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std.json

JavaScript Object Notation
Authors:
Jeremie Pelletier, David Herberth

References: http://json.org/

Source: std/json.d

Examples:
import std.conv : to;

// parse a file or string of json into a usable structure
string s = `{ "language": "D", "rating": 3.5, "code": "42" }`;
JSONValue j = parseJSON(s);
// j and j["language"] return JSONValue,
// j["language"].str returns a string
assert(j["language"].str == "D");
assert(j["rating"].floating == 3.5);

// check a type
long x;
if (const(JSONValue)* code = "code" in j)
{
    if (code.type() == JSON_TYPE.INTEGER)
        x = code.integer;
    else
        x = to!int(code.str);
}

// create a json struct
JSONValue jj = [ "language": "D" ];
// rating doesnt exist yet, so use .object to assign
jj.object["rating"] = JSONValue(3.5);
// create an array to assign to list
jj.object["list"] = JSONValue( ["a", "b", "c"] );
// list already exists, so .object optional
jj["list"].array ~= JSONValue("D");

string jjStr = `{"language":"D","list":["a","b","c","D"],"rating":3.5}`;
assert(jj.toString == jjStr);
enum JSONFloatLiteral: string;
String literals used to represent special float values within JSON strings.
nan
string representation of floating-point NaN
inf
string representation of floating-point Infinity
negativeInf
string representation of floating-point negative Infinity
enum JSONOptions: int;
Flags that control how json is encoded and parsed.
none
standard parsing
specialFloatLiterals
encode NaN and Inf float values as strings
escapeNonAsciiChars
encode non ascii characters with an unicode escape sequence
enum JSON_TYPE: byte;
JSON type enumeration
NULL

STRING

INTEGER

UINTEGER

FLOAT

OBJECT

ARRAY

TRUE

FALSE
Indicates the type of a JSONValue.
struct JSONValue;
JSON value node
const pure nothrow @nogc @property @safe JSON_TYPE type();
Returns the JSON_TYPE of the value stored in this structure.
Examples:
string s = "{ \"language\": \"D\" }";
JSONValue j = parseJSON(s);
assert(j.type == JSON_TYPE.OBJECT);
assert(j["language"].type == JSON_TYPE.STRING);
const pure @property @trusted string str();

pure nothrow @nogc @property @safe string str(string v);
Value getter/setter for JSON_TYPE.STRING.
Throws:
JSONException for read access if type is not
JSON_TYPE.STRING.
Examples:
JSONValue j = [ "language": "D" ];

// get value
assert(j["language"].str == "D");

// change existing key to new string
j["language"].str = "Perl";
assert(j["language"].str == "Perl");
inout pure @property @safe inout(long) integer();

pure nothrow @nogc @property @safe long integer(long v);
Value getter/setter for JSON_TYPE.INTEGER.
Throws:
JSONException for read access if type is not
JSON_TYPE.INTEGER.
inout pure @property @safe inout(ulong) uinteger();

pure nothrow @nogc @property @safe ulong uinteger(ulong v);
Value getter/setter for JSON_TYPE.UINTEGER.
Throws:
JSONException for read access if type is not
JSON_TYPE.UINTEGER.
inout pure @property @safe inout(double) floating();

pure nothrow @nogc @property @safe double floating(double v);
Value getter/setter for JSON_TYPE.FLOAT. Note that despite
the name, this is a 64-bit double, not a 32-bit float.
Throws:
JSONException for read access if type is not
JSON_TYPE.FLOAT.
inout pure @property ref @system inout(JSONValue[string]) object();

pure nothrow @nogc @property @safe JSONValue[string] object(JSONValue[string] v);
Value getter/setter for JSON_TYPE.OBJECT.
Throws:
JSONException for read access if type is not
JSON_TYPE.OBJECT.
inout pure @property @trusted inout(JSONValue[string]) objectNoRef();
Value getter for JSON_TYPE.OBJECT.
Unlike object, this retrieves the object by value and can be used in @safe code.
A caveat is that, if the returned value is null, modifications will not be visible:
JSONValue json;

json.object = null;

json.objectNoRef["hello"] = JSONValue("world");

assert("hello" !in json.object);

Throws:
JSONException for read access if type is not
JSON_TYPE.OBJECT.
inout pure @property ref @system inout(JSONValue[]) array();

pure nothrow @nogc @property @safe JSONValue[] array(JSONValue[] v);
Value getter/setter for JSON_TYPE.ARRAY.
Throws:
JSONException for read access if type is not
JSON_TYPE.ARRAY.
inout pure @property @trusted inout(JSONValue[]) arrayNoRef();
Value getter for JSON_TYPE.ARRAY.
Unlike array, this retrieves the array by value and can be used in @safe code.
A caveat is that, if you append to the returned array, the new values aren't visible in the

JSONValue:

JSONValue json;

json.array = [JSONValue("hello")];

json.arrayNoRef ~= JSONValue("world");

assert(json.array.length == 1);

Throws:
JSONException for read access if type is not
JSON_TYPE.ARRAY.
const pure nothrow @nogc @property @safe bool isNull();
Test whether the type is JSON_TYPE.NULL
this(T)(T arg)
if (!isStaticArray!T);

this(T)(ref T arg)
if (isStaticArray!T);

inout this(T : JSONValue)(inout T arg);
Constructor for JSONValue. If arg is a JSONValue its value and type will be copied to the new JSONValue. Note that this is a shallow copy: if type is JSON_TYPE.OBJECT or JSON_TYPE.ARRAY then only the reference to the data will be copied. Otherwise, arg must be implicitly convertible to one of the following types: typeof(null), string, ulong, long, double, an associative array V[K] for any V and K i.e. a JSON object, any array or bool. The type will be set accordingly.
Examples:
JSONValue j = JSONValue( "a string" );
j = JSONValue(42);

j = JSONValue( [1, 2, 3] );
assert(j.type == JSON_TYPE.ARRAY);

j = JSONValue( ["language": "D"] );
assert(j.type == JSON_TYPE.OBJECT);
inout pure ref @safe inout(JSONValue) opIndex(size_t i);
Array syntax for json arrays.
Throws:
JSONException if type is not JSON_TYPE.ARRAY.
Examples:
JSONValue j = JSONValue( [42, 43, 44] );
assert( j[0].integer == 42 );
assert( j[1].integer == 43 );
inout pure ref @safe inout(JSONValue) opIndex(string k);
Hash syntax for json objects.
Throws:
JSONException if type is not JSON_TYPE.OBJECT.
Examples:
JSONValue j = JSONValue( ["language": "D"] );
assert( j["language"].str == "D" );
pure void opIndexAssign(T)(auto ref T value, string key);
Operator sets value for element of JSON object by key.
If JSON value is null, then operator initializes it with object and then
sets value for it.
Throws:
JSONException if type is not JSON_TYPE.OBJECT
or JSON_TYPE.NULL.
Examples:
JSONValue j = JSONValue( ["language": "D"] );
j["language"].str = "Perl";
assert( j["language"].str == "Perl" );
const @safe auto opBinaryRight(string op : "in")(string k);
Support for the in operator.
Tests wether a key can be found in an object.
Returns:
when found, the const(JSONValue)* that matches to the key, otherwise null.
Throws:
JSONException if the right hand side argument JSON_TYPE is not OBJECT.
Examples:
JSONValue j = [ "language": "D", "author": "walter" ];
string a = ("author" in j).str;
@system int opApply(scope int delegate(size_t index, ref JSONValue) dg);
Implements the foreach opApply interface for json arrays.
@system int opApply(scope int delegate(string key, ref JSONValue) dg);
Implements the foreach opApply interface for json objects.
const @safe string toString(in JSONOptions options = JSONOptions.none);
Implicitly calls toJSON on this JSONValue.
options can be used to tweak the conversion behavior.
const @safe string toPrettyString(in JSONOptions options = JSONOptions.none);
Implicitly calls toJSON on this JSONValue, like toString, but
also passes true as pretty argument.
options can be used to tweak the conversion behavior
JSONValue parseJSON(T)(T json, int maxDepth = -1, JSONOptions options = JSONOptions.none)
if (isInputRange!T);
Parses a serialized string and returns a tree of JSON values.
Throws:
JSONException if the depth exceeds the max depth.
Parameters:
T json json-formatted string to parse
int maxDepth maximum depth of nesting allowed, -1 disables depth checking
JSONOptions options enable decoding string representations of NaN/Inf as float values
JSONValue parseJSON(T)(T json, JSONOptions options)
if (isInputRange!T);
Parses a serialized string and returns a tree of JSON values.
Throws:
json.html#.JSONException">std.json.JSONException if the depth exceeds the max depth.
Parameters:
T json json-formatted string to parse
JSONOptions options enable decoding string representations of NaN/Inf as float values
@safe string toJSON(ref const JSONValue root, in bool pretty = false, in JSONOptions options = JSONOptions.none);
Takes a tree of JSON values and returns the serialized string.
Any Object types will be serialized in a key-sorted order.
If pretty is false no whitespaces are generated. If pretty is true serialized string is formatted to be human-readable. Set the flag is set in options to encode NaN/Infinity as strings.
class JSONException: object.Exception;
Exception thrown on JSON errors