Added examples and modified the corresponding documents and unit tests. Signed-off-by: chirsz-ever <chirsz-ever@outlook.com> Co-authored-by: Niels Lohmann <niels.lohmann@gmail.com>
7.2 KiB
nlohmann::basic_json::parse
// (1)
template<typename InputType>
static basic_json parse(InputType&& i,
const parser_callback_t cb = nullptr,
const bool allow_exceptions = true,
const bool ignore_comments = false,
const bool ignore_trailing_commas = false);
// (2)
template<typename IteratorType>
static basic_json parse(IteratorType first, IteratorType last,
const parser_callback_t cb = nullptr,
const bool allow_exceptions = true,
const bool ignore_comments = false,
const bool ignore_trailing_commas = false);
-
Deserialize from a compatible input.
-
Deserialize from a pair of character iterators
The
value_typeof the iterator must be an integral type with size of 1, 2, or 4 bytes, which will be interpreted respectively as UTF-8, UTF-16, and UTF-32.
Template parameters
InputType- A compatible input, for instance:
- an
std::istreamobject - a
FILEpointer (throws if null) - a C-style array of characters
- a pointer to a null-terminated string of single byte characters (throws if null)
- a
std::string - an object
objfor whichbegin(obj)andend(obj)produces a valid pair of iterators.
- an
IteratorType- a compatible iterator type, for instance.
- a pair of
std::string::iteratororstd::vector<std::uint8_t>::iterator - a pair of pointers such as
ptrandptr + len
- a pair of
Parameters
i(in)- Input to parse from.
cb(in)- a parser callback function of type
parser_callback_twhich is used to control the deserialization by filtering unwanted values (optional) allow_exceptions(in)- whether to throw exceptions in case of a parse error (optional,
#!cpp trueby default) ignore_comments(in)- whether comments should be ignored and treated like whitespace (
#!cpp true) or yield a parse error (#!cpp false); (optional,#!cpp falseby default) ignore_trailing_commas(in)- whether trailing commas in arrays or objects should be ignored and treated like whitespace (
#!cpp true) or yield a parse error (#!cpp false); (optional,#!cpp falseby default) first(in)- iterator to the start of a character range
last(in)- iterator to the end of a character range
Return value
Deserialized JSON value; in case of a parse error and allow_exceptions set to #!cpp false, the return value will be
value_t::discarded. The latter can be checked with is_discarded.
Exception safety
Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no changes in the JSON value.
Exceptions
- Throws
parse_error.101in case of an unexpected token, or empty input like a nullFILE*orchar*pointer. - Throws
parse_error.102ifto_unicodefails or surrogate error. - Throws
parse_error.103ifto_unicodefails.
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 cb or reading from (1) the input i or (2) the iterator range [first, last] has a
super-linear complexity.
Notes
A UTF-8 byte order mark is silently ignored.
Examples
??? example "Parsing from a character array"
The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function reading from an array.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/parse__array__parser_callback_t.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/parse__array__parser_callback_t.output"
```
??? example "Parsing from a string"
The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function with and without callback function.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/parse__string__parser_callback_t.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/parse__string__parser_callback_t.output"
```
??? example "Parsing from an input stream"
The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function with and without callback function.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/parse__istream__parser_callback_t.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/parse__istream__parser_callback_t.output"
```
??? example "Parsing from a contiguous container"
The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function reading from a contiguous container.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/parse__contiguouscontainer__parser_callback_t.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/parse__contiguouscontainer__parser_callback_t.output"
```
??? example "Parsing from a non-null-terminated string"
The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function reading from a string that is not null-terminated.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/parse__pointers.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/parse__pointers.output"
```
??? example "Parsing from an iterator pair"
The example below demonstrates the `parse()` function reading from an iterator pair.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/parse__iterator_pair.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/parse__iterator_pair.output"
```
??? example "Effect of allow_exceptions parameter"
The example below demonstrates the effect of the `allow_exceptions` parameter in the ´parse()` function.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/parse__allow_exceptions.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/parse__allow_exceptions.output"
```
??? example "Effect of ignore_comments parameter"
The example below demonstrates the effect of the `ignore_comments` parameter in the `parse()` function.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/comments.cpp"
```
Output:
```
--8<-- "examples/comments.output"
```
??? example "Effect of ignore_trailing_commas parameter"
The example below demonstrates the effect of the `ignore_trailing_commas` parameter in the `parse()` function.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/trailing_commas.cpp"
```
Output:
```
--8<-- "examples/trailing_commas.output"
```
See also
- accept - check if the input is valid JSON
- operator>> - deserialize from stream
Version history
- Added in version 1.0.0.
- Overload for contiguous containers (1) added in version 2.0.3.
- Ignoring comments via
ignore_commentsadded in version 3.9.0. - Changed runtime assertion in case of
FILE*null pointers to exception in version 3.12.0. - Added
ignore_trailing_commasin version 3.12.1.
!!! warning "Deprecation"
Overload (2) replaces calls to `parse` with a pair of iterators as their first parameter which has been
deprecated in version 3.8.0. This overload will be removed in version 4.0.0. Please replace all calls like
`#!cpp parse({ptr, ptr+len}, ...);` with `#!cpp parse(ptr, ptr+len, ...);`.
You should be warned by your compiler with a `-Wdeprecated-declarations` warning if you are using a deprecated
function.