# NLOHMANN_JSON_SERIALIZE_ENUM_STRICT ```cpp #define NLOHMANN_JSON_SERIALIZE_ENUM_STRICT(type, conversion...) ``` By default, enum values are serialized to JSON as integers. In some cases, this could result in undesired behavior. If an enum is modified or re-ordered after data has been serialized to JSON, the later deserialized JSON data may be undefined or a different enum value than was originally intended. `NLOHMANN_JSON_SERIALIZE_ENUM_STRICT` allows to define a user-defined serialization for every enumerator that throws an exception on undefined input. ## Parameters `type` (in) : name of the enum to serialize/deserialize `conversion` (in) : a pair of an enumerator and a JSON serialization; arbitrary pairs can be given as a comma-separated list ## Default definition The macro adds two functions to the namespace which take care of the serialization and deserialization: ```cpp template inline void to_json(BasicJsonType& j, const type& e); template inline void from_json(const BasicJsonType& j, type& e); ``` ## Notes !!! info "Prerequisites" The macro must be used inside the namespace of the enum. !!! important "Important notes" - Undefined input throws [`out_of_range.410`](../../home/exceptions.md#jsonexceptionout_of_range410) in both directions: when serializing an enum value not listed in the conversions, and when deserializing (e.g., via [`get()`](../basic_json/get.md)) a JSON value that matches no conversion; example: `"enum value out of range for "`. - If an enum or JSON value is specified in multiple conversions, the first matching conversion from the top of the list will be returned when converting to or from JSON. See example 2 below. ## Examples ??? example "Example 1: Basic usage" The example shows how `NLOHMANN_JSON_SERIALIZE_ENUM_STRICT` can be used to serialize/deserialize both classical enums and C++11 enum classes: ```cpp hl_lines="16 17 18 19 20 21 22 29 30 31 32 33" --8<-- "examples/nlohmann_json_serialize_enum_strict.cpp" ``` Output: ```json --8<-- "examples/nlohmann_json_serialize_enum_strict.output" ``` ??? example "Example 2: Multiple conversions for one enumerator" The example shows how to use multiple conversions for a single enumerator. In the example, `Color::red` will always be *serialized* to `"red"`, because the first occurring conversion. The second conversion, however, offers an alternative *deserialization* from `"rot"` to `Color::red`. ```cpp hl_lines="17" --8<-- "examples/nlohmann_json_serialize_enum_strict_2.cpp" ``` Output: ```json --8<-- "examples/nlohmann_json_serialize_enum_strict_2.output" ``` ??? example "Example 3: exceptions on invalid serialization" The example shows how an invalid serialization causes an exception to be thrown. In the example, Color::unknown is not defined in the mapping used to call `NLOHMANN_JSON_SERIALIZE_ENUM_STRICT` so causes an exception when used to serialize. Similarly, "what" does not refer to an enum value so also causes an exception when deserialization is attempted. ```cpp hl_lines="14 32 33 43 44 45" --8<-- "examples/nlohmann_json_serialize_enum_strict_err.cpp" ``` Output: ```json --8<-- "examples/nlohmann_json_serialize_enum_strict_err.output" ``` ## See also - [Specializing enum conversion](../../features/enum_conversion.md) - [`NLOHMANN_JSON_SERIALIZE_ENUM`](./nlohmann_json_serialize_enum.md) - [`JSON_DISABLE_ENUM_SERIALIZATION`](json_disable_enum_serialization.md) ## Version history Added in version 3.12.x.