
| This overloads is chosen if: |
| - @a ValueType is not @ref basic_json and |
| - @ref json_serializer<ValueType> has a `from_json()` method of the form |
| `ValueType from_json(const basic_json&)` |
| |
| @note If @ref json_serializer<ValueType> has both overloads of |
| `from_json()`, this one is chosen. |
| |
| @tparam ValueTypeCV the provided value type |
| @tparam ValueType the returned value type |
| |
| @return copy of the JSON value, converted to @a ValueType |
| |
| @throw what @ref json_serializer<ValueType> `from_json()` method throws |
| |
| @since version 2.1.0 |
| */ |
| template < typename ValueTypeCV, typename ValueType = detail::uncvref_t<ValueTypeCV>, |
| detail::enable_if_t < !std::is_same<basic_json_t, ValueType>::value && |
| detail::has_non_default_from_json<basic_json_t, ValueType>::value, |
| int > = 0 > |
| ValueType get() const noexcept(noexcept( |
| JSONSerializer<ValueType>::from_json(std::declval<const basic_json_t&>()))) |
| { |
| static_assert(!std::is_reference<ValueTypeCV>::value, |
| "get() cannot be used with reference types, you might want to use get_ref()"); |
| return JSONSerializer<ValueType>::from_json(*this); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a value (explicit) |
| |
| Explicit type conversion between the JSON value and a compatible value. |
| The value is filled into the input parameter by calling the @ref json_serializer<ValueType> |
| `from_json()` method. |
| |
| The function is equivalent to executing |
| @code {.cpp} |
| ValueType v; |
| JSONSerializer<ValueType>::from_json(*this, v); |
| @endcode |
| |
| This overloads is chosen if: |
| - @a ValueType is not @ref basic_json, |
| - @ref json_serializer<ValueType> has a `from_json()` method of the form |
| `void from_json(const basic_json&, ValueType&)`, and |
| |
| @tparam ValueType the input parameter type. |
| |
| @return the input parameter, allowing chaining calls. |
| |
| @throw what @ref json_serializer<ValueType> `from_json()` method throws |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows several conversions from JSON values |
| to other types. There a few things to note: (1) Floating-point numbers can |
| be converted to integers\, (2) A JSON array can be converted to a standard |
| `std::vector<short>`\, (3) A JSON object can be converted to C++ |
| associative containers such as `std::unordered_map<std::string\, |
| json>`.,get_to} |
| |
| @since version 3.3.0 |
| */ |
| template < typename ValueType, |
| detail::enable_if_t < |
| !detail::is_basic_json<ValueType>::value&& |
| detail::has_from_json<basic_json_t, ValueType>::value, |
| int > = 0 > |
| ValueType & get_to(ValueType& v) const noexcept(noexcept( |
| JSONSerializer<ValueType>::from_json(std::declval<const basic_json_t&>(), v))) |
| { |
| JSONSerializer<ValueType>::from_json(*this, v); |
| return v; |
| } |
| |
| // specialization to allow to call get_to with a basic_json value |
| // see https://github.com/nlohmann/json/issues/2175 |
| template<typename ValueType, |
| detail::enable_if_t < |
| detail::is_basic_json<ValueType>::value, |
| int> = 0> |
| ValueType & get_to(ValueType& v) const |
| { |
| v = *this; |
| return v; |
| } |
| |
| template < |
| typename T, std::size_t N, |
| typename Array = T (&)[N], |
| detail::enable_if_t < |
| detail::has_from_json<basic_json_t, Array>::value, int > = 0 > |
| Array get_to(T (&v)[N]) const |
| noexcept(noexcept(JSONSerializer<Array>::from_json( |
| std::declval<const basic_json_t&>(), v))) |
| { |
| JSONSerializer<Array>::from_json(*this, v); |
| return v; |
| } |
| |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a pointer value (implicit) |
| |
| Implicit pointer access to the internally stored JSON value. No copies are |
| made. |
| |
| @warning Writing data to the pointee of the result yields an undefined |
| state. |
| |
| @tparam PointerType pointer type; must be a pointer to @ref array_t, @ref |
| object_t, @ref string_t, @ref boolean_t, @ref number_integer_t, |
| @ref number_unsigned_t, or @ref number_float_t. Enforced by a static |
| assertion. |
| |
| @return pointer to the internally stored JSON value if the requested |
| pointer type @a PointerType fits to the JSON value; `nullptr` otherwise |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how pointers to internal values of a |
| JSON value can be requested. Note that no type conversions are made and a |
| `nullptr` is returned if the value and the requested pointer type does not |
| match.,get_ptr} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename PointerType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_pointer<PointerType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| auto get_ptr() noexcept -> decltype(std::declval<basic_json_t&>().get_impl_ptr(std::declval<PointerType>())) |
| { |
| // delegate the call to get_impl_ptr<>() |
| return get_impl_ptr(static_cast<PointerType>(nullptr)); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a pointer value (implicit) |
| @copydoc get_ptr() |
| */ |
| template < typename PointerType, typename std::enable_if < |
| std::is_pointer<PointerType>::value&& |
| std::is_const<typename std::remove_pointer<PointerType>::type>::value, int >::type = 0 > |
| constexpr auto get_ptr() const noexcept -> decltype(std::declval<const basic_json_t&>().get_impl_ptr(std::declval<PointerType>())) |
| { |
| // delegate the call to get_impl_ptr<>() const |
| return get_impl_ptr(static_cast<PointerType>(nullptr)); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a pointer value (explicit) |
| |
| Explicit pointer access to the internally stored JSON value. No copies are |
| made. |
| |
| @warning The pointer becomes invalid if the underlying JSON object |
| changes. |
| |
| @tparam PointerType pointer type; must be a pointer to @ref array_t, @ref |
| object_t, @ref string_t, @ref boolean_t, @ref number_integer_t, |
| @ref number_unsigned_t, or @ref number_float_t. |
| |
| @return pointer to the internally stored JSON value if the requested |
| pointer type @a PointerType fits to the JSON value; `nullptr` otherwise |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how pointers to internal values of a |
| JSON value can be requested. Note that no type conversions are made and a |
| `nullptr` is returned if the value and the requested pointer type does not |
| match.,get__PointerType} |
| |
| @sa @ref get_ptr() for explicit pointer-member access |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename PointerType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_pointer<PointerType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| auto get() noexcept -> decltype(std::declval<basic_json_t&>().template get_ptr<PointerType>()) |
| { |
| // delegate the call to get_ptr |
| return get_ptr<PointerType>(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a pointer value (explicit) |
| @copydoc get() |
| */ |
| template<typename PointerType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_pointer<PointerType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| constexpr auto get() const noexcept -> decltype(std::declval<const basic_json_t&>().template get_ptr<PointerType>()) |
| { |
| // delegate the call to get_ptr |
| return get_ptr<PointerType>(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a reference value (implicit) |
| |
| Implicit reference access to the internally stored JSON value. No copies |
| are made. |
| |
| @warning Writing data to the referee of the result yields an undefined |
| state. |
| |
| @tparam ReferenceType reference type; must be a reference to @ref array_t, |
| @ref object_t, @ref string_t, @ref boolean_t, @ref number_integer_t, or |
| @ref number_float_t. Enforced by static assertion. |
| |
| @return reference to the internally stored JSON value if the requested |
| reference type @a ReferenceType fits to the JSON value; throws |
| type_error.303 otherwise |
| |
| @throw type_error.303 in case passed type @a ReferenceType is incompatible |
| with the stored JSON value; see example below |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows several calls to `get_ref()`.,get_ref} |
| |
| @since version 1.1.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename ReferenceType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_reference<ReferenceType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| ReferenceType get_ref() |
| { |
| // delegate call to get_ref_impl |
| return get_ref_impl<ReferenceType>(*this); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a reference value (implicit) |
| @copydoc get_ref() |
| */ |
| template < typename ReferenceType, typename std::enable_if < |
| std::is_reference<ReferenceType>::value&& |
| std::is_const<typename std::remove_reference<ReferenceType>::type>::value, int >::type = 0 > |
| ReferenceType get_ref() const |
| { |
| // delegate call to get_ref_impl |
| return get_ref_impl<ReferenceType>(*this); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief get a value (implicit) |
| |
| Implicit type conversion between the JSON value and a compatible value. |
| The call is realized by calling @ref get() const. |
| |
| @tparam ValueType non-pointer type compatible to the JSON value, for |
| instance `int` for JSON integer numbers, `bool` for JSON booleans, or |
| `std::vector` types for JSON arrays. The character type of @ref string_t |
| as well as an initializer list of this type is excluded to avoid |
| ambiguities as these types implicitly convert to `std::string`. |
| |
| @return copy of the JSON value, converted to type @a ValueType |
| |
| @throw type_error.302 in case passed type @a ValueType is incompatible |
| to the JSON value type (e.g., the JSON value is of type boolean, but a |
| string is requested); see example below |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows several conversions from JSON values |
| to other types. There a few things to note: (1) Floating-point numbers can |
| be converted to integers\, (2) A JSON array can be converted to a standard |
| `std::vector<short>`\, (3) A JSON object can be converted to C++ |
| associative containers such as `std::unordered_map<std::string\, |
| json>`.,operator__ValueType} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| template < typename ValueType, typename std::enable_if < |
| !std::is_pointer<ValueType>::value&& |
| !std::is_same<ValueType, detail::json_ref<basic_json>>::value&& |
| !std::is_same<ValueType, typename string_t::value_type>::value&& |
| !detail::is_basic_json<ValueType>::value |
| && !std::is_same<ValueType, std::initializer_list<typename string_t::value_type>>::value |
| #if defined(JSON_HAS_CPP_17) && (defined(__GNUC__) || (defined(_MSC_VER) && _MSC_VER >= 1910 && _MSC_VER <= 1914)) |
| && !std::is_same<ValueType, typename std::string_view>::value |
| #endif |
| && detail::is_detected<detail::get_template_function, const basic_json_t&, ValueType>::value |
| , int >::type = 0 > |
| JSON_EXPLICIT operator ValueType() const |
| { |
| // delegate the call to get<>() const |
| return get<ValueType>(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @return reference to the binary value |
| |
| @throw type_error.302 if the value is not binary |
| |
| @sa @ref is_binary() to check if the value is binary |
| |
| @since version 3.8.0 |
| */ |
| binary_t& get_binary() |
| { |
| if (!is_binary()) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(302, "type must be binary, but is " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| return *get_ptr<binary_t*>(); |
| } |
| |
| /// @copydoc get_binary() |
| const binary_t& get_binary() const |
| { |
| if (!is_binary()) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(302, "type must be binary, but is " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| return *get_ptr<const binary_t*>(); |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| |
| //////////////////// |
| // element access // |
| //////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name element access |
| /// Access to the JSON value. |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified array element with bounds checking |
| |
| Returns a reference to the element at specified location @a idx, with |
| bounds checking. |
| |
| @param[in] idx index of the element to access |
| |
| @return reference to the element at index @a idx |
| |
| @throw type_error.304 if the JSON value is not an array; in this case, |
| calling `at` with an index makes no sense. See example below. |
| @throw out_of_range.401 if the index @a idx is out of range of the array; |
| that is, `idx >= size()`. See example below. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes in the JSON value. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how array elements can be read and |
| written using `at()`. It also demonstrates the different exceptions that |
| can be thrown.,at__size_type} |
| */ |
| reference at(size_type idx) |
| { |
| // at only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_array())) |
| { |
| JSON_TRY |
| { |
| return m_value.array->at(idx); |
| } |
| JSON_CATCH (std::out_of_range&) |
| { |
| // create better exception explanation |
| JSON_THROW(out_of_range::create(401, "array index " + std::to_string(idx) + " is out of range")); |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(304, "cannot use at() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified array element with bounds checking |
| |
| Returns a const reference to the element at specified location @a idx, |
| with bounds checking. |
| |
| @param[in] idx index of the element to access |
| |
| @return const reference to the element at index @a idx |
| |
| @throw type_error.304 if the JSON value is not an array; in this case, |
| calling `at` with an index makes no sense. See example below. |
| @throw out_of_range.401 if the index @a idx is out of range of the array; |
| that is, `idx >= size()`. See example below. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes in the JSON value. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how array elements can be read using |
| `at()`. It also demonstrates the different exceptions that can be thrown., |
| at__size_type_const} |
| */ |
| const_reference at(size_type idx) const |
| { |
| // at only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_array())) |
| { |
| JSON_TRY |
| { |
| return m_value.array->at(idx); |
| } |
| JSON_CATCH (std::out_of_range&) |
| { |
| // create better exception explanation |
| JSON_THROW(out_of_range::create(401, "array index " + std::to_string(idx) + " is out of range")); |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(304, "cannot use at() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified object element with bounds checking |
| |
| Returns a reference to the element at with specified key @a key, with |
| bounds checking. |
| |
| @param[in] key key of the element to access |
| |
| @return reference to the element at key @a key |
| |
| @throw type_error.304 if the JSON value is not an object; in this case, |
| calling `at` with a key makes no sense. See example below. |
| @throw out_of_range.403 if the key @a key is is not stored in the object; |
| that is, `find(key) == end()`. See example below. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes in the JSON value. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container. |
| |
| @sa @ref operator[](const typename object_t::key_type&) for unchecked |
| access by reference |
| @sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read and |
| written using `at()`. It also demonstrates the different exceptions that |
| can be thrown.,at__object_t_key_type} |
| */ |
| reference at(const typename object_t::key_type& key) |
| { |
| // at only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_TRY |
| { |
| return m_value.object->at(key); |
| } |
| JSON_CATCH (std::out_of_range&) |
| { |
| // create better exception explanation |
| JSON_THROW(out_of_range::create(403, "key '" + key + "' not found")); |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(304, "cannot use at() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified object element with bounds checking |
| |
| Returns a const reference to the element at with specified key @a key, |
| with bounds checking. |
| |
| @param[in] key key of the element to access |
| |
| @return const reference to the element at key @a key |
| |
| @throw type_error.304 if the JSON value is not an object; in this case, |
| calling `at` with a key makes no sense. See example below. |
| @throw out_of_range.403 if the key @a key is is not stored in the object; |
| that is, `find(key) == end()`. See example below. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes in the JSON value. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container. |
| |
| @sa @ref operator[](const typename object_t::key_type&) for unchecked |
| access by reference |
| @sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read using |
| `at()`. It also demonstrates the different exceptions that can be thrown., |
| at__object_t_key_type_const} |
| */ |
| const_reference at(const typename object_t::key_type& key) const |
| { |
| // at only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_TRY |
| { |
| return m_value.object->at(key); |
| } |
| JSON_CATCH (std::out_of_range&) |
| { |
| // create better exception explanation |
| JSON_THROW(out_of_range::create(403, "key '" + key + "' not found")); |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(304, "cannot use at() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified array element |
| |
| Returns a reference to the element at specified location @a idx. |
| |
| @note If @a idx is beyond the range of the array (i.e., `idx >= size()`), |
| then the array is silently filled up with `null` values to make `idx` a |
| valid reference to the last stored element. |
| |
| @param[in] idx index of the element to access |
| |
| @return reference to the element at index @a idx |
| |
| @throw type_error.305 if the JSON value is not an array or null; in that |
| cases, using the [] operator with an index makes no sense. |
| |
| @complexity Constant if @a idx is in the range of the array. Otherwise |
| linear in `idx - size()`. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how array elements can be read and |
| written using `[]` operator. Note the addition of `null` |
| values.,operatorarray__size_type} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| reference operator[](size_type idx) |
| { |
| // implicitly convert null value to an empty array |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::array; |
| m_value.array = create<array_t>(); |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| // operator[] only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_array())) |
| { |
| // fill up array with null values if given idx is outside range |
| if (idx >= m_value.array->size()) |
| { |
| m_value.array->insert(m_value.array->end(), |
| idx - m_value.array->size() + 1, |
| basic_json()); |
| } |
| |
| return m_value.array->operator[](idx); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(305, "cannot use operator[] with a numeric argument with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified array element |
| |
| Returns a const reference to the element at specified location @a idx. |
| |
| @param[in] idx index of the element to access |
| |
| @return const reference to the element at index @a idx |
| |
| @throw type_error.305 if the JSON value is not an array; in that case, |
| using the [] operator with an index makes no sense. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how array elements can be read using |
| the `[]` operator.,operatorarray__size_type_const} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| const_reference operator[](size_type idx) const |
| { |
| // const operator[] only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_array())) |
| { |
| return m_value.array->operator[](idx); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(305, "cannot use operator[] with a numeric argument with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified object element |
| |
| Returns a reference to the element at with specified key @a key. |
| |
| @note If @a key is not found in the object, then it is silently added to |
| the object and filled with a `null` value to make `key` a valid reference. |
| In case the value was `null` before, it is converted to an object. |
| |
| @param[in] key key of the element to access |
| |
| @return reference to the element at key @a key |
| |
| @throw type_error.305 if the JSON value is not an object or null; in that |
| cases, using the [] operator with a key makes no sense. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read and |
| written using the `[]` operator.,operatorarray__key_type} |
| |
| @sa @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&) for access by reference |
| with range checking |
| @sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| reference operator[](const typename object_t::key_type& key) |
| { |
| // implicitly convert null value to an empty object |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::object; |
| m_value.object = create<object_t>(); |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| // operator[] only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| return m_value.object->operator[](key); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(305, "cannot use operator[] with a string argument with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief read-only access specified object element |
| |
| Returns a const reference to the element at with specified key @a key. No |
| bounds checking is performed. |
| |
| @warning If the element with key @a key does not exist, the behavior is |
| undefined. |
| |
| @param[in] key key of the element to access |
| |
| @return const reference to the element at key @a key |
| |
| @pre The element with key @a key must exist. **This precondition is |
| enforced with an assertion.** |
| |
| @throw type_error.305 if the JSON value is not an object; in that case, |
| using the [] operator with a key makes no sense. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read using |
| the `[]` operator.,operatorarray__key_type_const} |
| |
| @sa @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&) for access by reference |
| with range checking |
| @sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| const_reference operator[](const typename object_t::key_type& key) const |
| { |
| // const operator[] only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_ASSERT(m_value.object->find(key) != m_value.object->end()); |
| return m_value.object->find(key)->second; |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(305, "cannot use operator[] with a string argument with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified object element |
| |
| Returns a reference to the element at with specified key @a key. |
| |
| @note If @a key is not found in the object, then it is silently added to |
| the object and filled with a `null` value to make `key` a valid reference. |
| In case the value was `null` before, it is converted to an object. |
| |
| @param[in] key key of the element to access |
| |
| @return reference to the element at key @a key |
| |
| @throw type_error.305 if the JSON value is not an object or null; in that |
| cases, using the [] operator with a key makes no sense. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read and |
| written using the `[]` operator.,operatorarray__key_type} |
| |
| @sa @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&) for access by reference |
| with range checking |
| @sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value |
| |
| @since version 1.1.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename T> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_NON_NULL(2) |
| reference operator[](T* key) |
| { |
| // implicitly convert null to object |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::object; |
| m_value = value_t::object; |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| // at only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| return m_value.object->operator[](key); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(305, "cannot use operator[] with a string argument with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief read-only access specified object element |
| |
| Returns a const reference to the element at with specified key @a key. No |
| bounds checking is performed. |
| |
| @warning If the element with key @a key does not exist, the behavior is |
| undefined. |
| |
| @param[in] key key of the element to access |
| |
| @return const reference to the element at key @a key |
| |
| @pre The element with key @a key must exist. **This precondition is |
| enforced with an assertion.** |
| |
| @throw type_error.305 if the JSON value is not an object; in that case, |
| using the [] operator with a key makes no sense. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read using |
| the `[]` operator.,operatorarray__key_type_const} |
| |
| @sa @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&) for access by reference |
| with range checking |
| @sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value |
| |
| @since version 1.1.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename T> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_NON_NULL(2) |
| const_reference operator[](T* key) const |
| { |
| // at only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_ASSERT(m_value.object->find(key) != m_value.object->end()); |
| return m_value.object->find(key)->second; |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(305, "cannot use operator[] with a string argument with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified object element with default value |
| |
| Returns either a copy of an object's element at the specified key @a key |
| or a given default value if no element with key @a key exists. |
| |
| The function is basically equivalent to executing |
| @code {.cpp} |
| try { |
| return at(key); |
| } catch(out_of_range) { |
| return default_value; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| @note Unlike @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&), this function |
| does not throw if the given key @a key was not found. |
| |
| @note Unlike @ref operator[](const typename object_t::key_type& key), this |
| function does not implicitly add an element to the position defined by @a |
| key. This function is furthermore also applicable to const objects. |
| |
| @param[in] key key of the element to access |
| @param[in] default_value the value to return if @a key is not found |
| |
| @tparam ValueType type compatible to JSON values, for instance `int` for |
| JSON integer numbers, `bool` for JSON booleans, or `std::vector` types for |
| JSON arrays. Note the type of the expected value at @a key and the default |
| value @a default_value must be compatible. |
| |
| @return copy of the element at key @a key or @a default_value if @a key |
| is not found |
| |
| @throw type_error.302 if @a default_value does not match the type of the |
| value at @a key |
| @throw type_error.306 if the JSON value is not an object; in that case, |
| using `value()` with a key makes no sense. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be queried |
| with a default value.,basic_json__value} |
| |
| @sa @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&) for access by reference |
| with range checking |
| @sa @ref operator[](const typename object_t::key_type&) for unchecked |
| access by reference |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| // using std::is_convertible in a std::enable_if will fail when using explicit conversions |
| template < class ValueType, typename std::enable_if < |
| detail::is_getable<basic_json_t, ValueType>::value |
| && !std::is_same<value_t, ValueType>::value, int >::type = 0 > |
| ValueType value(const typename object_t::key_type& key, const ValueType& default_value) const |
| { |
| // at only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| // if key is found, return value and given default value otherwise |
| const auto it = find(key); |
| if (it != end()) |
| { |
| return it->template get<ValueType>(); |
| } |
| |
| return default_value; |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(306, "cannot use value() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief overload for a default value of type const char* |
| @copydoc basic_json::value(const typename object_t::key_type&, const ValueType&) const |
| */ |
| string_t value(const typename object_t::key_type& key, const char* default_value) const |
| { |
| return value(key, string_t(default_value)); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified object element via JSON Pointer with default value |
| |
| Returns either a copy of an object's element at the specified key @a key |
| or a given default value if no element with key @a key exists. |
| |
| The function is basically equivalent to executing |
| @code {.cpp} |
| try { |
| return at(ptr); |
| } catch(out_of_range) { |
| return default_value; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| @note Unlike @ref at(const json_pointer&), this function does not throw |
| if the given key @a key was not found. |
| |
| @param[in] ptr a JSON pointer to the element to access |
| @param[in] default_value the value to return if @a ptr found no value |
| |
| @tparam ValueType type compatible to JSON values, for instance `int` for |
| JSON integer numbers, `bool` for JSON booleans, or `std::vector` types for |
| JSON arrays. Note the type of the expected value at @a key and the default |
| value @a default_value must be compatible. |
| |
| @return copy of the element at key @a key or @a default_value if @a key |
| is not found |
| |
| @throw type_error.302 if @a default_value does not match the type of the |
| value at @a ptr |
| @throw type_error.306 if the JSON value is not an object; in that case, |
| using `value()` with a key makes no sense. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be queried |
| with a default value.,basic_json__value_ptr} |
| |
| @sa @ref operator[](const json_pointer&) for unchecked access by reference |
| |
| @since version 2.0.2 |
| */ |
| template<class ValueType, typename std::enable_if< |
| detail::is_getable<basic_json_t, ValueType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| ValueType value(const json_pointer& ptr, const ValueType& default_value) const |
| { |
| // at only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| // if pointer resolves a value, return it or use default value |
| JSON_TRY |
| { |
| return ptr.get_checked(this).template get<ValueType>(); |
| } |
| JSON_INTERNAL_CATCH (out_of_range&) |
| { |
| return default_value; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(306, "cannot use value() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief overload for a default value of type const char* |
| @copydoc basic_json::value(const json_pointer&, ValueType) const |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_NON_NULL(3) |
| string_t value(const json_pointer& ptr, const char* default_value) const |
| { |
| return value(ptr, string_t(default_value)); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access the first element |
| |
| Returns a reference to the first element in the container. For a JSON |
| container `c`, the expression `c.front()` is equivalent to `*c.begin()`. |
| |
| @return In case of a structured type (array or object), a reference to the |
| first element is returned. In case of number, string, boolean, or binary |
| values, a reference to the value is returned. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @pre The JSON value must not be `null` (would throw `std::out_of_range`) |
| or an empty array or object (undefined behavior, **guarded by |
| assertions**). |
| @post The JSON value remains unchanged. |
| |
| @throw invalid_iterator.214 when called on `null` value |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `front()`.,front} |
| |
| @sa @ref back() -- access the last element |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| reference front() |
| { |
| return *begin(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc basic_json::front() |
| */ |
| const_reference front() const |
| { |
| return *cbegin(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access the last element |
| |
| Returns a reference to the last element in the container. For a JSON |
| container `c`, the expression `c.back()` is equivalent to |
| @code {.cpp} |
| auto tmp = c.end(); |
| --tmp; |
| return *tmp; |
| @endcode |
| |
| @return In case of a structured type (array or object), a reference to the |
| last element is returned. In case of number, string, boolean, or binary |
| values, a reference to the value is returned. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @pre The JSON value must not be `null` (would throw `std::out_of_range`) |
| or an empty array or object (undefined behavior, **guarded by |
| assertions**). |
| @post The JSON value remains unchanged. |
| |
| @throw invalid_iterator.214 when called on a `null` value. See example |
| below. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `back()`.,back} |
| |
| @sa @ref front() -- access the first element |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| reference back() |
| { |
| auto tmp = end(); |
| --tmp; |
| return *tmp; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc basic_json::back() |
| */ |
| const_reference back() const |
| { |
| auto tmp = cend(); |
| --tmp; |
| return *tmp; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief remove element given an iterator |
| |
| Removes the element specified by iterator @a pos. The iterator @a pos must |
| be valid and dereferenceable. Thus the `end()` iterator (which is valid, |
| but is not dereferenceable) cannot be used as a value for @a pos. |
| |
| If called on a primitive type other than `null`, the resulting JSON value |
| will be `null`. |
| |
| @param[in] pos iterator to the element to remove |
| @return Iterator following the last removed element. If the iterator @a |
| pos refers to the last element, the `end()` iterator is returned. |
| |
| @tparam IteratorType an @ref iterator or @ref const_iterator |
| |
| @post Invalidates iterators and references at or after the point of the |
| erase, including the `end()` iterator. |
| |
| @throw type_error.307 if called on a `null` value; example: `"cannot use |
| erase() with null"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.202 if called on an iterator which does not belong |
| to the current JSON value; example: `"iterator does not fit current |
| value"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.205 if called on a primitive type with invalid |
| iterator (i.e., any iterator which is not `begin()`); example: `"iterator |
| out of range"` |
| |
| @complexity The complexity depends on the type: |
| - objects: amortized constant |
| - arrays: linear in distance between @a pos and the end of the container |
| - strings and binary: linear in the length of the member |
| - other types: constant |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the result of `erase()` for different JSON |
| types.,erase__IteratorType} |
| |
| @sa @ref erase(IteratorType, IteratorType) -- removes the elements in |
| the given range |
| @sa @ref erase(const typename object_t::key_type&) -- removes the element |
| from an object at the given key |
| @sa @ref erase(const size_type) -- removes the element from an array at |
| the given index |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| template < class IteratorType, typename std::enable_if < |
| std::is_same<IteratorType, typename basic_json_t::iterator>::value || |
| std::is_same<IteratorType, typename basic_json_t::const_iterator>::value, int >::type |
| = 0 > |
| IteratorType erase(IteratorType pos) |
| { |
| // make sure iterator fits the current value |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(this != pos.m_object)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(202, "iterator does not fit current value")); |
| } |
| |
| IteratorType result = end(); |
| |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| case value_t::string: |
| case value_t::binary: |
| { |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!pos.m_it.primitive_iterator.is_begin())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(205, "iterator out of range")); |
| } |
| |
| if (is_string()) |
| { |
| AllocatorType<string_t> alloc; |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::destroy(alloc, m_value.string); |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::deallocate(alloc, m_value.string, 1); |
| m_value.string = nullptr; |
| } |
| else if (is_binary()) |
| { |
| AllocatorType<binary_t> alloc; |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::destroy(alloc, m_value.binary); |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::deallocate(alloc, m_value.binary, 1); |
| m_value.binary = nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| m_type = value_t::null; |
| assert_invariant(); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| result.m_it.object_iterator = m_value.object->erase(pos.m_it.object_iterator); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| result.m_it.array_iterator = m_value.array->erase(pos.m_it.array_iterator); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(307, "cannot use erase() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief remove elements given an iterator range |
| |
| Removes the element specified by the range `[first; last)`. The iterator |
| @a first does not need to be dereferenceable if `first == last`: erasing |
| an empty range is a no-op. |
| |
| If called on a primitive type other than `null`, the resulting JSON value |
| will be `null`. |
| |
| @param[in] first iterator to the beginning of the range to remove |
| @param[in] last iterator past the end of the range to remove |
| @return Iterator following the last removed element. If the iterator @a |
| second refers to the last element, the `end()` iterator is returned. |
| |
| @tparam IteratorType an @ref iterator or @ref const_iterator |
| |
| @post Invalidates iterators and references at or after the point of the |
| erase, including the `end()` iterator. |
| |
| @throw type_error.307 if called on a `null` value; example: `"cannot use |
| erase() with null"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.203 if called on iterators which does not belong |
| to the current JSON value; example: `"iterators do not fit current value"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.204 if called on a primitive type with invalid |
| iterators (i.e., if `first != begin()` and `last != end()`); example: |
| `"iterators out of range"` |
| |
| @complexity The complexity depends on the type: |
| - objects: `log(size()) + std::distance(first, last)` |
| - arrays: linear in the distance between @a first and @a last, plus linear |
| in the distance between @a last and end of the container |
| - strings and binary: linear in the length of the member |
| - other types: constant |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the result of `erase()` for different JSON |
| types.,erase__IteratorType_IteratorType} |
| |
| @sa @ref erase(IteratorType) -- removes the element at a given position |
| @sa @ref erase(const typename object_t::key_type&) -- removes the element |
| from an object at the given key |
| @sa @ref erase(const size_type) -- removes the element from an array at |
| the given index |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| template < class IteratorType, typename std::enable_if < |
| std::is_same<IteratorType, typename basic_json_t::iterator>::value || |
| std::is_same<IteratorType, typename basic_json_t::const_iterator>::value, int >::type |
| = 0 > |
| IteratorType erase(IteratorType first, IteratorType last) |
| { |
| // make sure iterator fits the current value |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(this != first.m_object || this != last.m_object)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(203, "iterators do not fit current value")); |
| } |
| |
| IteratorType result = end(); |
| |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| case value_t::string: |
| case value_t::binary: |
| { |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(!first.m_it.primitive_iterator.is_begin() |
| || !last.m_it.primitive_iterator.is_end())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(204, "iterators out of range")); |
| } |
| |
| if (is_string()) |
| { |
| AllocatorType<string_t> alloc; |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::destroy(alloc, m_value.string); |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::deallocate(alloc, m_value.string, 1); |
| m_value.string = nullptr; |
| } |
| else if (is_binary()) |
| { |
| AllocatorType<binary_t> alloc; |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::destroy(alloc, m_value.binary); |
| std::allocator_traits<decltype(alloc)>::deallocate(alloc, m_value.binary, 1); |
| m_value.binary = nullptr; |
| } |
| |
| m_type = value_t::null; |
| assert_invariant(); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| result.m_it.object_iterator = m_value.object->erase(first.m_it.object_iterator, |
| last.m_it.object_iterator); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| result.m_it.array_iterator = m_value.array->erase(first.m_it.array_iterator, |
| last.m_it.array_iterator); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(307, "cannot use erase() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief remove element from a JSON object given a key |
| |
| Removes elements from a JSON object with the key value @a key. |
| |
| @param[in] key value of the elements to remove |
| |
| @return Number of elements removed. If @a ObjectType is the default |
| `std::map` type, the return value will always be `0` (@a key was not |
| found) or `1` (@a key was found). |
| |
| @post References and iterators to the erased elements are invalidated. |
| Other references and iterators are not affected. |
| |
| @throw type_error.307 when called on a type other than JSON object; |
| example: `"cannot use erase() with null"` |
| |
| @complexity `log(size()) + count(key)` |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the effect of `erase()`.,erase__key_type} |
| |
| @sa @ref erase(IteratorType) -- removes the element at a given position |
| @sa @ref erase(IteratorType, IteratorType) -- removes the elements in |
| the given range |
| @sa @ref erase(const size_type) -- removes the element from an array at |
| the given index |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| size_type erase(const typename object_t::key_type& key) |
| { |
| // this erase only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| return m_value.object->erase(key); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(307, "cannot use erase() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief remove element from a JSON array given an index |
| |
| Removes element from a JSON array at the index @a idx. |
| |
| @param[in] idx index of the element to remove |
| |
| @throw type_error.307 when called on a type other than JSON object; |
| example: `"cannot use erase() with null"` |
| @throw out_of_range.401 when `idx >= size()`; example: `"array index 17 |
| is out of range"` |
| |
| @complexity Linear in distance between @a idx and the end of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the effect of `erase()`.,erase__size_type} |
| |
| @sa @ref erase(IteratorType) -- removes the element at a given position |
| @sa @ref erase(IteratorType, IteratorType) -- removes the elements in |
| the given range |
| @sa @ref erase(const typename object_t::key_type&) -- removes the element |
| from an object at the given key |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| void erase(const size_type idx) |
| { |
| // this erase only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_array())) |
| { |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(idx >= size())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(out_of_range::create(401, "array index " + std::to_string(idx) + " is out of range")); |
| } |
| |
| m_value.array->erase(m_value.array->begin() + static_cast<difference_type>(idx)); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(307, "cannot use erase() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| |
| //////////// |
| // lookup // |
| //////////// |
| |
| /// @name lookup |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief find an element in a JSON object |
| |
| Finds an element in a JSON object with key equivalent to @a key. If the |
| element is not found or the JSON value is not an object, end() is |
| returned. |
| |
| @note This method always returns @ref end() when executed on a JSON type |
| that is not an object. |
| |
| @param[in] key key value of the element to search for. |
| |
| @return Iterator to an element with key equivalent to @a key. If no such |
| element is found or the JSON value is not an object, past-the-end (see |
| @ref end()) iterator is returned. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the JSON object. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `find()` is used.,find__key_type} |
| |
| @sa @ref contains(KeyT&&) const -- checks whether a key exists |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename KeyT> |
| iterator find(KeyT&& key) |
| { |
| auto result = end(); |
| |
| if (is_object()) |
| { |
| result.m_it.object_iterator = m_value.object->find(std::forward<KeyT>(key)); |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief find an element in a JSON object |
| @copydoc find(KeyT&&) |
| */ |
| template<typename KeyT> |
| const_iterator find(KeyT&& key) const |
| { |
| auto result = cend(); |
| |
| if (is_object()) |
| { |
| result.m_it.object_iterator = m_value.object->find(std::forward<KeyT>(key)); |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns the number of occurrences of a key in a JSON object |
| |
| Returns the number of elements with key @a key. If ObjectType is the |
| default `std::map` type, the return value will always be `0` (@a key was |
| not found) or `1` (@a key was found). |
| |
| @note This method always returns `0` when executed on a JSON type that is |
| not an object. |
| |
| @param[in] key key value of the element to count |
| |
| @return Number of elements with key @a key. If the JSON value is not an |
| object, the return value will be `0`. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the JSON object. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `count()` is used.,count} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename KeyT> |
| size_type count(KeyT&& key) const |
| { |
| // return 0 for all nonobject types |
| return is_object() ? m_value.object->count(std::forward<KeyT>(key)) : 0; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief check the existence of an element in a JSON object |
| |
| Check whether an element exists in a JSON object with key equivalent to |
| @a key. If the element is not found or the JSON value is not an object, |
| false is returned. |
| |
| @note This method always returns false when executed on a JSON type |
| that is not an object. |
| |
| @param[in] key key value to check its existence. |
| |
| @return true if an element with specified @a key exists. If no such |
| element with such key is found or the JSON value is not an object, |
| false is returned. |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the JSON object. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `contains()`.,contains} |
| |
| @sa @ref find(KeyT&&) -- returns an iterator to an object element |
| @sa @ref contains(const json_pointer&) const -- checks the existence for a JSON pointer |
| |
| @since version 3.6.0 |
| */ |
| template < typename KeyT, typename std::enable_if < |
| !std::is_same<typename std::decay<KeyT>::type, json_pointer>::value, int >::type = 0 > |
| bool contains(KeyT && key) const |
| { |
| return is_object() && m_value.object->find(std::forward<KeyT>(key)) != m_value.object->end(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief check the existence of an element in a JSON object given a JSON pointer |
| |
| Check whether the given JSON pointer @a ptr can be resolved in the current |
| JSON value. |
| |
| @note This method can be executed on any JSON value type. |
| |
| @param[in] ptr JSON pointer to check its existence. |
| |
| @return true if the JSON pointer can be resolved to a stored value, false |
| otherwise. |
| |
| @post If `j.contains(ptr)` returns true, it is safe to call `j[ptr]`. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.106 if an array index begins with '0' |
| @throw parse_error.109 if an array index was not a number |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the JSON object. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `contains()`.,contains_json_pointer} |
| |
| @sa @ref contains(KeyT &&) const -- checks the existence of a key |
| |
| @since version 3.7.0 |
| */ |
| bool contains(const json_pointer& ptr) const |
| { |
| return ptr.contains(this); |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| |
| /////////////// |
| // iterators // |
| /////////////// |
| |
| /// @name iterators |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns an iterator to the first element |
| |
| Returns an iterator to the first element. |
| |
| @image html range-begin-end.svg "Illustration from cppreference.com" |
| |
| @return iterator to the first element |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `begin()`.,begin} |
| |
| @sa @ref cbegin() -- returns a const iterator to the beginning |
| @sa @ref end() -- returns an iterator to the end |
| @sa @ref cend() -- returns a const iterator to the end |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| iterator begin() noexcept |
| { |
| iterator result(this); |
| result.set_begin(); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc basic_json::cbegin() |
| */ |
| const_iterator begin() const noexcept |
| { |
| return cbegin(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns a const iterator to the first element |
| |
| Returns a const iterator to the first element. |
| |
| @image html range-begin-end.svg "Illustration from cppreference.com" |
| |
| @return const iterator to the first element |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| - Has the semantics of `const_cast<const basic_json&>(*this).begin()`. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `cbegin()`.,cbegin} |
| |
| @sa @ref begin() -- returns an iterator to the beginning |
| @sa @ref end() -- returns an iterator to the end |
| @sa @ref cend() -- returns a const iterator to the end |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| const_iterator cbegin() const noexcept |
| { |
| const_iterator result(this); |
| result.set_begin(); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns an iterator to one past the last element |
| |
| Returns an iterator to one past the last element. |
| |
| @image html range-begin-end.svg "Illustration from cppreference.com" |
| |
| @return iterator one past the last element |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `end()`.,end} |
| |
| @sa @ref cend() -- returns a const iterator to the end |
| @sa @ref begin() -- returns an iterator to the beginning |
| @sa @ref cbegin() -- returns a const iterator to the beginning |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| iterator end() noexcept |
| { |
| iterator result(this); |
| result.set_end(); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc basic_json::cend() |
| */ |
| const_iterator end() const noexcept |
| { |
| return cend(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns a const iterator to one past the last element |
| |
| Returns a const iterator to one past the last element. |
| |
| @image html range-begin-end.svg "Illustration from cppreference.com" |
| |
| @return const iterator one past the last element |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| - Has the semantics of `const_cast<const basic_json&>(*this).end()`. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `cend()`.,cend} |
| |
| @sa @ref end() -- returns an iterator to the end |
| @sa @ref begin() -- returns an iterator to the beginning |
| @sa @ref cbegin() -- returns a const iterator to the beginning |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| const_iterator cend() const noexcept |
| { |
| const_iterator result(this); |
| result.set_end(); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns an iterator to the reverse-beginning |
| |
| Returns an iterator to the reverse-beginning; that is, the last element. |
| |
| @image html range-rbegin-rend.svg "Illustration from cppreference.com" |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [ReversibleContainer](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/ReversibleContainer) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| - Has the semantics of `reverse_iterator(end())`. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `rbegin()`.,rbegin} |
| |
| @sa @ref crbegin() -- returns a const reverse iterator to the beginning |
| @sa @ref rend() -- returns a reverse iterator to the end |
| @sa @ref crend() -- returns a const reverse iterator to the end |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| reverse_iterator rbegin() noexcept |
| { |
| return reverse_iterator(end()); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc basic_json::crbegin() |
| */ |
| const_reverse_iterator rbegin() const noexcept |
| { |
| return crbegin(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns an iterator to the reverse-end |
| |
| Returns an iterator to the reverse-end; that is, one before the first |
| element. |
| |
| @image html range-rbegin-rend.svg "Illustration from cppreference.com" |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [ReversibleContainer](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/ReversibleContainer) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| - Has the semantics of `reverse_iterator(begin())`. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `rend()`.,rend} |
| |
| @sa @ref crend() -- returns a const reverse iterator to the end |
| @sa @ref rbegin() -- returns a reverse iterator to the beginning |
| @sa @ref crbegin() -- returns a const reverse iterator to the beginning |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| reverse_iterator rend() noexcept |
| { |
| return reverse_iterator(begin()); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc basic_json::crend() |
| */ |
| const_reverse_iterator rend() const noexcept |
| { |
| return crend(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns a const reverse iterator to the last element |
| |
| Returns a const iterator to the reverse-beginning; that is, the last |
| element. |
| |
| @image html range-rbegin-rend.svg "Illustration from cppreference.com" |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [ReversibleContainer](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/ReversibleContainer) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| - Has the semantics of `const_cast<const basic_json&>(*this).rbegin()`. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `crbegin()`.,crbegin} |
| |
| @sa @ref rbegin() -- returns a reverse iterator to the beginning |
| @sa @ref rend() -- returns a reverse iterator to the end |
| @sa @ref crend() -- returns a const reverse iterator to the end |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| const_reverse_iterator crbegin() const noexcept |
| { |
| return const_reverse_iterator(cend()); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns a const reverse iterator to one before the first |
| |
| Returns a const reverse iterator to the reverse-end; that is, one before |
| the first element. |
| |
| @image html range-rbegin-rend.svg "Illustration from cppreference.com" |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [ReversibleContainer](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/ReversibleContainer) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| - Has the semantics of `const_cast<const basic_json&>(*this).rend()`. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows an example for `crend()`.,crend} |
| |
| @sa @ref rend() -- returns a reverse iterator to the end |
| @sa @ref rbegin() -- returns a reverse iterator to the beginning |
| @sa @ref crbegin() -- returns a const reverse iterator to the beginning |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| const_reverse_iterator crend() const noexcept |
| { |
| return const_reverse_iterator(cbegin()); |
| } |
| |
| public: |
| /*! |
| @brief wrapper to access iterator member functions in range-based for |
| |
| This function allows to access @ref iterator::key() and @ref |
| iterator::value() during range-based for loops. In these loops, a |
| reference to the JSON values is returned, so there is no access to the |
| underlying iterator. |
| |
| For loop without iterator_wrapper: |
| |
| @code{cpp} |
| for (auto it = j_object.begin(); it != j_object.end(); ++it) |
| { |
| std::cout << "key: " << it.key() << ", value:" << it.value() << '\n'; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| Range-based for loop without iterator proxy: |
| |
| @code{cpp} |
| for (auto it : j_object) |
| { |
| // "it" is of type json::reference and has no key() member |
| std::cout << "value: " << it << '\n'; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| Range-based for loop with iterator proxy: |
| |
| @code{cpp} |
| for (auto it : json::iterator_wrapper(j_object)) |
| { |
| std::cout << "key: " << it.key() << ", value:" << it.value() << '\n'; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| @note When iterating over an array, `key()` will return the index of the |
| element as string (see example). |
| |
| @param[in] ref reference to a JSON value |
| @return iteration proxy object wrapping @a ref with an interface to use in |
| range-based for loops |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows how the wrapper is used,iterator_wrapper} |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes in the JSON value. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @note The name of this function is not yet final and may change in the |
| future. |
| |
| @deprecated This stream operator is deprecated and will be removed in |
| future 4.0.0 of the library. Please use @ref items() instead; |
| that is, replace `json::iterator_wrapper(j)` with `j.items()`. |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.1.0, items()) |
| static iteration_proxy<iterator> iterator_wrapper(reference ref) noexcept |
| { |
| return ref.items(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc iterator_wrapper(reference) |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.1.0, items()) |
| static iteration_proxy<const_iterator> iterator_wrapper(const_reference ref) noexcept |
| { |
| return ref.items(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief helper to access iterator member functions in range-based for |
| |
| This function allows to access @ref iterator::key() and @ref |
| iterator::value() during range-based for loops. In these loops, a |
| reference to the JSON values is returned, so there is no access to the |
| underlying iterator. |
| |
| For loop without `items()` function: |
| |
| @code{cpp} |
| for (auto it = j_object.begin(); it != j_object.end(); ++it) |
| { |
| std::cout << "key: " << it.key() << ", value:" << it.value() << '\n'; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| Range-based for loop without `items()` function: |
| |
| @code{cpp} |
| for (auto it : j_object) |
| { |
| // "it" is of type json::reference and has no key() member |
| std::cout << "value: " << it << '\n'; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| Range-based for loop with `items()` function: |
| |
| @code{cpp} |
| for (auto& el : j_object.items()) |
| { |
| std::cout << "key: " << el.key() << ", value:" << el.value() << '\n'; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| The `items()` function also allows to use |
| [structured bindings](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/structured_binding) |
| (C++17): |
| |
| @code{cpp} |
| for (auto& [key, val] : j_object.items()) |
| { |
| std::cout << "key: " << key << ", value:" << val << '\n'; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| @note When iterating over an array, `key()` will return the index of the |
| element as string (see example). For primitive types (e.g., numbers), |
| `key()` returns an empty string. |
| |
| @warning Using `items()` on temporary objects is dangerous. Make sure the |
| object's lifetime exeeds the iteration. See |
| <https://github.com/nlohmann/json/issues/2040> for more |
| information. |
| |
| @return iteration proxy object wrapping @a ref with an interface to use in |
| range-based for loops |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows how the function is used.,items} |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes in the JSON value. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @since version 3.1.0, structured bindings support since 3.5.0. |
| */ |
| iteration_proxy<iterator> items() noexcept |
| { |
| return iteration_proxy<iterator>(*this); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc items() |
| */ |
| iteration_proxy<const_iterator> items() const noexcept |
| { |
| return iteration_proxy<const_iterator>(*this); |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| |
| ////////////// |
| // capacity // |
| ////////////// |
| |
| /// @name capacity |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief checks whether the container is empty. |
| |
| Checks if a JSON value has no elements (i.e. whether its @ref size is `0`). |
| |
| @return The return value depends on the different types and is |
| defined as follows: |
| Value type | return value |
| ----------- | ------------- |
| null | `true` |
| boolean | `false` |
| string | `false` |
| number | `false` |
| binary | `false` |
| object | result of function `object_t::empty()` |
| array | result of function `array_t::empty()` |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code uses `empty()` to check if a JSON |
| object contains any elements.,empty} |
| |
| @complexity Constant, as long as @ref array_t and @ref object_t satisfy |
| the Container concept; that is, their `empty()` functions have constant |
| complexity. |
| |
| @iterators No changes. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @note This function does not return whether a string stored as JSON value |
| is empty - it returns whether the JSON container itself is empty which is |
| false in the case of a string. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| - Has the semantics of `begin() == end()`. |
| |
| @sa @ref size() -- returns the number of elements |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| bool empty() const noexcept |
| { |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::null: |
| { |
| // null values are empty |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| // delegate call to array_t::empty() |
| return m_value.array->empty(); |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| // delegate call to object_t::empty() |
| return m_value.object->empty(); |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| { |
| // all other types are nonempty |
| return false; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns the number of elements |
| |
| Returns the number of elements in a JSON value. |
| |
| @return The return value depends on the different types and is |
| defined as follows: |
| Value type | return value |
| ----------- | ------------- |
| null | `0` |
| boolean | `1` |
| string | `1` |
| number | `1` |
| binary | `1` |
| object | result of function object_t::size() |
| array | result of function array_t::size() |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code calls `size()` on the different value |
| types.,size} |
| |
| @complexity Constant, as long as @ref array_t and @ref object_t satisfy |
| the Container concept; that is, their size() functions have constant |
| complexity. |
| |
| @iterators No changes. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @note This function does not return the length of a string stored as JSON |
| value - it returns the number of elements in the JSON value which is 1 in |
| the case of a string. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| - Has the semantics of `std::distance(begin(), end())`. |
| |
| @sa @ref empty() -- checks whether the container is empty |
| @sa @ref max_size() -- returns the maximal number of elements |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| size_type size() const noexcept |
| { |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::null: |
| { |
| // null values are empty |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| // delegate call to array_t::size() |
| return m_value.array->size(); |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| // delegate call to object_t::size() |
| return m_value.object->size(); |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| { |
| // all other types have size 1 |
| return 1; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief returns the maximum possible number of elements |
| |
| Returns the maximum number of elements a JSON value is able to hold due to |
| system or library implementation limitations, i.e. `std::distance(begin(), |
| end())` for the JSON value. |
| |
| @return The return value depends on the different types and is |
| defined as follows: |
| Value type | return value |
| ----------- | ------------- |
| null | `0` (same as `size()`) |
| boolean | `1` (same as `size()`) |
| string | `1` (same as `size()`) |
| number | `1` (same as `size()`) |
| binary | `1` (same as `size()`) |
| object | result of function `object_t::max_size()` |
| array | result of function `array_t::max_size()` |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code calls `max_size()` on the different value |
| types. Note the output is implementation specific.,max_size} |
| |
| @complexity Constant, as long as @ref array_t and @ref object_t satisfy |
| the Container concept; that is, their `max_size()` functions have constant |
| complexity. |
| |
| @iterators No changes. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @requirement This function helps `basic_json` satisfying the |
| [Container](https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/named_req/Container) |
| requirements: |
| - The complexity is constant. |
| - Has the semantics of returning `b.size()` where `b` is the largest |
| possible JSON value. |
| |
| @sa @ref size() -- returns the number of elements |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| size_type max_size() const noexcept |
| { |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| // delegate call to array_t::max_size() |
| return m_value.array->max_size(); |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| // delegate call to object_t::max_size() |
| return m_value.object->max_size(); |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| { |
| // all other types have max_size() == size() |
| return size(); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| |
| /////////////// |
| // modifiers // |
| /////////////// |
| |
| /// @name modifiers |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief clears the contents |
| |
| Clears the content of a JSON value and resets it to the default value as |
| if @ref basic_json(value_t) would have been called with the current value |
| type from @ref type(): |
| |
| Value type | initial value |
| ----------- | ------------- |
| null | `null` |
| boolean | `false` |
| string | `""` |
| number | `0` |
| binary | An empty byte vector |
| object | `{}` |
| array | `[]` |
| |
| @post Has the same effect as calling |
| @code {.cpp} |
| *this = basic_json(type()); |
| @endcode |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows the effect of `clear()` to different |
| JSON types.,clear} |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the JSON value. |
| |
| @iterators All iterators, pointers and references related to this container |
| are invalidated. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @sa @ref basic_json(value_t) -- constructor that creates an object with the |
| same value than calling `clear()` |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| void clear() noexcept |
| { |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| { |
| m_value.number_integer = 0; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| { |
| m_value.number_unsigned = 0; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| { |
| m_value.number_float = 0.0; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| { |
| m_value.boolean = false; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::string: |
| { |
| m_value.string->clear(); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::binary: |
| { |
| m_value.binary->clear(); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| m_value.array->clear(); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| m_value.object->clear(); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an array |
| |
| Appends the given element @a val to the end of the JSON value. If the |
| function is called on a JSON null value, an empty array is created before |
| appending @a val. |
| |
| @param[in] val the value to add to the JSON array |
| |
| @throw type_error.308 when called on a type other than JSON array or |
| null; example: `"cannot use push_back() with number"` |
| |
| @complexity Amortized constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `push_back()` and `+=` can be used to |
| add elements to a JSON array. Note how the `null` value was silently |
| converted to a JSON array.,push_back} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| void push_back(basic_json&& val) |
| { |
| // push_back only works for null objects or arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!(is_null() || is_array()))) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(308, "cannot use push_back() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| // transform null object into an array |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::array; |
| m_value = value_t::array; |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| // add element to array (move semantics) |
| m_value.array->push_back(std::move(val)); |
| // if val is moved from, basic_json move constructor marks it null so we do not call the destructor |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an array |
| @copydoc push_back(basic_json&&) |
| */ |
| reference operator+=(basic_json&& val) |
| { |
| push_back(std::move(val)); |
| return *this; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an array |
| @copydoc push_back(basic_json&&) |
| */ |
| void push_back(const basic_json& val) |
| { |
| // push_back only works for null objects or arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!(is_null() || is_array()))) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(308, "cannot use push_back() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| // transform null object into an array |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::array; |
| m_value = value_t::array; |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| // add element to array |
| m_value.array->push_back(val); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an array |
| @copydoc push_back(basic_json&&) |
| */ |
| reference operator+=(const basic_json& val) |
| { |
| push_back(val); |
| return *this; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an object |
| |
| Inserts the given element @a val to the JSON object. If the function is |
| called on a JSON null value, an empty object is created before inserting |
| @a val. |
| |
| @param[in] val the value to add to the JSON object |
| |
| @throw type_error.308 when called on a type other than JSON object or |
| null; example: `"cannot use push_back() with number"` |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container, O(log(`size()`)). |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `push_back()` and `+=` can be used to |
| add elements to a JSON object. Note how the `null` value was silently |
| converted to a JSON object.,push_back__object_t__value} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| void push_back(const typename object_t::value_type& val) |
| { |
| // push_back only works for null objects or objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!(is_null() || is_object()))) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(308, "cannot use push_back() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| // transform null object into an object |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::object; |
| m_value = value_t::object; |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| // add element to array |
| m_value.object->insert(val); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an object |
| @copydoc push_back(const typename object_t::value_type&) |
| */ |
| reference operator+=(const typename object_t::value_type& val) |
| { |
| push_back(val); |
| return *this; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an object |
| |
| This function allows to use `push_back` with an initializer list. In case |
| |
| 1. the current value is an object, |
| 2. the initializer list @a init contains only two elements, and |
| 3. the first element of @a init is a string, |
| |
| @a init is converted into an object element and added using |
| @ref push_back(const typename object_t::value_type&). Otherwise, @a init |
| is converted to a JSON value and added using @ref push_back(basic_json&&). |
| |
| @param[in] init an initializer list |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the initializer list @a init. |
| |
| @note This function is required to resolve an ambiguous overload error, |
| because pairs like `{"key", "value"}` can be both interpreted as |
| `object_t::value_type` or `std::initializer_list<basic_json>`, see |
| https://github.com/nlohmann/json/issues/235 for more information. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how initializer lists are treated as |
| objects when possible.,push_back__initializer_list} |
| */ |
| void push_back(initializer_list_t init) |
| { |
| if (is_object() && init.size() == 2 && (*init.begin())->is_string()) |
| { |
| basic_json&& key = init.begin()->moved_or_copied(); |
| push_back(typename object_t::value_type( |
| std::move(key.get_ref<string_t&>()), (init.begin() + 1)->moved_or_copied())); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| push_back(basic_json(init)); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an object |
| @copydoc push_back(initializer_list_t) |
| */ |
| reference operator+=(initializer_list_t init) |
| { |
| push_back(init); |
| return *this; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an array |
| |
| Creates a JSON value from the passed parameters @a args to the end of the |
| JSON value. If the function is called on a JSON null value, an empty array |
| is created before appending the value created from @a args. |
| |
| @param[in] args arguments to forward to a constructor of @ref basic_json |
| @tparam Args compatible types to create a @ref basic_json object |
| |
| @return reference to the inserted element |
| |
| @throw type_error.311 when called on a type other than JSON array or |
| null; example: `"cannot use emplace_back() with number"` |
| |
| @complexity Amortized constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `push_back()` can be used to add |
| elements to a JSON array. Note how the `null` value was silently converted |
| to a JSON array.,emplace_back} |
| |
| @since version 2.0.8, returns reference since 3.7.0 |
| */ |
| template<class... Args> |
| reference emplace_back(Args&& ... args) |
| { |
| // emplace_back only works for null objects or arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!(is_null() || is_array()))) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(311, "cannot use emplace_back() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| // transform null object into an array |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::array; |
| m_value = value_t::array; |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| // add element to array (perfect forwarding) |
| #ifdef JSON_HAS_CPP_17 |
| return m_value.array->emplace_back(std::forward<Args>(args)...); |
| #else |
| m_value.array->emplace_back(std::forward<Args>(args)...); |
| return m_value.array->back(); |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief add an object to an object if key does not exist |
| |
| Inserts a new element into a JSON object constructed in-place with the |
| given @a args if there is no element with the key in the container. If the |
| function is called on a JSON null value, an empty object is created before |
| appending the value created from @a args. |
| |
| @param[in] args arguments to forward to a constructor of @ref basic_json |
| @tparam Args compatible types to create a @ref basic_json object |
| |
| @return a pair consisting of an iterator to the inserted element, or the |
| already-existing element if no insertion happened, and a bool |
| denoting whether the insertion took place. |
| |
| @throw type_error.311 when called on a type other than JSON object or |
| null; example: `"cannot use emplace() with number"` |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container, O(log(`size()`)). |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `emplace()` can be used to add elements |
| to a JSON object. Note how the `null` value was silently converted to a |
| JSON object. Further note how no value is added if there was already one |
| value stored with the same key.,emplace} |
| |
| @since version 2.0.8 |
| */ |
| template<class... Args> |
| std::pair<iterator, bool> emplace(Args&& ... args) |
| { |
| // emplace only works for null objects or arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!(is_null() || is_object()))) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(311, "cannot use emplace() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| // transform null object into an object |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::object; |
| m_value = value_t::object; |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| // add element to array (perfect forwarding) |
| auto res = m_value.object->emplace(std::forward<Args>(args)...); |
| // create result iterator and set iterator to the result of emplace |
| auto it = begin(); |
| it.m_it.object_iterator = res.first; |
| |
| // return pair of iterator and boolean |
| return {it, res.second}; |
| } |
| |
| /// Helper for insertion of an iterator |
| /// @note: This uses std::distance to support GCC 4.8, |
| /// see https://github.com/nlohmann/json/pull/1257 |
| template<typename... Args> |
| iterator insert_iterator(const_iterator pos, Args&& ... args) |
| { |
| iterator result(this); |
| JSON_ASSERT(m_value.array != nullptr); |
| |
| auto insert_pos = std::distance(m_value.array->begin(), pos.m_it.array_iterator); |
| m_value.array->insert(pos.m_it.array_iterator, std::forward<Args>(args)...); |
| result.m_it.array_iterator = m_value.array->begin() + insert_pos; |
| |
| // This could have been written as: |
| // result.m_it.array_iterator = m_value.array->insert(pos.m_it.array_iterator, cnt, val); |
| // but the return value of insert is missing in GCC 4.8, so it is written this way instead. |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief inserts element |
| |
| Inserts element @a val before iterator @a pos. |
| |
| @param[in] pos iterator before which the content will be inserted; may be |
| the end() iterator |
| @param[in] val element to insert |
| @return iterator pointing to the inserted @a val. |
| |
| @throw type_error.309 if called on JSON values other than arrays; |
| example: `"cannot use insert() with string"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.202 if @a pos is not an iterator of *this; |
| example: `"iterator does not fit current value"` |
| |
| @complexity Constant plus linear in the distance between @a pos and end of |
| the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `insert()` is used.,insert} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| iterator insert(const_iterator pos, const basic_json& val) |
| { |
| // insert only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_array())) |
| { |
| // check if iterator pos fits to this JSON value |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(pos.m_object != this)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(202, "iterator does not fit current value")); |
| } |
| |
| // insert to array and return iterator |
| return insert_iterator(pos, val); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(309, "cannot use insert() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief inserts element |
| @copydoc insert(const_iterator, const basic_json&) |
| */ |
| iterator insert(const_iterator pos, basic_json&& val) |
| { |
| return insert(pos, val); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief inserts elements |
| |
| Inserts @a cnt copies of @a val before iterator @a pos. |
| |
| @param[in] pos iterator before which the content will be inserted; may be |
| the end() iterator |
| @param[in] cnt number of copies of @a val to insert |
| @param[in] val element to insert |
| @return iterator pointing to the first element inserted, or @a pos if |
| `cnt==0` |
| |
| @throw type_error.309 if called on JSON values other than arrays; example: |
| `"cannot use insert() with string"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.202 if @a pos is not an iterator of *this; |
| example: `"iterator does not fit current value"` |
| |
| @complexity Linear in @a cnt plus linear in the distance between @a pos |
| and end of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `insert()` is used.,insert__count} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| iterator insert(const_iterator pos, size_type cnt, const basic_json& val) |
| { |
| // insert only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_array())) |
| { |
| // check if iterator pos fits to this JSON value |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(pos.m_object != this)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(202, "iterator does not fit current value")); |
| } |
| |
| // insert to array and return iterator |
| return insert_iterator(pos, cnt, val); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(309, "cannot use insert() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief inserts elements |
| |
| Inserts elements from range `[first, last)` before iterator @a pos. |
| |
| @param[in] pos iterator before which the content will be inserted; may be |
| the end() iterator |
| @param[in] first begin of the range of elements to insert |
| @param[in] last end of the range of elements to insert |
| |
| @throw type_error.309 if called on JSON values other than arrays; example: |
| `"cannot use insert() with string"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.202 if @a pos is not an iterator of *this; |
| example: `"iterator does not fit current value"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.210 if @a first and @a last do not belong to the |
| same JSON value; example: `"iterators do not fit"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.211 if @a first or @a last are iterators into |
| container for which insert is called; example: `"passed iterators may not |
| belong to container"` |
| |
| @return iterator pointing to the first element inserted, or @a pos if |
| `first==last` |
| |
| @complexity Linear in `std::distance(first, last)` plus linear in the |
| distance between @a pos and end of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `insert()` is used.,insert__range} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| iterator insert(const_iterator pos, const_iterator first, const_iterator last) |
| { |
| // insert only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!is_array())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(309, "cannot use insert() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| // check if iterator pos fits to this JSON value |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(pos.m_object != this)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(202, "iterator does not fit current value")); |
| } |
| |
| // check if range iterators belong to the same JSON object |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(first.m_object != last.m_object)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(210, "iterators do not fit")); |
| } |
| |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(first.m_object == this)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(211, "passed iterators may not belong to container")); |
| } |
| |
| // insert to array and return iterator |
| return insert_iterator(pos, first.m_it.array_iterator, last.m_it.array_iterator); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief inserts elements |
| |
| Inserts elements from initializer list @a ilist before iterator @a pos. |
| |
| @param[in] pos iterator before which the content will be inserted; may be |
| the end() iterator |
| @param[in] ilist initializer list to insert the values from |
| |
| @throw type_error.309 if called on JSON values other than arrays; example: |
| `"cannot use insert() with string"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.202 if @a pos is not an iterator of *this; |
| example: `"iterator does not fit current value"` |
| |
| @return iterator pointing to the first element inserted, or @a pos if |
| `ilist` is empty |
| |
| @complexity Linear in `ilist.size()` plus linear in the distance between |
| @a pos and end of the container. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `insert()` is used.,insert__ilist} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| iterator insert(const_iterator pos, initializer_list_t ilist) |
| { |
| // insert only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!is_array())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(309, "cannot use insert() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| // check if iterator pos fits to this JSON value |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(pos.m_object != this)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(202, "iterator does not fit current value")); |
| } |
| |
| // insert to array and return iterator |
| return insert_iterator(pos, ilist.begin(), ilist.end()); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief inserts elements |
| |
| Inserts elements from range `[first, last)`. |
| |
| @param[in] first begin of the range of elements to insert |
| @param[in] last end of the range of elements to insert |
| |
| @throw type_error.309 if called on JSON values other than objects; example: |
| `"cannot use insert() with string"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.202 if iterator @a first or @a last does does not |
| point to an object; example: `"iterators first and last must point to |
| objects"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.210 if @a first and @a last do not belong to the |
| same JSON value; example: `"iterators do not fit"` |
| |
| @complexity Logarithmic: `O(N*log(size() + N))`, where `N` is the number |
| of elements to insert. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `insert()` is used.,insert__range_object} |
| |
| @since version 3.0.0 |
| */ |
| void insert(const_iterator first, const_iterator last) |
| { |
| // insert only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(309, "cannot use insert() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| // check if range iterators belong to the same JSON object |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(first.m_object != last.m_object)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(210, "iterators do not fit")); |
| } |
| |
| // passed iterators must belong to objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!first.m_object->is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(202, "iterators first and last must point to objects")); |
| } |
| |
| m_value.object->insert(first.m_it.object_iterator, last.m_it.object_iterator); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief updates a JSON object from another object, overwriting existing keys |
| |
| Inserts all values from JSON object @a j and overwrites existing keys. |
| |
| @param[in] j JSON object to read values from |
| |
| @throw type_error.312 if called on JSON values other than objects; example: |
| `"cannot use update() with string"` |
| |
| @complexity O(N*log(size() + N)), where N is the number of elements to |
| insert. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `update()` is used.,update} |
| |
| @sa https://docs.python.org/3.6/library/stdtypes.html#dict.update |
| |
| @since version 3.0.0 |
| */ |
| void update(const_reference j) |
| { |
| // implicitly convert null value to an empty object |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::object; |
| m_value.object = create<object_t>(); |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(312, "cannot use update() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!j.is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(312, "cannot use update() with " + std::string(j.type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| for (auto it = j.cbegin(); it != j.cend(); ++it) |
| { |
| m_value.object->operator[](it.key()) = it.value(); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief updates a JSON object from another object, overwriting existing keys |
| |
| Inserts all values from from range `[first, last)` and overwrites existing |
| keys. |
| |
| @param[in] first begin of the range of elements to insert |
| @param[in] last end of the range of elements to insert |
| |
| @throw type_error.312 if called on JSON values other than objects; example: |
| `"cannot use update() with string"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.202 if iterator @a first or @a last does does not |
| point to an object; example: `"iterators first and last must point to |
| objects"` |
| @throw invalid_iterator.210 if @a first and @a last do not belong to the |
| same JSON value; example: `"iterators do not fit"` |
| |
| @complexity O(N*log(size() + N)), where N is the number of elements to |
| insert. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows how `update()` is used__range.,update} |
| |
| @sa https://docs.python.org/3.6/library/stdtypes.html#dict.update |
| |
| @since version 3.0.0 |
| */ |
| void update(const_iterator first, const_iterator last) |
| { |
| // implicitly convert null value to an empty object |
| if (is_null()) |
| { |
| m_type = value_t::object; |
| m_value.object = create<object_t>(); |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(312, "cannot use update() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| |
| // check if range iterators belong to the same JSON object |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(first.m_object != last.m_object)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(210, "iterators do not fit")); |
| } |
| |
| // passed iterators must belong to objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!first.m_object->is_object() |
| || !last.m_object->is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(invalid_iterator::create(202, "iterators first and last must point to objects")); |
| } |
| |
| for (auto it = first; it != last; ++it) |
| { |
| m_value.object->operator[](it.key()) = it.value(); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief exchanges the values |
| |
| Exchanges the contents of the JSON value with those of @a other. Does not |
| invoke any move, copy, or swap operations on individual elements. All |
| iterators and references remain valid. The past-the-end iterator is |
| invalidated. |
| |
| @param[in,out] other JSON value to exchange the contents with |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how JSON values can be swapped with |
| `swap()`.,swap__reference} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| void swap(reference other) noexcept ( |
| std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<value_t>::value&& |
| std::is_nothrow_move_assignable<value_t>::value&& |
| std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<json_value>::value&& |
| std::is_nothrow_move_assignable<json_value>::value |
| ) |
| { |
| std::swap(m_type, other.m_type); |
| std::swap(m_value, other.m_value); |
| assert_invariant(); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief exchanges the values |
| |
| Exchanges the contents of the JSON value from @a left with those of @a right. Does not |
| invoke any move, copy, or swap operations on individual elements. All |
| iterators and references remain valid. The past-the-end iterator is |
| invalidated. implemented as a friend function callable via ADL. |
| |
| @param[in,out] left JSON value to exchange the contents with |
| @param[in,out] right JSON value to exchange the contents with |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how JSON values can be swapped with |
| `swap()`.,swap__reference} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| friend void swap(reference left, reference right) noexcept ( |
| std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<value_t>::value&& |
| std::is_nothrow_move_assignable<value_t>::value&& |
| std::is_nothrow_move_constructible<json_value>::value&& |
| std::is_nothrow_move_assignable<json_value>::value |
| ) |
| { |
| left.swap(right); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief exchanges the values |
| |
| Exchanges the contents of a JSON array with those of @a other. Does not |
| invoke any move, copy, or swap operations on individual elements. All |
| iterators and references remain valid. The past-the-end iterator is |
| invalidated. |
| |
| @param[in,out] other array to exchange the contents with |
| |
| @throw type_error.310 when JSON value is not an array; example: `"cannot |
| use swap() with string"` |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how arrays can be swapped with |
| `swap()`.,swap__array_t} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| void swap(array_t& other) |
| { |
| // swap only works for arrays |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_array())) |
| { |
| std::swap(*(m_value.array), other); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(310, "cannot use swap() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief exchanges the values |
| |
| Exchanges the contents of a JSON object with those of @a other. Does not |
| invoke any move, copy, or swap operations on individual elements. All |
| iterators and references remain valid. The past-the-end iterator is |
| invalidated. |
| |
| @param[in,out] other object to exchange the contents with |
| |
| @throw type_error.310 when JSON value is not an object; example: |
| `"cannot use swap() with string"` |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how objects can be swapped with |
| `swap()`.,swap__object_t} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| void swap(object_t& other) |
| { |
| // swap only works for objects |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_object())) |
| { |
| std::swap(*(m_value.object), other); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(310, "cannot use swap() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief exchanges the values |
| |
| Exchanges the contents of a JSON string with those of @a other. Does not |
| invoke any move, copy, or swap operations on individual elements. All |
| iterators and references remain valid. The past-the-end iterator is |
| invalidated. |
| |
| @param[in,out] other string to exchange the contents with |
| |
| @throw type_error.310 when JSON value is not a string; example: `"cannot |
| use swap() with boolean"` |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how strings can be swapped with |
| `swap()`.,swap__string_t} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| void swap(string_t& other) |
| { |
| // swap only works for strings |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_string())) |
| { |
| std::swap(*(m_value.string), other); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(310, "cannot use swap() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief exchanges the values |
| |
| Exchanges the contents of a JSON string with those of @a other. Does not |
| invoke any move, copy, or swap operations on individual elements. All |
| iterators and references remain valid. The past-the-end iterator is |
| invalidated. |
| |
| @param[in,out] other binary to exchange the contents with |
| |
| @throw type_error.310 when JSON value is not a string; example: `"cannot |
| use swap() with boolean"` |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how strings can be swapped with |
| `swap()`.,swap__binary_t} |
| |
| @since version 3.8.0 |
| */ |
| void swap(binary_t& other) |
| { |
| // swap only works for strings |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_binary())) |
| { |
| std::swap(*(m_value.binary), other); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(310, "cannot use swap() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// @copydoc swap(binary_t) |
| void swap(typename binary_t::container_type& other) |
| { |
| // swap only works for strings |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(is_binary())) |
| { |
| std::swap(*(m_value.binary), other); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(type_error::create(310, "cannot use swap() with " + std::string(type_name()))); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| public: |
| ////////////////////////////////////////// |
| // lexicographical comparison operators // |
| ////////////////////////////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name lexicographical comparison operators |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: equal |
| |
| Compares two JSON values for equality according to the following rules: |
| - Two JSON values are equal if (1) they are from the same type and (2) |
| their stored values are the same according to their respective |
| `operator==`. |
| - Integer and floating-point numbers are automatically converted before |
| comparison. Note that two NaN values are always treated as unequal. |
| - Two JSON null values are equal. |
| |
| @note Floating-point inside JSON values numbers are compared with |
| `json::number_float_t::operator==` which is `double::operator==` by |
| default. To compare floating-point while respecting an epsilon, an alternative |
| [comparison function](https://github.com/mariokonrad/marnav/blob/master/include/marnav/math/floatingpoint.hpp#L34-#L39) |
| could be used, for instance |
| @code {.cpp} |
| template<typename T, typename = typename std::enable_if<std::is_floating_point<T>::value, T>::type> |
| inline bool is_same(T a, T b, T epsilon = std::numeric_limits<T>::epsilon()) noexcept |
| { |
| return std::abs(a - b) <= epsilon; |
| } |
| @endcode |
| Or you can self-defined operator equal function like this: |
| @code {.cpp} |
| bool my_equal(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs) { |
| const auto lhs_type lhs.type(); |
| const auto rhs_type rhs.type(); |
| if (lhs_type == rhs_type) { |
| switch(lhs_type) |
| // self_defined case |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| return std::abs(lhs - rhs) <= std::numeric_limits<float>::epsilon(); |
| // other cases remain the same with the original |
| ... |
| } |
| ... |
| } |
| @endcode |
| |
| @note NaN values never compare equal to themselves or to other NaN values. |
| |
| @param[in] lhs first JSON value to consider |
| @param[in] rhs second JSON value to consider |
| @return whether the values @a lhs and @a rhs are equal |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example demonstrates comparing several JSON |
| types.,operator__equal} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| friend bool operator==(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| const auto lhs_type = lhs.type(); |
| const auto rhs_type = rhs.type(); |
| |
| if (lhs_type == rhs_type) |
| { |
| switch (lhs_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::array: |
| return *lhs.m_value.array == *rhs.m_value.array; |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| return *lhs.m_value.object == *rhs.m_value.object; |
| |
| case value_t::null: |
| return true; |
| |
| case value_t::string: |
| return *lhs.m_value.string == *rhs.m_value.string; |
| |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| return lhs.m_value.boolean == rhs.m_value.boolean; |
| |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| return lhs.m_value.number_integer == rhs.m_value.number_integer; |
| |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| return lhs.m_value.number_unsigned == rhs.m_value.number_unsigned; |
| |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| return lhs.m_value.number_float == rhs.m_value.number_float; |
| |
| case value_t::binary: |
| return *lhs.m_value.binary == *rhs.m_value.binary; |
| |
| default: |
| return false; |
| } |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_integer && rhs_type == value_t::number_float) |
| { |
| return static_cast<number_float_t>(lhs.m_value.number_integer) == rhs.m_value.number_float; |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_float && rhs_type == value_t::number_integer) |
| { |
| return lhs.m_value.number_float == static_cast<number_float_t>(rhs.m_value.number_integer); |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_unsigned && rhs_type == value_t::number_float) |
| { |
| return static_cast<number_float_t>(lhs.m_value.number_unsigned) == rhs.m_value.number_float; |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_float && rhs_type == value_t::number_unsigned) |
| { |
| return lhs.m_value.number_float == static_cast<number_float_t>(rhs.m_value.number_unsigned); |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_unsigned && rhs_type == value_t::number_integer) |
| { |
| return static_cast<number_integer_t>(lhs.m_value.number_unsigned) == rhs.m_value.number_integer; |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_integer && rhs_type == value_t::number_unsigned) |
| { |
| return lhs.m_value.number_integer == static_cast<number_integer_t>(rhs.m_value.number_unsigned); |
| } |
| |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: equal |
| @copydoc operator==(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator==(const_reference lhs, const ScalarType rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return lhs == basic_json(rhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: equal |
| @copydoc operator==(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator==(const ScalarType lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return basic_json(lhs) == rhs; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: not equal |
| |
| Compares two JSON values for inequality by calculating `not (lhs == rhs)`. |
| |
| @param[in] lhs first JSON value to consider |
| @param[in] rhs second JSON value to consider |
| @return whether the values @a lhs and @a rhs are not equal |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example demonstrates comparing several JSON |
| types.,operator__notequal} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| friend bool operator!=(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return !(lhs == rhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: not equal |
| @copydoc operator!=(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator!=(const_reference lhs, const ScalarType rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return lhs != basic_json(rhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: not equal |
| @copydoc operator!=(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator!=(const ScalarType lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return basic_json(lhs) != rhs; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: less than |
| |
| Compares whether one JSON value @a lhs is less than another JSON value @a |
| rhs according to the following rules: |
| - If @a lhs and @a rhs have the same type, the values are compared using |
| the default `<` operator. |
| - Integer and floating-point numbers are automatically converted before |
| comparison |
| - In case @a lhs and @a rhs have different types, the values are ignored |
| and the order of the types is considered, see |
| @ref operator<(const value_t, const value_t). |
| |
| @param[in] lhs first JSON value to consider |
| @param[in] rhs second JSON value to consider |
| @return whether @a lhs is less than @a rhs |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example demonstrates comparing several JSON |
| types.,operator__less} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| friend bool operator<(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| const auto lhs_type = lhs.type(); |
| const auto rhs_type = rhs.type(); |
| |
| if (lhs_type == rhs_type) |
| { |
| switch (lhs_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::array: |
| // note parentheses are necessary, see |
| // https://github.com/nlohmann/json/issues/1530 |
| return (*lhs.m_value.array) < (*rhs.m_value.array); |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| return (*lhs.m_value.object) < (*rhs.m_value.object); |
| |
| case value_t::null: |
| return false; |
| |
| case value_t::string: |
| return (*lhs.m_value.string) < (*rhs.m_value.string); |
| |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| return (lhs.m_value.boolean) < (rhs.m_value.boolean); |
| |
| case value_t::number_integer: |
| return (lhs.m_value.number_integer) < (rhs.m_value.number_integer); |
| |
| case value_t::number_unsigned: |
| return (lhs.m_value.number_unsigned) < (rhs.m_value.number_unsigned); |
| |
| case value_t::number_float: |
| return (lhs.m_value.number_float) < (rhs.m_value.number_float); |
| |
| case value_t::binary: |
| return (*lhs.m_value.binary) < (*rhs.m_value.binary); |
| |
| default: |
| return false; |
| } |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_integer && rhs_type == value_t::number_float) |
| { |
| return static_cast<number_float_t>(lhs.m_value.number_integer) < rhs.m_value.number_float; |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_float && rhs_type == value_t::number_integer) |
| { |
| return lhs.m_value.number_float < static_cast<number_float_t>(rhs.m_value.number_integer); |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_unsigned && rhs_type == value_t::number_float) |
| { |
| return static_cast<number_float_t>(lhs.m_value.number_unsigned) < rhs.m_value.number_float; |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_float && rhs_type == value_t::number_unsigned) |
| { |
| return lhs.m_value.number_float < static_cast<number_float_t>(rhs.m_value.number_unsigned); |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_integer && rhs_type == value_t::number_unsigned) |
| { |
| return lhs.m_value.number_integer < static_cast<number_integer_t>(rhs.m_value.number_unsigned); |
| } |
| else if (lhs_type == value_t::number_unsigned && rhs_type == value_t::number_integer) |
| { |
| return static_cast<number_integer_t>(lhs.m_value.number_unsigned) < rhs.m_value.number_integer; |
| } |
| |
| // We only reach this line if we cannot compare values. In that case, |
| // we compare types. Note we have to call the operator explicitly, |
| // because MSVC has problems otherwise. |
| return operator<(lhs_type, rhs_type); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: less than |
| @copydoc operator<(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator<(const_reference lhs, const ScalarType rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return lhs < basic_json(rhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: less than |
| @copydoc operator<(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator<(const ScalarType lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return basic_json(lhs) < rhs; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: less than or equal |
| |
| Compares whether one JSON value @a lhs is less than or equal to another |
| JSON value by calculating `not (rhs < lhs)`. |
| |
| @param[in] lhs first JSON value to consider |
| @param[in] rhs second JSON value to consider |
| @return whether @a lhs is less than or equal to @a rhs |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example demonstrates comparing several JSON |
| types.,operator__greater} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| friend bool operator<=(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return !(rhs < lhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: less than or equal |
| @copydoc operator<=(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator<=(const_reference lhs, const ScalarType rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return lhs <= basic_json(rhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: less than or equal |
| @copydoc operator<=(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator<=(const ScalarType lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return basic_json(lhs) <= rhs; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: greater than |
| |
| Compares whether one JSON value @a lhs is greater than another |
| JSON value by calculating `not (lhs <= rhs)`. |
| |
| @param[in] lhs first JSON value to consider |
| @param[in] rhs second JSON value to consider |
| @return whether @a lhs is greater than to @a rhs |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example demonstrates comparing several JSON |
| types.,operator__lessequal} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| friend bool operator>(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return !(lhs <= rhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: greater than |
| @copydoc operator>(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator>(const_reference lhs, const ScalarType rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return lhs > basic_json(rhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: greater than |
| @copydoc operator>(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator>(const ScalarType lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return basic_json(lhs) > rhs; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: greater than or equal |
| |
| Compares whether one JSON value @a lhs is greater than or equal to another |
| JSON value by calculating `not (lhs < rhs)`. |
| |
| @param[in] lhs first JSON value to consider |
| @param[in] rhs second JSON value to consider |
| @return whether @a lhs is greater than or equal to @a rhs |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example demonstrates comparing several JSON |
| types.,operator__greaterequal} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| friend bool operator>=(const_reference lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return !(lhs < rhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: greater than or equal |
| @copydoc operator>=(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator>=(const_reference lhs, const ScalarType rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return lhs >= basic_json(rhs); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief comparison: greater than or equal |
| @copydoc operator>=(const_reference, const_reference) |
| */ |
| template<typename ScalarType, typename std::enable_if< |
| std::is_scalar<ScalarType>::value, int>::type = 0> |
| friend bool operator>=(const ScalarType lhs, const_reference rhs) noexcept |
| { |
| return basic_json(lhs) >= rhs; |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| /////////////////// |
| // serialization // |
| /////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name serialization |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief serialize to stream |
| |
| Serialize the given JSON value @a j to the output stream @a o. The JSON |
| value will be serialized using the @ref dump member function. |
| |
| - The indentation of the output can be controlled with the member variable |
| `width` of the output stream @a o. For instance, using the manipulator |
| `std::setw(4)` on @a o sets the indentation level to `4` and the |
| serialization result is the same as calling `dump(4)`. |
| |
| - The indentation character can be controlled with the member variable |
| `fill` of the output stream @a o. For instance, the manipulator |
| `std::setfill('\\t')` sets indentation to use a tab character rather than |
| the default space character. |
| |
| @param[in,out] o stream to serialize to |
| @param[in] j JSON value to serialize |
| |
| @return the stream @a o |
| |
| @throw type_error.316 if a string stored inside the JSON value is not |
| UTF-8 encoded |
| |
| @complexity Linear. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows the serialization with different |
| parameters to `width` to adjust the indentation level.,operator_serialize} |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0; indentation character added in version 3.0.0 |
| */ |
| friend std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& o, const basic_json& j) |
| { |
| // read width member and use it as indentation parameter if nonzero |
| const bool pretty_print = o.width() > 0; |
| const auto indentation = pretty_print ? o.width() : 0; |
| |
| // reset width to 0 for subsequent calls to this stream |
| o.width(0); |
| |
| // do the actual serialization |
| serializer s(detail::output_adapter<char>(o), o.fill()); |
| s.dump(j, pretty_print, false, static_cast<unsigned int>(indentation)); |
| return o; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief serialize to stream |
| @deprecated This stream operator is deprecated and will be removed in |
| future 4.0.0 of the library. Please use |
| @ref operator<<(std::ostream&, const basic_json&) |
| instead; that is, replace calls like `j >> o;` with `o << j;`. |
| @since version 1.0.0; deprecated since version 3.0.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.0.0, operator<<(std::ostream&, const basic_json&)) |
| friend std::ostream& operator>>(const basic_json& j, std::ostream& o) |
| { |
| return o << j; |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| |
| ///////////////////// |
| // deserialization // |
| ///////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name deserialization |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief deserialize from a compatible input |
| |
| @tparam InputType A compatible input, for instance |
| - an std::istream object |
| - a FILE pointer |
| - a C-style array of characters |
| - a pointer to a null-terminated string of single byte characters |
| - an object obj for which begin(obj) and end(obj) produces a valid pair of |
| iterators. |
| |
| @param[in] i input to read from |
| @param[in] cb a parser callback function of type @ref parser_callback_t |
| which is used to control the deserialization by filtering unwanted values |
| (optional) |
| @param[in] allow_exceptions whether to throw exceptions in case of a |
| parse error (optional, true by default) |
| @param[in] ignore_comments whether comments should be ignored and treated |
| like whitespace (true) or yield a parse error (true); (optional, false by |
| default) |
| |
| @return deserialized JSON value; in case of a parse error and |
| @a allow_exceptions set to `false`, the return value will be |
| value_t::discarded. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.101 if a parse error occurs; example: `""unexpected end |
| of input; expected string literal""` |
| @throw parse_error.102 if to_unicode fails or surrogate error |
| @throw parse_error.103 if to_unicode fails |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the length of the input. The parser is a predictive |
| LL(1) parser. The complexity can be higher if the parser callback function |
| @a cb or reading from the input @a i has a super-linear complexity. |
| |
| @note A UTF-8 byte order mark is silently ignored. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function reading |
| from an array.,parse__array__parser_callback_t} |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function with |
| and without callback function.,parse__string__parser_callback_t} |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function with |
| and without callback function.,parse__istream__parser_callback_t} |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function reading |
| from a contiguous container.,parse__contiguouscontainer__parser_callback_t} |
| |
| @since version 2.0.3 (contiguous containers); version 3.9.0 allowed to |
| ignore comments. |
| */ |
| template<typename InputType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json parse(InputType&& i, |
| const parser_callback_t cb = nullptr, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| parser(detail::input_adapter(std::forward<InputType>(i)), cb, allow_exceptions, ignore_comments).parse(true, result); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief deserialize from a pair of character iterators |
| |
| The value_type of the iterator must be a integral type with size of 1, 2 or |
| 4 bytes, which will be interpreted respectively as UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32. |
| |
| @param[in] first iterator to start of character range |
| @param[in] last iterator to end of character range |
| @param[in] cb a parser callback function of type @ref parser_callback_t |
| which is used to control the deserialization by filtering unwanted values |
| (optional) |
| @param[in] allow_exceptions whether to throw exceptions in case of a |
| parse error (optional, true by default) |
| @param[in] ignore_comments whether comments should be ignored and treated |
| like whitespace (true) or yield a parse error (true); (optional, false by |
| default) |
| |
| @return deserialized JSON value; in case of a parse error and |
| @a allow_exceptions set to `false`, the return value will be |
| value_t::discarded. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.101 if a parse error occurs; example: `""unexpected end |
| of input; expected string literal""` |
| @throw parse_error.102 if to_unicode fails or surrogate error |
| @throw parse_error.103 if to_unicode fails |
| */ |
| template<typename IteratorType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json parse(IteratorType first, |
| IteratorType last, |
| const parser_callback_t cb = nullptr, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| parser(detail::input_adapter(std::move(first), std::move(last)), cb, allow_exceptions, ignore_comments).parse(true, result); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, parse(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static basic_json parse(detail::span_input_adapter&& i, |
| const parser_callback_t cb = nullptr, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| parser(i.get(), cb, allow_exceptions, ignore_comments).parse(true, result); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief check if the input is valid JSON |
| |
| Unlike the @ref parse(InputType&&, const parser_callback_t,const bool) |
| function, this function neither throws an exception in case of invalid JSON |
| input (i.e., a parse error) nor creates diagnostic information. |
| |
| @tparam InputType A compatible input, for instance |
| - an std::istream object |
| - a FILE pointer |
| - a C-style array of characters |
| - a pointer to a null-terminated string of single byte characters |
| - an object obj for which begin(obj) and end(obj) produces a valid pair of |
| iterators. |
| |
| @param[in] i input to read from |
| @param[in] ignore_comments whether comments should be ignored and treated |
| like whitespace (true) or yield a parse error (true); (optional, false by |
| default) |
| |
| @return Whether the input read from @a i is valid JSON. |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the length of the input. The parser is a predictive |
| LL(1) parser. |
| |
| @note A UTF-8 byte order mark is silently ignored. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below demonstrates the `accept()` function reading |
| from a string.,accept__string} |
| */ |
| template<typename InputType> |
| static bool accept(InputType&& i, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false) |
| { |
| return parser(detail::input_adapter(std::forward<InputType>(i)), nullptr, false, ignore_comments).accept(true); |
| } |
| |
| template<typename IteratorType> |
| static bool accept(IteratorType first, IteratorType last, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false) |
| { |
| return parser(detail::input_adapter(std::move(first), std::move(last)), nullptr, false, ignore_comments).accept(true); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, accept(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static bool accept(detail::span_input_adapter&& i, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false) |
| { |
| return parser(i.get(), nullptr, false, ignore_comments).accept(true); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief generate SAX events |
| |
| The SAX event lister must follow the interface of @ref json_sax. |
| |
| This function reads from a compatible input. Examples are: |
| - an std::istream object |
| - a FILE pointer |
| - a C-style array of characters |
| - a pointer to a null-terminated string of single byte characters |
| - an object obj for which begin(obj) and end(obj) produces a valid pair of |
| iterators. |
| |
| @param[in] i input to read from |
| @param[in,out] sax SAX event listener |
| @param[in] format the format to parse (JSON, CBOR, MessagePack, or UBJSON) |
| @param[in] strict whether the input has to be consumed completely |
| @param[in] ignore_comments whether comments should be ignored and treated |
| like whitespace (true) or yield a parse error (true); (optional, false by |
| default); only applies to the JSON file format. |
| |
| @return return value of the last processed SAX event |
| |
| @throw parse_error.101 if a parse error occurs; example: `""unexpected end |
| of input; expected string literal""` |
| @throw parse_error.102 if to_unicode fails or surrogate error |
| @throw parse_error.103 if to_unicode fails |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the length of the input. The parser is a predictive |
| LL(1) parser. The complexity can be higher if the SAX consumer @a sax has |
| a super-linear complexity. |
| |
| @note A UTF-8 byte order mark is silently ignored. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below demonstrates the `sax_parse()` function |
| reading from string and processing the events with a user-defined SAX |
| event consumer.,sax_parse} |
| |
| @since version 3.2.0 |
| */ |
| template <typename InputType, typename SAX> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_NON_NULL(2) |
| static bool sax_parse(InputType&& i, SAX* sax, |
| input_format_t format = input_format_t::json, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false) |
| { |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::forward<InputType>(i)); |
| return format == input_format_t::json |
| ? parser(std::move(ia), nullptr, true, ignore_comments).sax_parse(sax, strict) |
| : detail::binary_reader<basic_json, decltype(ia), SAX>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(format, sax, strict); |
| } |
| |
| template<class IteratorType, class SAX> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_NON_NULL(3) |
| static bool sax_parse(IteratorType first, IteratorType last, SAX* sax, |
| input_format_t format = input_format_t::json, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false) |
| { |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::move(first), std::move(last)); |
| return format == input_format_t::json |
| ? parser(std::move(ia), nullptr, true, ignore_comments).sax_parse(sax, strict) |
| : detail::binary_reader<basic_json, decltype(ia), SAX>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(format, sax, strict); |
| } |
| |
| template <typename SAX> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, sax_parse(ptr, ptr + len, ...)) |
| JSON_HEDLEY_NON_NULL(2) |
| static bool sax_parse(detail::span_input_adapter&& i, SAX* sax, |
| input_format_t format = input_format_t::json, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool ignore_comments = false) |
| { |
| auto ia = i.get(); |
| return format == input_format_t::json |
| ? parser(std::move(ia), nullptr, true, ignore_comments).sax_parse(sax, strict) |
| : detail::binary_reader<basic_json, decltype(ia), SAX>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(format, sax, strict); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief deserialize from stream |
| @deprecated This stream operator is deprecated and will be removed in |
| version 4.0.0 of the library. Please use |
| @ref operator>>(std::istream&, basic_json&) |
| instead; that is, replace calls like `j << i;` with `i >> j;`. |
| @since version 1.0.0; deprecated since version 3.0.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.0.0, operator>>(std::istream&, basic_json&)) |
| friend std::istream& operator<<(basic_json& j, std::istream& i) |
| { |
| return operator>>(i, j); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief deserialize from stream |
| |
| Deserializes an input stream to a JSON value. |
| |
| @param[in,out] i input stream to read a serialized JSON value from |
| @param[in,out] j JSON value to write the deserialized input to |
| |
| @throw parse_error.101 in case of an unexpected token |
| @throw parse_error.102 if to_unicode fails or surrogate error |
| @throw parse_error.103 if to_unicode fails |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the length of the input. The parser is a predictive |
| LL(1) parser. |
| |
| @note A UTF-8 byte order mark is silently ignored. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example below shows how a JSON value is constructed by |
| reading a serialization from a stream.,operator_deserialize} |
| |
| @sa parse(std::istream&, const parser_callback_t) for a variant with a |
| parser callback function to filter values while parsing |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| friend std::istream& operator>>(std::istream& i, basic_json& j) |
| { |
| parser(detail::input_adapter(i)).parse(false, j); |
| return i; |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| /////////////////////////// |
| // convenience functions // |
| /////////////////////////// |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return the type as string |
| |
| Returns the type name as string to be used in error messages - usually to |
| indicate that a function was called on a wrong JSON type. |
| |
| @return a string representation of a the @a m_type member: |
| Value type | return value |
| ----------- | ------------- |
| null | `"null"` |
| boolean | `"boolean"` |
| string | `"string"` |
| number | `"number"` (for all number types) |
| object | `"object"` |
| array | `"array"` |
| binary | `"binary"` |
| discarded | `"discarded"` |
| |
| @exceptionsafety No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code exemplifies `type_name()` for all JSON |
| types.,type_name} |
| |
| @sa @ref type() -- return the type of the JSON value |
| @sa @ref operator value_t() -- return the type of the JSON value (implicit) |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0, public since 2.1.0, `const char*` and `noexcept` |
| since 3.0.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_RETURNS_NON_NULL |
| const char* type_name() const noexcept |
| { |
| { |
| switch (m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::null: |
| return "null"; |
| case value_t::object: |
| return "object"; |
| case value_t::array: |
| return "array"; |
| case value_t::string: |
| return "string"; |
| case value_t::boolean: |
| return "boolean"; |
| case value_t::binary: |
| return "binary"; |
| case value_t::discarded: |
| return "discarded"; |
| default: |
| return "number"; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| JSON_PRIVATE_UNLESS_TESTED: |
| ////////////////////// |
| // member variables // |
| ////////////////////// |
| |
| /// the type of the current element |
| value_t m_type = value_t::null; |
| |
| /// the value of the current element |
| json_value m_value = {}; |
| |
| ////////////////////////////////////////// |
| // binary serialization/deserialization // |
| ////////////////////////////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name binary serialization/deserialization support |
| /// @{ |
| |
| public: |
| /*! |
| @brief create a CBOR serialization of a given JSON value |
| |
| Serializes a given JSON value @a j to a byte vector using the CBOR (Concise |
| Binary Object Representation) serialization format. CBOR is a binary |
| serialization format which aims to be more compact than JSON itself, yet |
| more efficient to parse. |
| |
| The library uses the following mapping from JSON values types to |
| CBOR types according to the CBOR specification (RFC 7049): |
| |
| JSON value type | value/range | CBOR type | first byte |
| --------------- | ------------------------------------------ | ---------------------------------- | --------------- |
| null | `null` | Null | 0xF6 |
| boolean | `true` | True | 0xF5 |
| boolean | `false` | False | 0xF4 |
| number_integer | -9223372036854775808..-2147483649 | Negative integer (8 bytes follow) | 0x3B |
| number_integer | -2147483648..-32769 | Negative integer (4 bytes follow) | 0x3A |
| number_integer | -32768..-129 | Negative integer (2 bytes follow) | 0x39 |
| number_integer | -128..-25 | Negative integer (1 byte follow) | 0x38 |
| number_integer | -24..-1 | Negative integer | 0x20..0x37 |
| number_integer | 0..23 | Integer | 0x00..0x17 |
| number_integer | 24..255 | Unsigned integer (1 byte follow) | 0x18 |
| number_integer | 256..65535 | Unsigned integer (2 bytes follow) | 0x19 |
| number_integer | 65536..4294967295 | Unsigned integer (4 bytes follow) | 0x1A |
| number_integer | 4294967296..18446744073709551615 | Unsigned integer (8 bytes follow) | 0x1B |
| number_unsigned | 0..23 | Integer | 0x00..0x17 |
| number_unsigned | 24..255 | Unsigned integer (1 byte follow) | 0x18 |
| number_unsigned | 256..65535 | Unsigned integer (2 bytes follow) | 0x19 |
| number_unsigned | 65536..4294967295 | Unsigned integer (4 bytes follow) | 0x1A |
| number_unsigned | 4294967296..18446744073709551615 | Unsigned integer (8 bytes follow) | 0x1B |
| number_float | *any value representable by a float* | Single-Precision Float | 0xFA |
| number_float | *any value NOT representable by a float* | Double-Precision Float | 0xFB |
| string | *length*: 0..23 | UTF-8 string | 0x60..0x77 |
| string | *length*: 23..255 | UTF-8 string (1 byte follow) | 0x78 |
| string | *length*: 256..65535 | UTF-8 string (2 bytes follow) | 0x79 |
| string | *length*: 65536..4294967295 | UTF-8 string (4 bytes follow) | 0x7A |
| string | *length*: 4294967296..18446744073709551615 | UTF-8 string (8 bytes follow) | 0x7B |
| array | *size*: 0..23 | array | 0x80..0x97 |
| array | *size*: 23..255 | array (1 byte follow) | 0x98 |
| array | *size*: 256..65535 | array (2 bytes follow) | 0x99 |
| array | *size*: 65536..4294967295 | array (4 bytes follow) | 0x9A |
| array | *size*: 4294967296..18446744073709551615 | array (8 bytes follow) | 0x9B |
| object | *size*: 0..23 | map | 0xA0..0xB7 |
| object | *size*: 23..255 | map (1 byte follow) | 0xB8 |
| object | *size*: 256..65535 | map (2 bytes follow) | 0xB9 |
| object | *size*: 65536..4294967295 | map (4 bytes follow) | 0xBA |
| object | *size*: 4294967296..18446744073709551615 | map (8 bytes follow) | 0xBB |
| binary | *size*: 0..23 | byte string | 0x40..0x57 |
| binary | *size*: 23..255 | byte string (1 byte follow) | 0x58 |
| binary | *size*: 256..65535 | byte string (2 bytes follow) | 0x59 |
| binary | *size*: 65536..4294967295 | byte string (4 bytes follow) | 0x5A |
| binary | *size*: 4294967296..18446744073709551615 | byte string (8 bytes follow) | 0x5B |
| |
| @note The mapping is **complete** in the sense that any JSON value type |
| can be converted to a CBOR value. |
| |
| @note If NaN or Infinity are stored inside a JSON number, they are |
| serialized properly. This behavior differs from the @ref dump() |
| function which serializes NaN or Infinity to `null`. |
| |
| @note The following CBOR types are not used in the conversion: |
| - UTF-8 strings terminated by "break" (0x7F) |
| - arrays terminated by "break" (0x9F) |
| - maps terminated by "break" (0xBF) |
| - byte strings terminated by "break" (0x5F) |
| - date/time (0xC0..0xC1) |
| - bignum (0xC2..0xC3) |
| - decimal fraction (0xC4) |
| - bigfloat (0xC5) |
| - expected conversions (0xD5..0xD7) |
| - simple values (0xE0..0xF3, 0xF8) |
| - undefined (0xF7) |
| - half-precision floats (0xF9) |
| - break (0xFF) |
| |
| @param[in] j JSON value to serialize |
| @return CBOR serialization as byte vector |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the JSON value @a j. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the serialization of a JSON value to a byte |
| vector in CBOR format.,to_cbor} |
| |
| @sa http://cbor.io |
| @sa @ref from_cbor(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool, const cbor_tag_handler_t) for the |
| analogous deserialization |
| @sa @ref to_msgpack(const basic_json&) for the related MessagePack format |
| @sa @ref to_ubjson(const basic_json&, const bool, const bool) for the |
| related UBJSON format |
| |
| @since version 2.0.9; compact representation of floating-point numbers |
| since version 3.8.0 |
| */ |
| static std::vector<uint8_t> to_cbor(const basic_json& j) |
| { |
| std::vector<uint8_t> result; |
| to_cbor(j, result); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| static void to_cbor(const basic_json& j, detail::output_adapter<uint8_t> o) |
| { |
| binary_writer<uint8_t>(o).write_cbor(j); |
| } |
| |
| static void to_cbor(const basic_json& j, detail::output_adapter<char> o) |
| { |
| binary_writer<char>(o).write_cbor(j); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create a MessagePack serialization of a given JSON value |
| |
| Serializes a given JSON value @a j to a byte vector using the MessagePack |
| serialization format. MessagePack is a binary serialization format which |
| aims to be more compact than JSON itself, yet more efficient to parse. |
| |
| The library uses the following mapping from JSON values types to |
| MessagePack types according to the MessagePack specification: |
| |
| JSON value type | value/range | MessagePack type | first byte |
| --------------- | --------------------------------- | ---------------- | ---------- |
| null | `null` | nil | 0xC0 |
| boolean | `true` | true | 0xC3 |
| boolean | `false` | false | 0xC2 |
| number_integer | -9223372036854775808..-2147483649 | int64 | 0xD3 |
| number_integer | -2147483648..-32769 | int32 | 0xD2 |
| number_integer | -32768..-129 | int16 | 0xD1 |
| number_integer | -128..-33 | int8 | 0xD0 |
| number_integer | -32..-1 | negative fixint | 0xE0..0xFF |
| number_integer | 0..127 | positive fixint | 0x00..0x7F |
| number_integer | 128..255 | uint 8 | 0xCC |
| number_integer | 256..65535 | uint 16 | 0xCD |
| number_integer | 65536..4294967295 | uint 32 | 0xCE |
| number_integer | 4294967296..18446744073709551615 | uint 64 | 0xCF |
| number_unsigned | 0..127 | positive fixint | 0x00..0x7F |
| number_unsigned | 128..255 | uint 8 | 0xCC |
| number_unsigned | 256..65535 | uint 16 | 0xCD |
| number_unsigned | 65536..4294967295 | uint 32 | 0xCE |
| number_unsigned | 4294967296..18446744073709551615 | uint 64 | 0xCF |
| number_float | *any value representable by a float* | float 32 | 0xCA |
| number_float | *any value NOT representable by a float* | float 64 | 0xCB |
| string | *length*: 0..31 | fixstr | 0xA0..0xBF |
| string | *length*: 32..255 | str 8 | 0xD9 |
| string | *length*: 256..65535 | str 16 | 0xDA |
| string | *length*: 65536..4294967295 | str 32 | 0xDB |
| array | *size*: 0..15 | fixarray | 0x90..0x9F |
| array | *size*: 16..65535 | array 16 | 0xDC |
| array | *size*: 65536..4294967295 | array 32 | 0xDD |
| object | *size*: 0..15 | fix map | 0x80..0x8F |
| object | *size*: 16..65535 | map 16 | 0xDE |
| object | *size*: 65536..4294967295 | map 32 | 0xDF |
| binary | *size*: 0..255 | bin 8 | 0xC4 |
| binary | *size*: 256..65535 | bin 16 | 0xC5 |
| binary | *size*: 65536..4294967295 | bin 32 | 0xC6 |
| |
| @note The mapping is **complete** in the sense that any JSON value type |
| can be converted to a MessagePack value. |
| |
| @note The following values can **not** be converted to a MessagePack value: |
| - strings with more than 4294967295 bytes |
| - byte strings with more than 4294967295 bytes |
| - arrays with more than 4294967295 elements |
| - objects with more than 4294967295 elements |
| |
| @note Any MessagePack output created @ref to_msgpack can be successfully |
| parsed by @ref from_msgpack. |
| |
| @note If NaN or Infinity are stored inside a JSON number, they are |
| serialized properly. This behavior differs from the @ref dump() |
| function which serializes NaN or Infinity to `null`. |
| |
| @param[in] j JSON value to serialize |
| @return MessagePack serialization as byte vector |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the JSON value @a j. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the serialization of a JSON value to a byte |
| vector in MessagePack format.,to_msgpack} |
| |
| @sa http://msgpack.org |
| @sa @ref from_msgpack for the analogous deserialization |
| @sa @ref to_cbor(const basic_json& for the related CBOR format |
| @sa @ref to_ubjson(const basic_json&, const bool, const bool) for the |
| related UBJSON format |
| |
| @since version 2.0.9 |
| */ |
| static std::vector<uint8_t> to_msgpack(const basic_json& j) |
| { |
| std::vector<uint8_t> result; |
| to_msgpack(j, result); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| static void to_msgpack(const basic_json& j, detail::output_adapter<uint8_t> o) |
| { |
| binary_writer<uint8_t>(o).write_msgpack(j); |
| } |
| |
| static void to_msgpack(const basic_json& j, detail::output_adapter<char> o) |
| { |
| binary_writer<char>(o).write_msgpack(j); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create a UBJSON serialization of a given JSON value |
| |
| Serializes a given JSON value @a j to a byte vector using the UBJSON |
| (Universal Binary JSON) serialization format. UBJSON aims to be more compact |
| than JSON itself, yet more efficient to parse. |
| |
| The library uses the following mapping from JSON values types to |
| UBJSON types according to the UBJSON specification: |
| |
| JSON value type | value/range | UBJSON type | marker |
| --------------- | --------------------------------- | ----------- | ------ |
| null | `null` | null | `Z` |
| boolean | `true` | true | `T` |
| boolean | `false` | false | `F` |
| number_integer | -9223372036854775808..-2147483649 | int64 | `L` |
| number_integer | -2147483648..-32769 | int32 | `l` |
| number_integer | -32768..-129 | int16 | `I` |
| number_integer | -128..127 | int8 | `i` |
| number_integer | 128..255 | uint8 | `U` |
| number_integer | 256..32767 | int16 | `I` |
| number_integer | 32768..2147483647 | int32 | `l` |
| number_integer | 2147483648..9223372036854775807 | int64 | `L` |
| number_unsigned | 0..127 | int8 | `i` |
| number_unsigned | 128..255 | uint8 | `U` |
| number_unsigned | 256..32767 | int16 | `I` |
| number_unsigned | 32768..2147483647 | int32 | `l` |
| number_unsigned | 2147483648..9223372036854775807 | int64 | `L` |
| number_unsigned | 2147483649..18446744073709551615 | high-precision | `H` |
| number_float | *any value* | float64 | `D` |
| string | *with shortest length indicator* | string | `S` |
| array | *see notes on optimized format* | array | `[` |
| object | *see notes on optimized format* | map | `{` |
| |
| @note The mapping is **complete** in the sense that any JSON value type |
| can be converted to a UBJSON value. |
| |
| @note The following values can **not** be converted to a UBJSON value: |
| - strings with more than 9223372036854775807 bytes (theoretical) |
| |
| @note The following markers are not used in the conversion: |
| - `Z`: no-op values are not created. |
| - `C`: single-byte strings are serialized with `S` markers. |
| |
| @note Any UBJSON output created @ref to_ubjson can be successfully parsed |
| by @ref from_ubjson. |
| |
| @note If NaN or Infinity are stored inside a JSON number, they are |
| serialized properly. This behavior differs from the @ref dump() |
| function which serializes NaN or Infinity to `null`. |
| |
| @note The optimized formats for containers are supported: Parameter |
| @a use_size adds size information to the beginning of a container and |
| removes the closing marker. Parameter @a use_type further checks |
| whether all elements of a container have the same type and adds the |
| type marker to the beginning of the container. The @a use_type |
| parameter must only be used together with @a use_size = true. Note |
| that @a use_size = true alone may result in larger representations - |
| the benefit of this parameter is that the receiving side is |
| immediately informed on the number of elements of the container. |
| |
| @note If the JSON data contains the binary type, the value stored is a list |
| of integers, as suggested by the UBJSON documentation. In particular, |
| this means that serialization and the deserialization of a JSON |
| containing binary values into UBJSON and back will result in a |
| different JSON object. |
| |
| @param[in] j JSON value to serialize |
| @param[in] use_size whether to add size annotations to container types |
| @param[in] use_type whether to add type annotations to container types |
| (must be combined with @a use_size = true) |
| @return UBJSON serialization as byte vector |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the JSON value @a j. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the serialization of a JSON value to a byte |
| vector in UBJSON format.,to_ubjson} |
| |
| @sa http://ubjson.org |
| @sa @ref from_ubjson(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) for the |
| analogous deserialization |
| @sa @ref to_cbor(const basic_json& for the related CBOR format |
| @sa @ref to_msgpack(const basic_json&) for the related MessagePack format |
| |
| @since version 3.1.0 |
| */ |
| static std::vector<uint8_t> to_ubjson(const basic_json& j, |
| const bool use_size = false, |
| const bool use_type = false) |
| { |
| std::vector<uint8_t> result; |
| to_ubjson(j, result, use_size, use_type); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| static void to_ubjson(const basic_json& j, detail::output_adapter<uint8_t> o, |
| const bool use_size = false, const bool use_type = false) |
| { |
| binary_writer<uint8_t>(o).write_ubjson(j, use_size, use_type); |
| } |
| |
| static void to_ubjson(const basic_json& j, detail::output_adapter<char> o, |
| const bool use_size = false, const bool use_type = false) |
| { |
| binary_writer<char>(o).write_ubjson(j, use_size, use_type); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief Serializes the given JSON object `j` to BSON and returns a vector |
| containing the corresponding BSON-representation. |
| |
| BSON (Binary JSON) is a binary format in which zero or more ordered key/value pairs are |
| stored as a single entity (a so-called document). |
| |
| The library uses the following mapping from JSON values types to BSON types: |
| |
| JSON value type | value/range | BSON type | marker |
| --------------- | --------------------------------- | ----------- | ------ |
| null | `null` | null | 0x0A |
| boolean | `true`, `false` | boolean | 0x08 |
| number_integer | -9223372036854775808..-2147483649 | int64 | 0x12 |
| number_integer | -2147483648..2147483647 | int32 | 0x10 |
| number_integer | 2147483648..9223372036854775807 | int64 | 0x12 |
| number_unsigned | 0..2147483647 | int32 | 0x10 |
| number_unsigned | 2147483648..9223372036854775807 | int64 | 0x12 |
| number_unsigned | 9223372036854775808..18446744073709551615| -- | -- |
| number_float | *any value* | double | 0x01 |
| string | *any value* | string | 0x02 |
| array | *any value* | document | 0x04 |
| object | *any value* | document | 0x03 |
| binary | *any value* | binary | 0x05 |
| |
| @warning The mapping is **incomplete**, since only JSON-objects (and things |
| contained therein) can be serialized to BSON. |
| Also, integers larger than 9223372036854775807 cannot be serialized to BSON, |
| and the keys may not contain U+0000, since they are serialized a |
| zero-terminated c-strings. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.407 if `j.is_number_unsigned() && j.get<std::uint64_t>() > 9223372036854775807` |
| @throw out_of_range.409 if a key in `j` contains a NULL (U+0000) |
| @throw type_error.317 if `!j.is_object()` |
| |
| @pre The input `j` is required to be an object: `j.is_object() == true`. |
| |
| @note Any BSON output created via @ref to_bson can be successfully parsed |
| by @ref from_bson. |
| |
| @param[in] j JSON value to serialize |
| @return BSON serialization as byte vector |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the JSON value @a j. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the serialization of a JSON value to a byte |
| vector in BSON format.,to_bson} |
| |
| @sa http://bsonspec.org/spec.html |
| @sa @ref from_bson(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool strict) for the |
| analogous deserialization |
| @sa @ref to_ubjson(const basic_json&, const bool, const bool) for the |
| related UBJSON format |
| @sa @ref to_cbor(const basic_json&) for the related CBOR format |
| @sa @ref to_msgpack(const basic_json&) for the related MessagePack format |
| */ |
| static std::vector<uint8_t> to_bson(const basic_json& j) |
| { |
| std::vector<uint8_t> result; |
| to_bson(j, result); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief Serializes the given JSON object `j` to BSON and forwards the |
| corresponding BSON-representation to the given output_adapter `o`. |
| @param j The JSON object to convert to BSON. |
| @param o The output adapter that receives the binary BSON representation. |
| @pre The input `j` shall be an object: `j.is_object() == true` |
| @sa @ref to_bson(const basic_json&) |
| */ |
| static void to_bson(const basic_json& j, detail::output_adapter<uint8_t> o) |
| { |
| binary_writer<uint8_t>(o).write_bson(j); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc to_bson(const basic_json&, detail::output_adapter<uint8_t>) |
| */ |
| static void to_bson(const basic_json& j, detail::output_adapter<char> o) |
| { |
| binary_writer<char>(o).write_bson(j); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create a JSON value from an input in CBOR format |
| |
| Deserializes a given input @a i to a JSON value using the CBOR (Concise |
| Binary Object Representation) serialization format. |
| |
| The library maps CBOR types to JSON value types as follows: |
| |
| CBOR type | JSON value type | first byte |
| ---------------------- | --------------- | ---------- |
| Integer | number_unsigned | 0x00..0x17 |
| Unsigned integer | number_unsigned | 0x18 |
| Unsigned integer | number_unsigned | 0x19 |
| Unsigned integer | number_unsigned | 0x1A |
| Unsigned integer | number_unsigned | 0x1B |
| Negative integer | number_integer | 0x20..0x37 |
| Negative integer | number_integer | 0x38 |
| Negative integer | number_integer | 0x39 |
| Negative integer | number_integer | 0x3A |
| Negative integer | number_integer | 0x3B |
| Byte string | binary | 0x40..0x57 |
| Byte string | binary | 0x58 |
| Byte string | binary | 0x59 |
| Byte string | binary | 0x5A |
| Byte string | binary | 0x5B |
| UTF-8 string | string | 0x60..0x77 |
| UTF-8 string | string | 0x78 |
| UTF-8 string | string | 0x79 |
| UTF-8 string | string | 0x7A |
| UTF-8 string | string | 0x7B |
| UTF-8 string | string | 0x7F |
| array | array | 0x80..0x97 |
| array | array | 0x98 |
| array | array | 0x99 |
| array | array | 0x9A |
| array | array | 0x9B |
| array | array | 0x9F |
| map | object | 0xA0..0xB7 |
| map | object | 0xB8 |
| map | object | 0xB9 |
| map | object | 0xBA |
| map | object | 0xBB |
| map | object | 0xBF |
| False | `false` | 0xF4 |
| True | `true` | 0xF5 |
| Null | `null` | 0xF6 |
| Half-Precision Float | number_float | 0xF9 |
| Single-Precision Float | number_float | 0xFA |
| Double-Precision Float | number_float | 0xFB |
| |
| @warning The mapping is **incomplete** in the sense that not all CBOR |
| types can be converted to a JSON value. The following CBOR types |
| are not supported and will yield parse errors (parse_error.112): |
| - date/time (0xC0..0xC1) |
| - bignum (0xC2..0xC3) |
| - decimal fraction (0xC4) |
| - bigfloat (0xC5) |
| - expected conversions (0xD5..0xD7) |
| - simple values (0xE0..0xF3, 0xF8) |
| - undefined (0xF7) |
| |
| @warning CBOR allows map keys of any type, whereas JSON only allows |
| strings as keys in object values. Therefore, CBOR maps with keys |
| other than UTF-8 strings are rejected (parse_error.113). |
| |
| @note Any CBOR output created @ref to_cbor can be successfully parsed by |
| @ref from_cbor. |
| |
| @param[in] i an input in CBOR format convertible to an input adapter |
| @param[in] strict whether to expect the input to be consumed until EOF |
| (true by default) |
| @param[in] allow_exceptions whether to throw exceptions in case of a |
| parse error (optional, true by default) |
| @param[in] tag_handler how to treat CBOR tags (optional, error by default) |
| |
| @return deserialized JSON value; in case of a parse error and |
| @a allow_exceptions set to `false`, the return value will be |
| value_t::discarded. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.110 if the given input ends prematurely or the end of |
| file was not reached when @a strict was set to true |
| @throw parse_error.112 if unsupported features from CBOR were |
| used in the given input @a v or if the input is not valid CBOR |
| @throw parse_error.113 if a string was expected as map key, but not found |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the input @a i. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the deserialization of a byte vector in CBOR |
| format to a JSON value.,from_cbor} |
| |
| @sa http://cbor.io |
| @sa @ref to_cbor(const basic_json&) for the analogous serialization |
| @sa @ref from_msgpack(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) for the |
| related MessagePack format |
| @sa @ref from_ubjson(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) for the |
| related UBJSON format |
| |
| @since version 2.0.9; parameter @a start_index since 2.1.1; changed to |
| consume input adapters, removed start_index parameter, and added |
| @a strict parameter since 3.0.0; added @a allow_exceptions parameter |
| since 3.2.0; added @a tag_handler parameter since 3.9.0. |
| */ |
| template<typename InputType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json from_cbor(InputType&& i, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true, |
| const cbor_tag_handler_t tag_handler = cbor_tag_handler_t::error) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::forward<InputType>(i)); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::cbor, &sdp, strict, tag_handler); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc from_cbor(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool, const cbor_tag_handler_t) |
| */ |
| template<typename IteratorType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json from_cbor(IteratorType first, IteratorType last, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true, |
| const cbor_tag_handler_t tag_handler = cbor_tag_handler_t::error) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::move(first), std::move(last)); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::cbor, &sdp, strict, tag_handler); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| template<typename T> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, from_cbor(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static basic_json from_cbor(const T* ptr, std::size_t len, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true, |
| const cbor_tag_handler_t tag_handler = cbor_tag_handler_t::error) |
| { |
| return from_cbor(ptr, ptr + len, strict, allow_exceptions, tag_handler); |
| } |
| |
| |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, from_cbor(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static basic_json from_cbor(detail::span_input_adapter&& i, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true, |
| const cbor_tag_handler_t tag_handler = cbor_tag_handler_t::error) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = i.get(); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::cbor, &sdp, strict, tag_handler); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create a JSON value from an input in MessagePack format |
| |
| Deserializes a given input @a i to a JSON value using the MessagePack |
| serialization format. |
| |
| The library maps MessagePack types to JSON value types as follows: |
| |
| MessagePack type | JSON value type | first byte |
| ---------------- | --------------- | ---------- |
| positive fixint | number_unsigned | 0x00..0x7F |
| fixmap | object | 0x80..0x8F |
| fixarray | array | 0x90..0x9F |
| fixstr | string | 0xA0..0xBF |
| nil | `null` | 0xC0 |
| false | `false` | 0xC2 |
| true | `true` | 0xC3 |
| float 32 | number_float | 0xCA |
| float 64 | number_float | 0xCB |
| uint 8 | number_unsigned | 0xCC |
| uint 16 | number_unsigned | 0xCD |
| uint 32 | number_unsigned | 0xCE |
| uint 64 | number_unsigned | 0xCF |
| int 8 | number_integer | 0xD0 |
| int 16 | number_integer | 0xD1 |
| int 32 | number_integer | 0xD2 |
| int 64 | number_integer | 0xD3 |
| str 8 | string | 0xD9 |
| str 16 | string | 0xDA |
| str 32 | string | 0xDB |
| array 16 | array | 0xDC |
| array 32 | array | 0xDD |
| map 16 | object | 0xDE |
| map 32 | object | 0xDF |
| bin 8 | binary | 0xC4 |
| bin 16 | binary | 0xC5 |
| bin 32 | binary | 0xC6 |
| ext 8 | binary | 0xC7 |
| ext 16 | binary | 0xC8 |
| ext 32 | binary | 0xC9 |
| fixext 1 | binary | 0xD4 |
| fixext 2 | binary | 0xD5 |
| fixext 4 | binary | 0xD6 |
| fixext 8 | binary | 0xD7 |
| fixext 16 | binary | 0xD8 |
| negative fixint | number_integer | 0xE0-0xFF |
| |
| @note Any MessagePack output created @ref to_msgpack can be successfully |
| parsed by @ref from_msgpack. |
| |
| @param[in] i an input in MessagePack format convertible to an input |
| adapter |
| @param[in] strict whether to expect the input to be consumed until EOF |
| (true by default) |
| @param[in] allow_exceptions whether to throw exceptions in case of a |
| parse error (optional, true by default) |
| |
| @return deserialized JSON value; in case of a parse error and |
| @a allow_exceptions set to `false`, the return value will be |
| value_t::discarded. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.110 if the given input ends prematurely or the end of |
| file was not reached when @a strict was set to true |
| @throw parse_error.112 if unsupported features from MessagePack were |
| used in the given input @a i or if the input is not valid MessagePack |
| @throw parse_error.113 if a string was expected as map key, but not found |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the input @a i. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the deserialization of a byte vector in |
| MessagePack format to a JSON value.,from_msgpack} |
| |
| @sa http://msgpack.org |
| @sa @ref to_msgpack(const basic_json&) for the analogous serialization |
| @sa @ref from_cbor(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool, const cbor_tag_handler_t) for the |
| related CBOR format |
| @sa @ref from_ubjson(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) for |
| the related UBJSON format |
| @sa @ref from_bson(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) for |
| the related BSON format |
| |
| @since version 2.0.9; parameter @a start_index since 2.1.1; changed to |
| consume input adapters, removed start_index parameter, and added |
| @a strict parameter since 3.0.0; added @a allow_exceptions parameter |
| since 3.2.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename InputType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json from_msgpack(InputType&& i, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::forward<InputType>(i)); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::msgpack, &sdp, strict); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc from_msgpack(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) |
| */ |
| template<typename IteratorType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json from_msgpack(IteratorType first, IteratorType last, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::move(first), std::move(last)); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::msgpack, &sdp, strict); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| |
| template<typename T> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, from_msgpack(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static basic_json from_msgpack(const T* ptr, std::size_t len, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| return from_msgpack(ptr, ptr + len, strict, allow_exceptions); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, from_msgpack(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static basic_json from_msgpack(detail::span_input_adapter&& i, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = i.get(); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::msgpack, &sdp, strict); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief create a JSON value from an input in UBJSON format |
| |
| Deserializes a given input @a i to a JSON value using the UBJSON (Universal |
| Binary JSON) serialization format. |
| |
| The library maps UBJSON types to JSON value types as follows: |
| |
| UBJSON type | JSON value type | marker |
| ----------- | --------------------------------------- | ------ |
| no-op | *no value, next value is read* | `N` |
| null | `null` | `Z` |
| false | `false` | `F` |
| true | `true` | `T` |
| float32 | number_float | `d` |
| float64 | number_float | `D` |
| uint8 | number_unsigned | `U` |
| int8 | number_integer | `i` |
| int16 | number_integer | `I` |
| int32 | number_integer | `l` |
| int64 | number_integer | `L` |
| high-precision number | number_integer, number_unsigned, or number_float - depends on number string | 'H' |
| string | string | `S` |
| char | string | `C` |
| array | array (optimized values are supported) | `[` |
| object | object (optimized values are supported) | `{` |
| |
| @note The mapping is **complete** in the sense that any UBJSON value can |
| be converted to a JSON value. |
| |
| @param[in] i an input in UBJSON format convertible to an input adapter |
| @param[in] strict whether to expect the input to be consumed until EOF |
| (true by default) |
| @param[in] allow_exceptions whether to throw exceptions in case of a |
| parse error (optional, true by default) |
| |
| @return deserialized JSON value; in case of a parse error and |
| @a allow_exceptions set to `false`, the return value will be |
| value_t::discarded. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.110 if the given input ends prematurely or the end of |
| file was not reached when @a strict was set to true |
| @throw parse_error.112 if a parse error occurs |
| @throw parse_error.113 if a string could not be parsed successfully |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the input @a i. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the deserialization of a byte vector in |
| UBJSON format to a JSON value.,from_ubjson} |
| |
| @sa http://ubjson.org |
| @sa @ref to_ubjson(const basic_json&, const bool, const bool) for the |
| analogous serialization |
| @sa @ref from_cbor(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool, const cbor_tag_handler_t) for the |
| related CBOR format |
| @sa @ref from_msgpack(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) for |
| the related MessagePack format |
| @sa @ref from_bson(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) for |
| the related BSON format |
| |
| @since version 3.1.0; added @a allow_exceptions parameter since 3.2.0 |
| */ |
| template<typename InputType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json from_ubjson(InputType&& i, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::forward<InputType>(i)); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::ubjson, &sdp, strict); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc from_ubjson(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) |
| */ |
| template<typename IteratorType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json from_ubjson(IteratorType first, IteratorType last, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::move(first), std::move(last)); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::ubjson, &sdp, strict); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| template<typename T> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, from_ubjson(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static basic_json from_ubjson(const T* ptr, std::size_t len, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| return from_ubjson(ptr, ptr + len, strict, allow_exceptions); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, from_ubjson(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static basic_json from_ubjson(detail::span_input_adapter&& i, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = i.get(); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::ubjson, &sdp, strict); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief Create a JSON value from an input in BSON format |
| |
| Deserializes a given input @a i to a JSON value using the BSON (Binary JSON) |
| serialization format. |
| |
| The library maps BSON record types to JSON value types as follows: |
| |
| BSON type | BSON marker byte | JSON value type |
| --------------- | ---------------- | --------------------------- |
| double | 0x01 | number_float |
| string | 0x02 | string |
| document | 0x03 | object |
| array | 0x04 | array |
| binary | 0x05 | binary |
| undefined | 0x06 | still unsupported |
| ObjectId | 0x07 | still unsupported |
| boolean | 0x08 | boolean |
| UTC Date-Time | 0x09 | still unsupported |
| null | 0x0A | null |
| Regular Expr. | 0x0B | still unsupported |
| DB Pointer | 0x0C | still unsupported |
| JavaScript Code | 0x0D | still unsupported |
| Symbol | 0x0E | still unsupported |
| JavaScript Code | 0x0F | still unsupported |
| int32 | 0x10 | number_integer |
| Timestamp | 0x11 | still unsupported |
| 128-bit decimal float | 0x13 | still unsupported |
| Max Key | 0x7F | still unsupported |
| Min Key | 0xFF | still unsupported |
| |
| @warning The mapping is **incomplete**. The unsupported mappings |
| are indicated in the table above. |
| |
| @param[in] i an input in BSON format convertible to an input adapter |
| @param[in] strict whether to expect the input to be consumed until EOF |
| (true by default) |
| @param[in] allow_exceptions whether to throw exceptions in case of a |
| parse error (optional, true by default) |
| |
| @return deserialized JSON value; in case of a parse error and |
| @a allow_exceptions set to `false`, the return value will be |
| value_t::discarded. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.114 if an unsupported BSON record type is encountered |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the input @a i. |
| |
| @liveexample{The example shows the deserialization of a byte vector in |
| BSON format to a JSON value.,from_bson} |
| |
| @sa http://bsonspec.org/spec.html |
| @sa @ref to_bson(const basic_json&) for the analogous serialization |
| @sa @ref from_cbor(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool, const cbor_tag_handler_t) for the |
| related CBOR format |
| @sa @ref from_msgpack(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) for |
| the related MessagePack format |
| @sa @ref from_ubjson(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) for the |
| related UBJSON format |
| */ |
| template<typename InputType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json from_bson(InputType&& i, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::forward<InputType>(i)); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::bson, &sdp, strict); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @copydoc from_bson(detail::input_adapter&&, const bool, const bool) |
| */ |
| template<typename IteratorType> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json from_bson(IteratorType first, IteratorType last, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = detail::input_adapter(std::move(first), std::move(last)); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::bson, &sdp, strict); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| |
| template<typename T> |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, from_bson(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static basic_json from_bson(const T* ptr, std::size_t len, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| return from_bson(ptr, ptr + len, strict, allow_exceptions); |
| } |
| |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| JSON_HEDLEY_DEPRECATED_FOR(3.8.0, from_bson(ptr, ptr + len)) |
| static basic_json from_bson(detail::span_input_adapter&& i, |
| const bool strict = true, |
| const bool allow_exceptions = true) |
| { |
| basic_json result; |
| detail::json_sax_dom_parser<basic_json> sdp(result, allow_exceptions); |
| auto ia = i.get(); |
| const bool res = binary_reader<decltype(ia)>(std::move(ia)).sax_parse(input_format_t::bson, &sdp, strict); |
| return res ? result : basic_json(value_t::discarded); |
| } |
| /// @} |
| |
| ////////////////////////// |
| // JSON Pointer support // |
| ////////////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name JSON Pointer functions |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified element via JSON Pointer |
| |
| Uses a JSON pointer to retrieve a reference to the respective JSON value. |
| No bound checking is performed. Similar to @ref operator[](const typename |
| object_t::key_type&), `null` values are created in arrays and objects if |
| necessary. |
| |
| In particular: |
| - If the JSON pointer points to an object key that does not exist, it |
| is created an filled with a `null` value before a reference to it |
| is returned. |
| - If the JSON pointer points to an array index that does not exist, it |
| is created an filled with a `null` value before a reference to it |
| is returned. All indices between the current maximum and the given |
| index are also filled with `null`. |
| - The special value `-` is treated as a synonym for the index past the |
| end. |
| |
| @param[in] ptr a JSON pointer |
| |
| @return reference to the element pointed to by @a ptr |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.106 if an array index begins with '0' |
| @throw parse_error.109 if an array index was not a number |
| @throw out_of_range.404 if the JSON pointer can not be resolved |
| |
| @liveexample{The behavior is shown in the example.,operatorjson_pointer} |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| */ |
| reference operator[](const json_pointer& ptr) |
| { |
| return ptr.get_unchecked(this); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified element via JSON Pointer |
| |
| Uses a JSON pointer to retrieve a reference to the respective JSON value. |
| No bound checking is performed. The function does not change the JSON |
| value; no `null` values are created. In particular, the special value |
| `-` yields an exception. |
| |
| @param[in] ptr JSON pointer to the desired element |
| |
| @return const reference to the element pointed to by @a ptr |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.106 if an array index begins with '0' |
| @throw parse_error.109 if an array index was not a number |
| @throw out_of_range.402 if the array index '-' is used |
| @throw out_of_range.404 if the JSON pointer can not be resolved |
| |
| @liveexample{The behavior is shown in the example.,operatorjson_pointer_const} |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| */ |
| const_reference operator[](const json_pointer& ptr) const |
| { |
| return ptr.get_unchecked(this); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified element via JSON Pointer |
| |
| Returns a reference to the element at with specified JSON pointer @a ptr, |
| with bounds checking. |
| |
| @param[in] ptr JSON pointer to the desired element |
| |
| @return reference to the element pointed to by @a ptr |
| |
| @throw parse_error.106 if an array index in the passed JSON pointer @a ptr |
| begins with '0'. See example below. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.109 if an array index in the passed JSON pointer @a ptr |
| is not a number. See example below. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.401 if an array index in the passed JSON pointer @a ptr |
| is out of range. See example below. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.402 if the array index '-' is used in the passed JSON |
| pointer @a ptr. As `at` provides checked access (and no elements are |
| implicitly inserted), the index '-' is always invalid. See example below. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.403 if the JSON pointer describes a key of an object |
| which cannot be found. See example below. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.404 if the JSON pointer @a ptr can not be resolved. |
| See example below. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes in the JSON value. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| |
| @liveexample{The behavior is shown in the example.,at_json_pointer} |
| */ |
| reference at(const json_pointer& ptr) |
| { |
| return ptr.get_checked(this); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief access specified element via JSON Pointer |
| |
| Returns a const reference to the element at with specified JSON pointer @a |
| ptr, with bounds checking. |
| |
| @param[in] ptr JSON pointer to the desired element |
| |
| @return reference to the element pointed to by @a ptr |
| |
| @throw parse_error.106 if an array index in the passed JSON pointer @a ptr |
| begins with '0'. See example below. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.109 if an array index in the passed JSON pointer @a ptr |
| is not a number. See example below. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.401 if an array index in the passed JSON pointer @a ptr |
| is out of range. See example below. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.402 if the array index '-' is used in the passed JSON |
| pointer @a ptr. As `at` provides checked access (and no elements are |
| implicitly inserted), the index '-' is always invalid. See example below. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.403 if the JSON pointer describes a key of an object |
| which cannot be found. See example below. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.404 if the JSON pointer @a ptr can not be resolved. |
| See example below. |
| |
| @exceptionsafety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no |
| changes in the JSON value. |
| |
| @complexity Constant. |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| |
| @liveexample{The behavior is shown in the example.,at_json_pointer_const} |
| */ |
| const_reference at(const json_pointer& ptr) const |
| { |
| return ptr.get_checked(this); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief return flattened JSON value |
| |
| The function creates a JSON object whose keys are JSON pointers (see [RFC |
| 6901](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901)) and whose values are all |
| primitive. The original JSON value can be restored using the @ref |
| unflatten() function. |
| |
| @return an object that maps JSON pointers to primitive values |
| |
| @note Empty objects and arrays are flattened to `null` and will not be |
| reconstructed correctly by the @ref unflatten() function. |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size the JSON value. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows how a JSON object is flattened to an |
| object whose keys consist of JSON pointers.,flatten} |
| |
| @sa @ref unflatten() for the reverse function |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json flatten() const |
| { |
| basic_json result(value_t::object); |
| json_pointer::flatten("", *this, result); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief unflatten a previously flattened JSON value |
| |
| The function restores the arbitrary nesting of a JSON value that has been |
| flattened before using the @ref flatten() function. The JSON value must |
| meet certain constraints: |
| 1. The value must be an object. |
| 2. The keys must be JSON pointers (see |
| [RFC 6901](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901)) |
| 3. The mapped values must be primitive JSON types. |
| |
| @return the original JSON from a flattened version |
| |
| @note Empty objects and arrays are flattened by @ref flatten() to `null` |
| values and can not unflattened to their original type. Apart from |
| this example, for a JSON value `j`, the following is always true: |
| `j == j.flatten().unflatten()`. |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size the JSON value. |
| |
| @throw type_error.314 if value is not an object |
| @throw type_error.315 if object values are not primitive |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows how a flattened JSON object is |
| unflattened into the original nested JSON object.,unflatten} |
| |
| @sa @ref flatten() for the reverse function |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json unflatten() const |
| { |
| return json_pointer::unflatten(*this); |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| ////////////////////////// |
| // JSON Patch functions // |
| ////////////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name JSON Patch functions |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief applies a JSON patch |
| |
| [JSON Patch](http://jsonpatch.com) defines a JSON document structure for |
| expressing a sequence of operations to apply to a JSON) document. With |
| this function, a JSON Patch is applied to the current JSON value by |
| executing all operations from the patch. |
| |
| @param[in] json_patch JSON patch document |
| @return patched document |
| |
| @note The application of a patch is atomic: Either all operations succeed |
| and the patched document is returned or an exception is thrown. In |
| any case, the original value is not changed: the patch is applied |
| to a copy of the value. |
| |
| @throw parse_error.104 if the JSON patch does not consist of an array of |
| objects |
| |
| @throw parse_error.105 if the JSON patch is malformed (e.g., mandatory |
| attributes are missing); example: `"operation add must have member path"` |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.401 if an array index is out of range. |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.403 if a JSON pointer inside the patch could not be |
| resolved successfully in the current JSON value; example: `"key baz not |
| found"` |
| |
| @throw out_of_range.405 if JSON pointer has no parent ("add", "remove", |
| "move") |
| |
| @throw other_error.501 if "test" operation was unsuccessful |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the size of the JSON value and the length of the |
| JSON patch. As usually only a fraction of the JSON value is affected by |
| the patch, the complexity can usually be neglected. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows how a JSON patch is applied to a |
| value.,patch} |
| |
| @sa @ref diff -- create a JSON patch by comparing two JSON values |
| |
| @sa [RFC 6902 (JSON Patch)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6902) |
| @sa [RFC 6901 (JSON Pointer)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901) |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| */ |
| basic_json patch(const basic_json& json_patch) const |
| { |
| // make a working copy to apply the patch to |
| basic_json result = *this; |
| |
| // the valid JSON Patch operations |
| enum class patch_operations {add, remove, replace, move, copy, test, invalid}; |
| |
| const auto get_op = [](const std::string & op) |
| { |
| if (op == "add") |
| { |
| return patch_operations::add; |
| } |
| if (op == "remove") |
| { |
| return patch_operations::remove; |
| } |
| if (op == "replace") |
| { |
| return patch_operations::replace; |
| } |
| if (op == "move") |
| { |
| return patch_operations::move; |
| } |
| if (op == "copy") |
| { |
| return patch_operations::copy; |
| } |
| if (op == "test") |
| { |
| return patch_operations::test; |
| } |
| |
| return patch_operations::invalid; |
| }; |
| |
| // wrapper for "add" operation; add value at ptr |
| const auto operation_add = [&result](json_pointer & ptr, basic_json val) |
| { |
| // adding to the root of the target document means replacing it |
| if (ptr.empty()) |
| { |
| result = val; |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| // make sure the top element of the pointer exists |
| json_pointer top_pointer = ptr.top(); |
| if (top_pointer != ptr) |
| { |
| result.at(top_pointer); |
| } |
| |
| // get reference to parent of JSON pointer ptr |
| const auto last_path = ptr.back(); |
| ptr.pop_back(); |
| basic_json& parent = result[ptr]; |
| |
| switch (parent.m_type) |
| { |
| case value_t::null: |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| // use operator[] to add value |
| parent[last_path] = val; |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| if (last_path == "-") |
| { |
| // special case: append to back |
| parent.push_back(val); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| const auto idx = json_pointer::array_index(last_path); |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(idx > parent.size())) |
| { |
| // avoid undefined behavior |
| JSON_THROW(out_of_range::create(401, "array index " + std::to_string(idx) + " is out of range")); |
| } |
| |
| // default case: insert add offset |
| parent.insert(parent.begin() + static_cast<difference_type>(idx), val); |
| } |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| // if there exists a parent it cannot be primitive |
| default: // LCOV_EXCL_LINE |
| JSON_ASSERT(false); // LCOV_EXCL_LINE |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| // wrapper for "remove" operation; remove value at ptr |
| const auto operation_remove = [&result](json_pointer & ptr) |
| { |
| // get reference to parent of JSON pointer ptr |
| const auto last_path = ptr.back(); |
| ptr.pop_back(); |
| basic_json& parent = result.at(ptr); |
| |
| // remove child |
| if (parent.is_object()) |
| { |
| // perform range check |
| auto it = parent.find(last_path); |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_LIKELY(it != parent.end())) |
| { |
| parent.erase(it); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(out_of_range::create(403, "key '" + last_path + "' not found")); |
| } |
| } |
| else if (parent.is_array()) |
| { |
| // note erase performs range check |
| parent.erase(json_pointer::array_index(last_path)); |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| // type check: top level value must be an array |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!json_patch.is_array())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(parse_error::create(104, 0, "JSON patch must be an array of objects")); |
| } |
| |
| // iterate and apply the operations |
| for (const auto& val : json_patch) |
| { |
| // wrapper to get a value for an operation |
| const auto get_value = [&val](const std::string & op, |
| const std::string & member, |
| bool string_type) -> basic_json & |
| { |
| // find value |
| auto it = val.m_value.object->find(member); |
| |
| // context-sensitive error message |
| const auto error_msg = (op == "op") ? "operation" : "operation '" + op + "'"; |
| |
| // check if desired value is present |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(it == val.m_value.object->end())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(parse_error::create(105, 0, error_msg + " must have member '" + member + "'")); |
| } |
| |
| // check if result is of type string |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(string_type && !it->second.is_string())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(parse_error::create(105, 0, error_msg + " must have string member '" + member + "'")); |
| } |
| |
| // no error: return value |
| return it->second; |
| }; |
| |
| // type check: every element of the array must be an object |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!val.is_object())) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(parse_error::create(104, 0, "JSON patch must be an array of objects")); |
| } |
| |
| // collect mandatory members |
| const auto op = get_value("op", "op", true).template get<std::string>(); |
| const auto path = get_value(op, "path", true).template get<std::string>(); |
| json_pointer ptr(path); |
| |
| switch (get_op(op)) |
| { |
| case patch_operations::add: |
| { |
| operation_add(ptr, get_value("add", "value", false)); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case patch_operations::remove: |
| { |
| operation_remove(ptr); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case patch_operations::replace: |
| { |
| // the "path" location must exist - use at() |
| result.at(ptr) = get_value("replace", "value", false); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case patch_operations::move: |
| { |
| const auto from_path = get_value("move", "from", true).template get<std::string>(); |
| json_pointer from_ptr(from_path); |
| |
| // the "from" location must exist - use at() |
| basic_json v = result.at(from_ptr); |
| |
| // The move operation is functionally identical to a |
| // "remove" operation on the "from" location, followed |
| // immediately by an "add" operation at the target |
| // location with the value that was just removed. |
| operation_remove(from_ptr); |
| operation_add(ptr, v); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case patch_operations::copy: |
| { |
| const auto from_path = get_value("copy", "from", true).template get<std::string>(); |
| const json_pointer from_ptr(from_path); |
| |
| // the "from" location must exist - use at() |
| basic_json v = result.at(from_ptr); |
| |
| // The copy is functionally identical to an "add" |
| // operation at the target location using the value |
| // specified in the "from" member. |
| operation_add(ptr, v); |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case patch_operations::test: |
| { |
| bool success = false; |
| JSON_TRY |
| { |
| // check if "value" matches the one at "path" |
| // the "path" location must exist - use at() |
| success = (result.at(ptr) == get_value("test", "value", false)); |
| } |
| JSON_INTERNAL_CATCH (out_of_range&) |
| { |
| // ignore out of range errors: success remains false |
| } |
| |
| // throw an exception if test fails |
| if (JSON_HEDLEY_UNLIKELY(!success)) |
| { |
| JSON_THROW(other_error::create(501, "unsuccessful: " + val.dump())); |
| } |
| |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| { |
| // op must be "add", "remove", "replace", "move", "copy", or |
| // "test" |
| JSON_THROW(parse_error::create(105, 0, "operation value '" + op + "' is invalid")); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief creates a diff as a JSON patch |
| |
| Creates a [JSON Patch](http://jsonpatch.com) so that value @a source can |
| be changed into the value @a target by calling @ref patch function. |
| |
| @invariant For two JSON values @a source and @a target, the following code |
| yields always `true`: |
| @code {.cpp} |
| source.patch(diff(source, target)) == target; |
| @endcode |
| |
| @note Currently, only `remove`, `add`, and `replace` operations are |
| generated. |
| |
| @param[in] source JSON value to compare from |
| @param[in] target JSON value to compare against |
| @param[in] path helper value to create JSON pointers |
| |
| @return a JSON patch to convert the @a source to @a target |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the lengths of @a source and @a target. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows how a JSON patch is created as a |
| diff for two JSON values.,diff} |
| |
| @sa @ref patch -- apply a JSON patch |
| @sa @ref merge_patch -- apply a JSON Merge Patch |
| |
| @sa [RFC 6902 (JSON Patch)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6902) |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_WARN_UNUSED_RESULT |
| static basic_json diff(const basic_json& source, const basic_json& target, |
| const std::string& path = "") |
| { |
| // the patch |
| basic_json result(value_t::array); |
| |
| // if the values are the same, return empty patch |
| if (source == target) |
| { |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| if (source.type() != target.type()) |
| { |
| // different types: replace value |
| result.push_back( |
| { |
| {"op", "replace"}, {"path", path}, {"value", target} |
| }); |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| switch (source.type()) |
| { |
| case value_t::array: |
| { |
| // first pass: traverse common elements |
| std::size_t i = 0; |
| while (i < source.size() && i < target.size()) |
| { |
| // recursive call to compare array values at index i |
| auto temp_diff = diff(source[i], target[i], path + "/" + std::to_string(i)); |
| result.insert(result.end(), temp_diff.begin(), temp_diff.end()); |
| ++i; |
| } |
| |
| // i now reached the end of at least one array |
| // in a second pass, traverse the remaining elements |
| |
| // remove my remaining elements |
| const auto end_index = static_cast<difference_type>(result.size()); |
| while (i < source.size()) |
| { |
| // add operations in reverse order to avoid invalid |
| // indices |
| result.insert(result.begin() + end_index, object( |
| { |
| {"op", "remove"}, |
| {"path", path + "/" + std::to_string(i)} |
| })); |
| ++i; |
| } |
| |
| // add other remaining elements |
| while (i < target.size()) |
| { |
| result.push_back( |
| { |
| {"op", "add"}, |
| {"path", path + "/-"}, |
| {"value", target[i]} |
| }); |
| ++i; |
| } |
| |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| case value_t::object: |
| { |
| // first pass: traverse this object's elements |
| for (auto it = source.cbegin(); it != source.cend(); ++it) |
| { |
| // escape the key name to be used in a JSON patch |
| const auto key = json_pointer::escape(it.key()); |
| |
| if (target.find(it.key()) != target.end()) |
| { |
| // recursive call to compare object values at key it |
| auto temp_diff = diff(it.value(), target[it.key()], path + "/" + key); |
| result.insert(result.end(), temp_diff.begin(), temp_diff.end()); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| // found a key that is not in o -> remove it |
| result.push_back(object( |
| { |
| {"op", "remove"}, {"path", path + "/" + key} |
| })); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| // second pass: traverse other object's elements |
| for (auto it = target.cbegin(); it != target.cend(); ++it) |
| { |
| if (source.find(it.key()) == source.end()) |
| { |
| // found a key that is not in this -> add it |
| const auto key = json_pointer::escape(it.key()); |
| result.push_back( |
| { |
| {"op", "add"}, {"path", path + "/" + key}, |
| {"value", it.value()} |
| }); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| break; |
| } |
| |
| default: |
| { |
| // both primitive type: replace value |
| result.push_back( |
| { |
| {"op", "replace"}, {"path", path}, {"value", target} |
| }); |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| return result; |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| |
| //////////////////////////////// |
| // JSON Merge Patch functions // |
| //////////////////////////////// |
| |
| /// @name JSON Merge Patch functions |
| /// @{ |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief applies a JSON Merge Patch |
| |
| The merge patch format is primarily intended for use with the HTTP PATCH |
| method as a means of describing a set of modifications to a target |
| resource's content. This function applies a merge patch to the current |
| JSON value. |
| |
| The function implements the following algorithm from Section 2 of |
| [RFC 7396 (JSON Merge Patch)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7396): |
| |
| ``` |
| define MergePatch(Target, Patch): |
| if Patch is an Object: |
| if Target is not an Object: |
| Target = {} // Ignore the contents and set it to an empty Object |
| for each Name/Value pair in Patch: |
| if Value is null: |
| if Name exists in Target: |
| remove the Name/Value pair from Target |
| else: |
| Target[Name] = MergePatch(Target[Name], Value) |
| return Target |
| else: |
| return Patch |
| ``` |
| |
| Thereby, `Target` is the current object; that is, the patch is applied to |
| the current value. |
| |
| @param[in] apply_patch the patch to apply |
| |
| @complexity Linear in the lengths of @a patch. |
| |
| @liveexample{The following code shows how a JSON Merge Patch is applied to |
| a JSON document.,merge_patch} |
| |
| @sa @ref patch -- apply a JSON patch |
| @sa [RFC 7396 (JSON Merge Patch)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7396) |
| |
| @since version 3.0.0 |
| */ |
| void merge_patch(const basic_json& apply_patch) |
| { |
| if (apply_patch.is_object()) |
| { |
| if (!is_object()) |
| { |
| *this = object(); |
| } |
| for (auto it = apply_patch.begin(); it != apply_patch.end(); ++it) |
| { |
| if (it.value().is_null()) |
| { |
| erase(it.key()); |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| operator[](it.key()).merge_patch(it.value()); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| *this = apply_patch; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /// @} |
| }; |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief user-defined to_string function for JSON values |
| |
| This function implements a user-defined to_string for JSON objects. |
| |
| @param[in] j a JSON object |
| @return a std::string object |
| */ |
| |
| NLOHMANN_BASIC_JSON_TPL_DECLARATION |
| std::string to_string(const NLOHMANN_BASIC_JSON_TPL& j) |
| { |
| return j.dump(); |
| } |
| } // namespace nlohmann |
| |
| /////////////////////// |
| // nonmember support // |
| /////////////////////// |
| |
| // specialization of std::swap, and std::hash |
| namespace std |
| { |
| |
| /// hash value for JSON objects |
| template<> |
| struct hash<nlohmann::json> |
| { |
| /*! |
| @brief return a hash value for a JSON object |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| std::size_t operator()(const nlohmann::json& j) const |
| { |
| return nlohmann::detail::hash(j); |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| /// specialization for std::less<value_t> |
| /// @note: do not remove the space after '<', |
| /// see https://github.com/nlohmann/json/pull/679 |
| template<> |
| struct less<::nlohmann::detail::value_t> |
| { |
| /*! |
| @brief compare two value_t enum values |
| @since version 3.0.0 |
| */ |
| bool operator()(nlohmann::detail::value_t lhs, |
| nlohmann::detail::value_t rhs) const noexcept |
| { |
| return nlohmann::detail::operator<(lhs, rhs); |
| } |
| }; |
| |
| // C++20 prohibit function specialization in the std namespace. |
| #ifndef JSON_HAS_CPP_20 |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief exchanges the values of two JSON objects |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| template<> |
| inline void swap<nlohmann::json>(nlohmann::json& j1, nlohmann::json& j2) noexcept( |
| is_nothrow_move_constructible<nlohmann::json>::value&& |
| is_nothrow_move_assignable<nlohmann::json>::value |
| ) |
| { |
| j1.swap(j2); |
| } |
| |
| #endif |
| |
| } // namespace std |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief user-defined string literal for JSON values |
| |
| This operator implements a user-defined string literal for JSON objects. It |
| can be used by adding `"_json"` to a string literal and returns a JSON object |
| if no parse error occurred. |
| |
| @param[in] s a string representation of a JSON object |
| @param[in] n the length of string @a s |
| @return a JSON object |
| |
| @since version 1.0.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_NON_NULL(1) |
| inline nlohmann::json operator "" _json(const char* s, std::size_t n) |
| { |
| return nlohmann::json::parse(s, s + n); |
| } |
| |
| /*! |
| @brief user-defined string literal for JSON pointer |
| |
| This operator implements a user-defined string literal for JSON Pointers. It |
| can be used by adding `"_json_pointer"` to a string literal and returns a JSON pointer |
| object if no parse error occurred. |
| |
| @param[in] s a string representation of a JSON Pointer |
| @param[in] n the length of string @a s |
| @return a JSON pointer object |
| |
| @since version 2.0.0 |
| */ |
| JSON_HEDLEY_NON_NULL(1) |
| inline nlohmann::json::json_pointer operator "" _json_pointer(const char* s, std::size_t n) |
| { |
| return nlohmann::json::json_pointer(std::string(s, n)); |
| } |
| |
| #include <nlohmann/detail/macro_unscope.hpp> |
| |
| #endif // INCLUDE_NLOHMANN_JSON_HPP_ |