# nlohmann::operator""\_json_pointer ``` json_pointer operator ""_json_pointer(const char* s, std::size_t n); json_pointer operator ""_json_pointer(const char8_t* s, std::size_t n); // since C++20 ``` 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`](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/json_pointer/index.md) object if no parse error occurred. It is recommended to bring the operator into scope using any of the following lines: ``` using nlohmann::literals::operator ""_json_pointer; using namespace nlohmann::literals; using namespace nlohmann::json_literals; using namespace nlohmann::literals::json_literals; using namespace nlohmann; ``` This is suggested to ease migration to the next major version release of the library. See [`JSON_USE_GLOBAL_UDLS`](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/macros/json_use_global_udls/#notes) for details. ## Parameters `s` (in) : a string representation of a JSON Pointer `n` (in) : length of string `s` ## Return value [`json_pointer`](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/json_pointer/index.md) value parsed from `s` ## Exceptions The function can throw anything that [`json_pointer::json_pointer`](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/json_pointer/index.md) would throw. ## Complexity Linear. ## Examples Example The following code shows how to create JSON Pointers from string literals. ``` #include #include #include using json = nlohmann::json; using namespace nlohmann::literals; int main() { json j = R"( {"hello": "world", "answer": 42} )"_json; auto val = j["/hello"_json_pointer]; std::cout << std::setw(2) << val << '\n'; } ``` Output: ``` "world" ``` ## See also - [json_pointer](https://json.nlohmann.me/api/json_pointer/index.md) - type to represent JSON Pointers ## Version history - Added in version 2.0.0. - Moved to namespace `nlohmann::literals::json_literals` in 3.11.0. - Added `char8_t*` overload in 3.12.x.