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March 25, 2012 std.json | ||||
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Could I get a "hello, world" example of parsing json? The docs look simple enough, but I could still use an example. |
March 25, 2012 Re: std.json | ||||
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Posted in reply to AaronP | Hope it's clear... import std.json; import std.stdio; void main(string args[]) { JSONValue json = parseJSON(q"EOS { "key" : { "subkey1" : "str_val", "subkey2" : [1,2,3], "subkey3" : 3.1415 } } EOS"); writeln(json.object["key"].object["subkey1"].str); writeln(json.object["key"].object["subkey2"].array[1].integer); writeln(json.object["key"].object["subkey3"].type == JSON_TYPE.FLOAT); } On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 15:26:31 UTC, AaronP wrote: > Could I get a "hello, world" example of parsing json? The docs look simple enough, but I could still use an example. |
March 25, 2012 Re: std.json | ||||
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Posted in reply to Andrea Fontana | On 03/25/2012 12:50 PM, Andrea Fontana wrote:
> Hope it's clear...
>
>
> import std.json;
> import std.stdio;
>
> void main(string args[])
> {
> JSONValue json = parseJSON(q"EOS
> {
> "key" :
> {
> "subkey1" : "str_val",
> "subkey2" : [1,2,3],
> "subkey3" : 3.1415
> }
> }
> EOS");
> writeln(json.object["key"].object["subkey1"].str);
> writeln(json.object["key"].object["subkey2"].array[1].integer);
> writeln(json.object["key"].object["subkey3"].type == JSON_TYPE.FLOAT);
> }
>
>
> On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 15:26:31 UTC, AaronP wrote:
>> Could I get a "hello, world" example of parsing json? The docs look
>> simple enough, but I could still use an example.
>
Ah. That's perfect, thanks. :)
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March 26, 2012 Re: std.json | ||||
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Posted in reply to AaronP | On 03/25/2012 08:26 AM, AaronP wrote:
> Could I get a "hello, world" example of parsing json? The docs look
> simple enough, but I could still use an example.
For what it's worth, I've just sent the following program to a friend before seeing this thread.
1) Save this sample text to a file named "json_file"
{
"employees": [
{ "firstName":"John" , "lastName":"Doe" },
{ "firstName":"Anna" , "lastName":"Smith" },
{ "firstName":"Peter" , "lastName":"Jones" }
]
}
2) The following program makes struct Employee objects from that file:
import std.stdio;
import std.json;
import std.conv;
import std.file;
struct Employee
{
string firstName;
string lastName;
}
void main()
{
// Assumes UTF-8 file
auto content = to!string(read("json_file"));
JSONValue[string] document = parseJSON(content).object;
JSONValue[] employees = document["employees"].array;
foreach (employeeJson; employees) {
JSONValue[string] employee = employeeJson.object;
string firstName = employee["firstName"].str;
string lastName = employee["lastName"].str;
auto e = Employee(firstName, lastName);
writeln("Constructed: ", e);
}
}
The output of the program:
Constructed: Employee("John", "Doe")
Constructed: Employee("Anna", "Smith")
Constructed: Employee("Peter", "Jones")
Ali
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May 17, 2012 Re: std.json | ||||
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Posted in reply to Andrea Fontana | On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 17:50:45 UTC, Andrea Fontana wrote: > Hope it's clear... Nope, it's something like chess and have nothing common with simplicity of the real JSON usage! This is example from C#: var p = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Person>("{some real JSON, not crapy EOS}"); var str = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(p); That's it! And this is how it SHOULD be implemented. Cannot catch why this stupid realization came to standard library... :(( |
May 17, 2012 Re: std.json | ||||
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Posted in reply to Vincent | On Thursday, 17 May 2012 at 14:08:27 UTC, Vincent wrote:
> On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 17:50:45 UTC, Andrea Fontana wrote:
>> Hope it's clear...
>
> Nope, it's something like chess and have nothing common with simplicity of the real JSON usage! This is example from C#:
>
> var p = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Person>("{some real JSON, not crapy EOS}");
> var str = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(p);
>
> That's it! And this is how it SHOULD be implemented. Cannot catch why this stupid realization came to standard library... :((
I'm pretty new to D, but I am an expert Java developer, self claimed. I am fluent in many other languages as well. In all languages there is a basis documentation.
Read the documentation for parseJSON and you'll see that it should be possible to send in a straight JSON string. I think the complex example is a bit stupid. It scares developers away from the lang.
Feel free to correct me of course.
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May 17, 2012 Re: std.json | ||||
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Posted in reply to Jarl André | On Thursday, 17 May 2012 at 18:36:22 UTC, Jarl André wrote:
> On Thursday, 17 May 2012 at 14:08:27 UTC, Vincent wrote:
>> On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 17:50:45 UTC, Andrea Fontana wrote:
>>> Hope it's clear...
>>
>> Nope, it's something like chess and have nothing common with simplicity of the real JSON usage! This is example from C#:
>>
>> var p = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Person>("{some real JSON, not crapy EOS}");
>> var str = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(p);
>>
>> That's it! And this is how it SHOULD be implemented. Cannot catch why this stupid realization came to standard library... :((
>
> I'm pretty new to D, but I am an expert Java developer, self claimed. I am fluent in many other languages as well. In all languages there is a basis documentation.
>
> Read the documentation for parseJSON and you'll see that it should be possible to send in a straight JSON string. I think the complex example is a bit stupid. It scares developers away from the lang.
>
> Feel free to correct me of course.
The final proof of exisiting simplicity :)
JSONValue[string] value = parseJSON("{ \"test\": \"1\"
}").object;
writeln(value["test"].str);
This outputs "1"
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June 24, 2012 Re: std.json | ||||
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Posted in reply to Jarl André | On Thursday, 17 May 2012 at 18:55:57 UTC, Jarl André wrote:
> On Thursday, 17 May 2012 at 18:36:22 UTC, Jarl André wrote:
>> On Thursday, 17 May 2012 at 14:08:27 UTC, Vincent wrote:
>>> On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 17:50:45 UTC, Andrea Fontana wrote:
>>>> Hope it's clear...
>>>
>>> Nope, it's something like chess and have nothing common with simplicity of the real JSON usage! This is example from C#:
>>>
>>> var p = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Person>("{some real JSON, not crapy EOS}");
>>> var str = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(p);
>>>
>>> That's it! And this is how it SHOULD be implemented. Cannot catch why this stupid realization came to standard library... :((
>>
>> I'm pretty new to D, but I am an expert Java developer, self claimed. I am fluent in many other languages as well. In all languages there is a basis documentation.
>>
>> Read the documentation for parseJSON and you'll see that it should be possible to send in a straight JSON string. I think the complex example is a bit stupid. It scares developers away from the lang.
>>
>> Feel free to correct me of course.
>
> The final proof of exisiting simplicity :)
>
> JSONValue[string] value = parseJSON("{ \"test\": \"1\"
> }").object;
> writeln(value["test"].str);
>
> This outputs "1"
Vincent, I'm not sure what you are trying to claim by saying "some real JSON, not crappy EOS", all modern languages support special string delimiters to avoid escaping characters. This isn't a deficit it's a feature which improves readability. On the other hand, Phobos does (by design) tend towards minimalism, this is a legitimate library strategy, as it allows me to serialize and deserialize objects in whatever way suits me. Unfortunately it has the side effect that you don't get to have a built in function for every common task. It's a tradeoff.
Anyway, I just wanted to ask if we could get Ali or Jarl's (or both) samples added to the documentation. I read the docs, and having only worked with JSON in Javascript and PHP, wasn't quite clear how to use std.json. As it turns out, it's exactly what one would expect :D
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July 04, 2012 Re: std.json | ||||
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Posted in reply to Ali Çehreli | On Monday, 26 March 2012 at 07:14:50 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote:
> On 03/25/2012 08:26 AM, AaronP wrote:
>> Could I get a "hello, world" example of parsing json? The docs look
>> simple enough, but I could still use an example.
>
> For what it's worth, I've just sent the following program to a friend before seeing this thread.
>
> 1) Save this sample text to a file named "json_file"
>
> {
> "employees": [
> { "firstName":"John" , "lastName":"Doe" },
> { "firstName":"Anna" , "lastName":"Smith" },
> { "firstName":"Peter" , "lastName":"Jones" }
> ]
> }
>
> 2) The following program makes struct Employee objects from that file:
>
> import std.stdio;
> import std.json;
> import std.conv;
> import std.file;
>
> struct Employee
> {
> string firstName;
> string lastName;
> }
>
> void main()
> {
> // Assumes UTF-8 file
> auto content = to!string(read("json_file"));
>
> JSONValue[string] document = parseJSON(content).object;
> JSONValue[] employees = document["employees"].array;
>
> foreach (employeeJson; employees) {
> JSONValue[string] employee = employeeJson.object;
>
> string firstName = employee["firstName"].str;
> string lastName = employee["lastName"].str;
>
> auto e = Employee(firstName, lastName);
> writeln("Constructed: ", e);
> }
> }
>
> The output of the program:
>
> Constructed: Employee("John", "Doe")
> Constructed: Employee("Anna", "Smith")
> Constructed: Employee("Peter", "Jones")
>
> Ali
Your example only works if the json file in UTF-8 (BOM), how to make sure that it worked with the files in UTF-8 without BOM.
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July 04, 2012 Re: std.json | ||||
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Posted in reply to Alexsej | On 07/04/2012 08:25 AM, Alexsej wrote: > On Monday, 26 March 2012 at 07:14:50 UTC, Ali Çehreli wrote: >> // Assumes UTF-8 file >> auto content = to!string(read("json_file")); > Your example only works if the json file in UTF-8 (BOM), how to make > sure that it worked with the files in UTF-8 without BOM. I am pretty sure that I have tested it without BOM, which is not recommended nor needed for UTF-8 anyway. If anything, the file should not have any BOM because it is being converted to a string and is being passed to parseJSON(). I don't think parseJSON() expects a BOM either. Does it? Ali |
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