Skip to content

JSON implementation in Rust

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT
Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

mineshaft-server/json-rust

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

json-rust

Travis shield Crates.io version shield Crates.io license shield

Parse and serialize JSON with ease.

Changelog - Complete Documentation - Cargo - Repository

Why?

JSON is a very loose format where anything goes - arrays can hold mixed types, object keys can change types between API calls or not include some keys under some conditions. Mapping that to idiomatic Rust structs introduces friction.

This crate intends to avoid that friction.

let parsed = json::parse(r#"

{
    "code": 200,
    "success": true,
    "payload": {
        "features": [
            "awesome",
            "easyAPI",
            "lowLearningCurve"
        ]
    }
}

"#).unwrap();

let instantiated = object!{
    "code" => 200,
    "success" => true,
    "payload" => object!{
        "features" => array![
            "awesome",
            "easyAPI",
            "lowLearningCurve"
        ]
    }
};

assert_eq!(parsed, instantiated);

First class citizen

Using macros and indexing, it's easy to work with the data.

let mut data = object!{
    "foo" => false,
    "bar" => json::Null,
    "answer" => 42,
    "list" => array![json::Null, "world", true]
};

// Partial equality is implemented for most raw types:
assert!(data["foo"] == false);

// And it's type aware, `null` and `false` are different values:
assert!(data["bar"] != false);

// But you can use any Rust number types:
assert!(data["answer"] == 42);
assert!(data["answer"] == 42.0);
assert!(data["answer"] == 42isize);

// Access nested structures, arrays and objects:
assert!(data["list"][0].is_null());
assert!(data["list"][1] == "world");
assert!(data["list"][2] == true);

// Error resilient - accessing properties that don't exist yield null:
assert!(data["this"]["does"]["not"]["exist"].is_null());

// Mutate by assigning:
data["list"][0] = "Hello".into();

// Use the `dump` method to serialize the data:
assert_eq!(data.dump(), r#"{"foo":false,"bar":null,"answer":42,"list":["Hello","world",true]}"#);

// Or pretty print it out:
println!("{:#}", data);

Installation

Just add it to your Cargo.toml file:

[dependencies]
json = "*"

Then import it in your main.rs / lib.rs file:

#[macro_use]
extern crate json;

Performance and Conformance

There used to be a statement here saying that performance is not the main goal of this crate. It is definitely one of them now.

While this crate doesn't provide a way to parse JSON to native Rust structs, it does a lot to optimize its performance for DOM parsing, stringifying and manipulation. It does very well in benchmarks, in some cases it can even outperform parsing to structs.

This crate implements the standard according to the RFC 7159 and ECMA-404 documents. For the best interoperability numbers are treated stored as 64bit precision mantissa with 16 bit decimal exponent for floating point representation.

License

This crate is distributed under the terms of both the MIT license and the Apache License (Version 2.0). Choose whichever one works best for you.

See LICENSE-APACHE and LICENSE-MIT for details.

About

JSON implementation in Rust

Resources

License

Apache-2.0, MIT licenses found

Licenses found

Apache-2.0
LICENSE-APACHE
MIT
LICENSE-MIT

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Rust 100.0%