The main release package of Ashita v3. Contains all the needed files for users to get up and running. Used by the launcher/injector to auto-update as well.
https://ashitaxi.com/
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1544 lines
54 KiB
1544 lines
54 KiB
-- -*- coding: utf-8 -*- |
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-- |
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-- Simple JSON encoding and decoding in pure Lua. |
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-- |
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-- Copyright 2010-2016 Jeffrey Friedl |
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-- http://regex.info/blog/ |
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-- Latest version: http://regex.info/blog/lua/json |
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-- |
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-- This code is released under a Creative Commons CC-BY "Attribution" License: |
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-- http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/deed.en_US |
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-- |
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-- It can be used for any purpose so long as: |
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-- 1) the copyright notice above is maintained |
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-- 2) the web-page links above are maintained |
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-- 3) the 'AUTHOR_NOTE' string below is maintained |
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-- |
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local VERSION = '20161103.20' -- version history at end of file |
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local AUTHOR_NOTE = "-[ JSON.lua package by Jeffrey Friedl (http://regex.info/blog/lua/json) version 20161103.20 ]-" |
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-- |
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-- The 'AUTHOR_NOTE' variable exists so that information about the source |
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-- of the package is maintained even in compiled versions. It's also |
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-- included in OBJDEF below mostly to quiet warnings about unused variables. |
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-- |
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local OBJDEF = { |
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VERSION = VERSION, |
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AUTHOR_NOTE = AUTHOR_NOTE, |
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} |
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-- |
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-- Simple JSON encoding and decoding in pure Lua. |
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-- JSON definition: http://www.json.org/ |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- JSON = assert(loadfile "JSON.lua")() -- one-time load of the routines |
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-- |
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-- local lua_value = JSON:decode(raw_json_text) |
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-- |
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-- local raw_json_text = JSON:encode(lua_table_or_value) |
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-- local pretty_json_text = JSON:encode_pretty(lua_table_or_value) -- "pretty printed" version for human readability |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- DECODING (from a JSON string to a Lua table) |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- JSON = assert(loadfile "JSON.lua")() -- one-time load of the routines |
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-- |
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-- local lua_value = JSON:decode(raw_json_text) |
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-- |
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-- If the JSON text is for an object or an array, e.g. |
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-- { "what": "books", "count": 3 } |
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-- or |
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-- [ "Larry", "Curly", "Moe" ] |
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-- |
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-- the result is a Lua table, e.g. |
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-- { what = "books", count = 3 } |
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-- or |
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-- { "Larry", "Curly", "Moe" } |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- The encode and decode routines accept an optional second argument, |
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-- "etc", which is not used during encoding or decoding, but upon error |
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-- is passed along to error handlers. It can be of any type (including nil). |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- ERROR HANDLING |
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-- |
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-- With most errors during decoding, this code calls |
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-- |
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-- JSON:onDecodeError(message, text, location, etc) |
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-- |
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-- with a message about the error, and if known, the JSON text being |
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-- parsed and the byte count where the problem was discovered. You can |
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-- replace the default JSON:onDecodeError() with your own function. |
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-- |
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-- The default onDecodeError() merely augments the message with data |
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-- about the text and the location if known (and if a second 'etc' |
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-- argument had been provided to decode(), its value is tacked onto the |
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-- message as well), and then calls JSON.assert(), which itself defaults |
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-- to Lua's built-in assert(), and can also be overridden. |
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-- |
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-- For example, in an Adobe Lightroom plugin, you might use something like |
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-- |
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-- function JSON:onDecodeError(message, text, location, etc) |
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-- LrErrors.throwUserError("Internal Error: invalid JSON data") |
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-- end |
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-- |
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-- or even just |
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-- |
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-- function JSON.assert(message) |
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-- LrErrors.throwUserError("Internal Error: " .. message) |
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-- end |
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-- |
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-- If JSON:decode() is passed a nil, this is called instead: |
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-- |
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-- JSON:onDecodeOfNilError(message, nil, nil, etc) |
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-- |
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-- and if JSON:decode() is passed HTML instead of JSON, this is called: |
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-- |
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-- JSON:onDecodeOfHTMLError(message, text, nil, etc) |
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-- |
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-- The use of the fourth 'etc' argument allows stronger coordination |
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-- between decoding and error reporting, especially when you provide your |
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-- own error-handling routines. Continuing with the the Adobe Lightroom |
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-- plugin example: |
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-- |
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-- function JSON:onDecodeError(message, text, location, etc) |
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-- local note = "Internal Error: invalid JSON data" |
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-- if type(etc) = 'table' and etc.photo then |
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-- note = note .. " while processing for " .. etc.photo:getFormattedMetadata('fileName') |
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-- end |
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-- LrErrors.throwUserError(note) |
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-- end |
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-- |
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-- : |
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-- : |
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-- |
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-- for i, photo in ipairs(photosToProcess) do |
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-- : |
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-- : |
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-- local data = JSON:decode(someJsonText, { photo = photo }) |
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-- : |
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-- : |
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-- end |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- If the JSON text passed to decode() has trailing garbage (e.g. as with the JSON "[123]xyzzy"), |
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-- the method |
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-- |
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-- JSON:onTrailingGarbage(json_text, location, parsed_value, etc) |
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-- |
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-- is invoked, where: |
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-- |
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-- json_text is the original JSON text being parsed, |
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-- location is the count of bytes into json_text where the garbage starts (6 in the example), |
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-- parsed_value is the Lua result of what was successfully parsed ({123} in the example), |
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-- etc is as above. |
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-- |
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-- If JSON:onTrailingGarbage() does not abort, it should return the value decode() should return, |
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-- or nil + an error message. |
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-- |
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-- local new_value, error_message = JSON:onTrailingGarbage() |
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-- |
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-- The default handler just invokes JSON:onDecodeError("trailing garbage"...), but you can have |
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-- this package ignore trailing garbage via |
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-- |
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-- function JSON:onTrailingGarbage(json_text, location, parsed_value, etc) |
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-- return parsed_value |
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-- end |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- DECODING AND STRICT TYPES |
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-- |
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-- Because both JSON objects and JSON arrays are converted to Lua tables, |
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-- it's not normally possible to tell which original JSON type a |
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-- particular Lua table was derived from, or guarantee decode-encode |
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-- round-trip equivalency. |
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-- |
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-- However, if you enable strictTypes, e.g. |
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-- |
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-- JSON = assert(loadfile "JSON.lua")() --load the routines |
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-- JSON.strictTypes = true |
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-- |
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-- then the Lua table resulting from the decoding of a JSON object or |
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-- JSON array is marked via Lua metatable, so that when re-encoded with |
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-- JSON:encode() it ends up as the appropriate JSON type. |
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-- |
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-- (This is not the default because other routines may not work well with |
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-- tables that have a metatable set, for example, Lightroom API calls.) |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- ENCODING (from a lua table to a JSON string) |
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-- |
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-- JSON = assert(loadfile "JSON.lua")() -- one-time load of the routines |
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-- |
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-- local raw_json_text = JSON:encode(lua_table_or_value) |
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-- local pretty_json_text = JSON:encode_pretty(lua_table_or_value) -- "pretty printed" version for human readability |
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-- local custom_pretty = JSON:encode(lua_table_or_value, etc, { pretty = true, indent = "| ", align_keys = false }) |
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-- |
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-- On error during encoding, this code calls: |
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-- |
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-- JSON:onEncodeError(message, etc) |
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-- |
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-- which you can override in your local JSON object. |
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-- |
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-- The 'etc' in the error call is the second argument to encode() |
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-- and encode_pretty(), or nil if it wasn't provided. |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- ENCODING OPTIONS |
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-- |
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-- An optional third argument, a table of options, can be provided to encode(). |
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-- |
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-- encode_options = { |
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-- -- options for making "pretty" human-readable JSON (see "PRETTY-PRINTING" below) |
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-- pretty = true, |
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-- indent = " ", |
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-- align_keys = false, |
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-- |
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-- -- other output-related options |
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-- null = "\0", -- see "ENCODING JSON NULL VALUES" below |
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-- stringsAreUtf8 = false, -- see "HANDLING UNICODE LINE AND PARAGRAPH SEPARATORS FOR JAVA" below |
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-- } |
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-- |
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-- json_string = JSON:encode(mytable, etc, encode_options) |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- For reference, the defaults are: |
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-- |
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-- pretty = false |
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-- null = nil, |
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-- stringsAreUtf8 = false, |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- PRETTY-PRINTING |
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-- |
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-- Enabling the 'pretty' encode option helps generate human-readable JSON. |
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-- |
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-- pretty = JSON:encode(val, etc, { |
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-- pretty = true, |
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-- indent = " ", |
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-- align_keys = false, |
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-- }) |
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-- |
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-- encode_pretty() is also provided: it's identical to encode() except |
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-- that encode_pretty() provides a default options table if none given in the call: |
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-- |
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-- { pretty = true, align_keys = false, indent = " " } |
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-- |
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-- For example, if |
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-- |
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-- JSON:encode(data) |
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-- |
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-- produces: |
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-- |
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-- {"city":"Kyoto","climate":{"avg_temp":16,"humidity":"high","snowfall":"minimal"},"country":"Japan","wards":11} |
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-- |
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-- then |
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-- |
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-- JSON:encode_pretty(data) |
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-- |
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-- produces: |
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-- |
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-- { |
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-- "city": "Kyoto", |
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-- "climate": { |
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-- "avg_temp": 16, |
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-- "humidity": "high", |
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-- "snowfall": "minimal" |
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-- }, |
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-- "country": "Japan", |
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-- "wards": 11 |
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-- } |
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-- |
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-- The following three lines return identical results: |
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-- JSON:encode_pretty(data) |
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-- JSON:encode_pretty(data, nil, { pretty = true, align_keys = false, indent = " " }) |
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-- JSON:encode (data, nil, { pretty = true, align_keys = false, indent = " " }) |
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-- |
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-- An example of setting your own indent string: |
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-- |
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-- JSON:encode_pretty(data, nil, { pretty = true, indent = "| " }) |
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-- |
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-- produces: |
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-- |
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-- { |
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-- | "city": "Kyoto", |
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-- | "climate": { |
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-- | | "avg_temp": 16, |
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-- | | "humidity": "high", |
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-- | | "snowfall": "minimal" |
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-- | }, |
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-- | "country": "Japan", |
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-- | "wards": 11 |
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-- } |
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-- |
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-- An example of setting align_keys to true: |
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-- |
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-- JSON:encode_pretty(data, nil, { pretty = true, indent = " ", align_keys = true }) |
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-- |
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-- produces: |
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-- |
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-- { |
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-- "city": "Kyoto", |
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-- "climate": { |
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-- "avg_temp": 16, |
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-- "humidity": "high", |
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-- "snowfall": "minimal" |
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-- }, |
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-- "country": "Japan", |
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-- "wards": 11 |
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-- } |
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-- |
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-- which I must admit is kinda ugly, sorry. This was the default for |
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-- encode_pretty() prior to version 20141223.14. |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- HANDLING UNICODE LINE AND PARAGRAPH SEPARATORS FOR JAVA |
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-- |
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-- If the 'stringsAreUtf8' encode option is set to true, consider Lua strings not as a sequence of bytes, |
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-- but as a sequence of UTF-8 characters. |
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-- |
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-- Currently, the only practical effect of setting this option is that Unicode LINE and PARAGRAPH |
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-- separators, if found in a string, are encoded with a JSON escape instead of being dumped as is. |
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-- The JSON is valid either way, but encoding this way, apparently, allows the resulting JSON |
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-- to also be valid Java. |
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-- |
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-- AMBIGUOUS SITUATIONS DURING THE ENCODING |
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-- |
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-- During the encode, if a Lua table being encoded contains both string |
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-- and numeric keys, it fits neither JSON's idea of an object, nor its |
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-- idea of an array. To get around this, when any string key exists (or |
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-- when non-positive numeric keys exist), numeric keys are converted to |
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-- strings. |
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-- |
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-- For example, |
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-- JSON:encode({ "one", "two", "three", SOMESTRING = "some string" })) |
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-- produces the JSON object |
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-- {"1":"one","2":"two","3":"three","SOMESTRING":"some string"} |
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-- |
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-- To prohibit this conversion and instead make it an error condition, set |
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-- JSON.noKeyConversion = true |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- ENCODING JSON NULL VALUES |
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-- |
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-- Lua tables completely omit keys whose value is nil, so without special handling there's |
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-- no way to get a field in a JSON object with a null value. For example |
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-- JSON:encode({ username = "admin", password = nil }) |
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-- produces |
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-- {"username":"admin"} |
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-- |
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-- In order to actually produce |
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-- {"username":"admin", "password":null} |
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-- one can include a string value for a "null" field in the options table passed to encode().... |
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-- any Lua table entry with that value becomes null in the JSON output: |
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-- JSON:encode({ username = "admin", password = "xyzzy" }, nil, { null = "xyzzy" }) |
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-- produces |
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-- {"username":"admin", "password":null} |
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-- |
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-- Just be sure to use a string that is otherwise unlikely to appear in your data. |
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-- The string "\0" (a string with one null byte) may well be appropriate for many applications. |
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-- |
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-- The "null" options also applies to Lua tables that become JSON arrays. |
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-- JSON:encode({ "one", "two", nil, nil }) |
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-- produces |
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-- ["one","two"] |
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-- while |
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-- NULL = "\0" |
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-- JSON:encode({ "one", "two", NULL, NULL}, nil, { null = NULL }) |
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-- produces |
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-- ["one","two",null,null] |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- HANDLING LARGE AND/OR PRECISE NUMBERS |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- Without special handling, numbers in JSON can lose precision in Lua. |
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-- For example: |
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-- |
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-- T = JSON:decode('{ "small":12345, "big":12345678901234567890123456789, "precise":9876.67890123456789012345 }') |
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-- |
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-- print("small: ", type(T.small), T.small) |
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-- print("big: ", type(T.big), T.big) |
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-- print("precise: ", type(T.precise), T.precise) |
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-- |
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-- produces |
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-- |
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-- small: number 12345 |
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-- big: number 1.2345678901235e+28 |
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-- precise: number 9876.6789012346 |
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-- |
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-- Precision is lost with both 'big' and 'precise'. |
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-- |
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-- This package offers ways to try to handle this better (for some definitions of "better")... |
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-- |
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-- The most precise method is by setting the global: |
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-- |
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-- JSON.decodeNumbersAsObjects = true |
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-- |
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-- When this is set, numeric JSON data is encoded into Lua in a form that preserves the exact |
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-- JSON numeric presentation when re-encoded back out to JSON, or accessed in Lua as a string. |
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-- |
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-- (This is done by encoding the numeric data with a Lua table/metatable that returns |
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-- the possibly-imprecise numeric form when accessed numerically, but the original precise |
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-- representation when accessed as a string. You can also explicitly access |
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-- via JSON:forceString() and JSON:forceNumber()) |
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-- |
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-- Consider the example above, with this option turned on: |
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-- |
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-- JSON.decodeNumbersAsObjects = true |
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-- |
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-- T = JSON:decode('{ "small":12345, "big":12345678901234567890123456789, "precise":9876.67890123456789012345 }') |
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-- |
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-- print("small: ", type(T.small), T.small) |
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-- print("big: ", type(T.big), T.big) |
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-- print("precise: ", type(T.precise), T.precise) |
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-- |
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-- This now produces: |
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-- |
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-- small: table 12345 |
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-- big: table 12345678901234567890123456789 |
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-- precise: table 9876.67890123456789012345 |
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-- |
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-- However, within Lua you can still use the values (e.g. T.precise in the example above) in numeric |
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-- contexts. In such cases you'll get the possibly-imprecise numeric version, but in string contexts |
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-- and when the data finds its way to this package's encode() function, the original full-precision |
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-- representation is used. |
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-- |
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-- Even without using the JSON.decodeNumbersAsObjects option, you can encode numbers |
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-- in your Lua table that retain high precision upon encoding to JSON, by using the JSON:asNumber() |
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-- function: |
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-- |
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-- T = { |
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-- imprecise = 123456789123456789.123456789123456789, |
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-- precise = JSON:asNumber("123456789123456789.123456789123456789") |
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-- } |
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-- |
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-- print(JSON:encode_pretty(T)) |
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-- |
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-- This produces: |
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-- |
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-- { |
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-- "precise": 123456789123456789.123456789123456789, |
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-- "imprecise": 1.2345678912346e+17 |
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-- } |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- A different way to handle big/precise JSON numbers is to have decode() merely return |
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-- the exact string representation of the number instead of the number itself. |
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-- This approach might be useful when the numbers are merely some kind of opaque |
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-- object identifier and you want to work with them in Lua as strings anyway. |
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-- |
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-- This approach is enabled by setting |
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-- |
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-- JSON.decodeIntegerStringificationLength = 10 |
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-- |
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-- The value is the number of digits (of the integer part of the number) at which to stringify numbers. |
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-- |
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-- Consider our previous example with this option set to 10: |
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-- |
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-- JSON.decodeIntegerStringificationLength = 10 |
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-- |
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-- T = JSON:decode('{ "small":12345, "big":12345678901234567890123456789, "precise":9876.67890123456789012345 }') |
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-- |
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-- print("small: ", type(T.small), T.small) |
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-- print("big: ", type(T.big), T.big) |
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-- print("precise: ", type(T.precise), T.precise) |
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-- |
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-- This produces: |
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-- |
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-- small: number 12345 |
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-- big: string 12345678901234567890123456789 |
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-- precise: number 9876.6789012346 |
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-- |
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-- The long integer of the 'big' field is at least JSON.decodeIntegerStringificationLength digits |
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-- in length, so it's converted not to a Lua integer but to a Lua string. Using a value of 0 or 1 ensures |
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-- that all JSON numeric data becomes strings in Lua. |
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-- |
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-- Note that unlike |
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-- JSON.decodeNumbersAsObjects = true |
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-- this stringification is simple and unintelligent: the JSON number simply becomes a Lua string, and that's the end of it. |
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-- If the string is then converted back to JSON, it's still a string. After running the code above, adding |
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-- print(JSON:encode(T)) |
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-- produces |
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-- {"big":"12345678901234567890123456789","precise":9876.6789012346,"small":12345} |
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-- which is unlikely to be desired. |
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-- |
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-- There's a comparable option for the length of the decimal part of a number: |
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-- |
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-- JSON.decodeDecimalStringificationLength |
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-- |
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-- This can be used alone or in conjunction with |
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-- |
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-- JSON.decodeIntegerStringificationLength |
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-- |
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-- to trip stringification on precise numbers with at least JSON.decodeIntegerStringificationLength digits after |
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-- the decimal point. |
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-- |
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-- This example: |
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-- |
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-- JSON.decodeIntegerStringificationLength = 10 |
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-- JSON.decodeDecimalStringificationLength = 5 |
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-- |
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-- T = JSON:decode('{ "small":12345, "big":12345678901234567890123456789, "precise":9876.67890123456789012345 }') |
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-- |
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-- print("small: ", type(T.small), T.small) |
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-- print("big: ", type(T.big), T.big) |
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-- print("precise: ", type(T.precise), T.precise) |
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-- |
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-- produces: |
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-- |
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-- small: number 12345 |
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-- big: string 12345678901234567890123456789 |
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-- precise: string 9876.67890123456789012345 |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- |
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-- SUMMARY OF METHODS YOU CAN OVERRIDE IN YOUR LOCAL LUA JSON OBJECT |
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-- |
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-- assert |
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-- onDecodeError |
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-- onDecodeOfNilError |
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-- onDecodeOfHTMLError |
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-- onTrailingGarbage |
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-- onEncodeError |
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-- |
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-- If you want to create a separate Lua JSON object with its own error handlers, |
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-- you can reload JSON.lua or use the :new() method. |
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-- |
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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local default_pretty_indent = " " |
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local default_pretty_options = { pretty = true, align_keys = false, indent = default_pretty_indent } |
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|
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local isArray = { __tostring = function() return "JSON array" end } isArray.__index = isArray |
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local isObject = { __tostring = function() return "JSON object" end } isObject.__index = isObject |
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function OBJDEF:newArray(tbl) |
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return setmetatable(tbl or {}, isArray) |
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end |
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function OBJDEF:newObject(tbl) |
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return setmetatable(tbl or {}, isObject) |
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end |
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local function getnum(op) |
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return type(op) == 'number' and op or op.N |
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end |
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local isNumber = { |
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__tostring = function(T) return T.S end, |
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__unm = function(op) return getnum(op) end, |
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|
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__concat = function(op1, op2) return tostring(op1) .. tostring(op2) end, |
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__add = function(op1, op2) return getnum(op1) + getnum(op2) end, |
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__sub = function(op1, op2) return getnum(op1) - getnum(op2) end, |
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__mul = function(op1, op2) return getnum(op1) * getnum(op2) end, |
|
__div = function(op1, op2) return getnum(op1) / getnum(op2) end, |
|
__mod = function(op1, op2) return getnum(op1) % getnum(op2) end, |
|
__pow = function(op1, op2) return getnum(op1) ^ getnum(op2) end, |
|
__lt = function(op1, op2) return getnum(op1) < getnum(op2) end, |
|
__eq = function(op1, op2) return getnum(op1) == getnum(op2) end, |
|
__le = function(op1, op2) return getnum(op1) <= getnum(op2) end, |
|
} |
|
isNumber.__index = isNumber |
|
|
|
function OBJDEF:asNumber(item) |
|
|
|
if getmetatable(item) == isNumber then |
|
-- it's already a JSON number object. |
|
return item |
|
elseif type(item) == 'table' and type(item.S) == 'string' and type(item.N) == 'number' then |
|
-- it's a number-object table that lost its metatable, so give it one |
|
return setmetatable(item, isNumber) |
|
else |
|
-- the normal situation... given a number or a string representation of a number.... |
|
local holder = { |
|
S = tostring(item), -- S is the representation of the number as a string, which remains precise |
|
N = tonumber(item), -- N is the number as a Lua number. |
|
} |
|
return setmetatable(holder, isNumber) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Given an item that might be a normal string or number, or might be an 'isNumber' object defined above, |
|
-- return the string version. This shouldn't be needed often because the 'isNumber' object should autoconvert |
|
-- to a string in most cases, but it's here to allow it to be forced when needed. |
|
-- |
|
function OBJDEF:forceString(item) |
|
if type(item) == 'table' and type(item.S) == 'string' then |
|
return item.S |
|
else |
|
return tostring(item) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Given an item that might be a normal string or number, or might be an 'isNumber' object defined above, |
|
-- return the numeric version. |
|
-- |
|
function OBJDEF:forceNumber(item) |
|
if type(item) == 'table' and type(item.N) == 'number' then |
|
return item.N |
|
else |
|
return tonumber(item) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
|
|
local function unicode_codepoint_as_utf8(codepoint) |
|
-- |
|
-- codepoint is a number |
|
-- |
|
if codepoint <= 127 then |
|
return string.char(codepoint) |
|
|
|
elseif codepoint <= 2047 then |
|
-- |
|
-- 110yyyxx 10xxxxxx <-- useful notation from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utf8 |
|
-- |
|
local highpart = math.floor(codepoint / 0x40) |
|
local lowpart = codepoint - (0x40 * highpart) |
|
return string.char(0xC0 + highpart, |
|
0x80 + lowpart) |
|
|
|
elseif codepoint <= 65535 then |
|
-- |
|
-- 1110yyyy 10yyyyxx 10xxxxxx |
|
-- |
|
local highpart = math.floor(codepoint / 0x1000) |
|
local remainder = codepoint - 0x1000 * highpart |
|
local midpart = math.floor(remainder / 0x40) |
|
local lowpart = remainder - 0x40 * midpart |
|
|
|
highpart = 0xE0 + highpart |
|
midpart = 0x80 + midpart |
|
lowpart = 0x80 + lowpart |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Check for an invalid character (thanks Andy R. at Adobe). |
|
-- See table 3.7, page 93, in http://www.unicode.org/versions/Unicode5.2.0/ch03.pdf#G28070 |
|
-- |
|
if ( highpart == 0xE0 and midpart < 0xA0 ) or |
|
( highpart == 0xED and midpart > 0x9F ) or |
|
( highpart == 0xF0 and midpart < 0x90 ) or |
|
( highpart == 0xF4 and midpart > 0x8F ) |
|
then |
|
return "?" |
|
else |
|
return string.char(highpart, |
|
midpart, |
|
lowpart) |
|
end |
|
|
|
else |
|
-- |
|
-- 11110zzz 10zzyyyy 10yyyyxx 10xxxxxx |
|
-- |
|
local highpart = math.floor(codepoint / 0x40000) |
|
local remainder = codepoint - 0x40000 * highpart |
|
local midA = math.floor(remainder / 0x1000) |
|
remainder = remainder - 0x1000 * midA |
|
local midB = math.floor(remainder / 0x40) |
|
local lowpart = remainder - 0x40 * midB |
|
|
|
return string.char(0xF0 + highpart, |
|
0x80 + midA, |
|
0x80 + midB, |
|
0x80 + lowpart) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
function OBJDEF:onDecodeError(message, text, location, etc) |
|
if text then |
|
if location then |
|
message = string.format("%s at byte %d of: %s", message, location, text) |
|
else |
|
message = string.format("%s: %s", message, text) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
if etc ~= nil then |
|
message = message .. " (" .. OBJDEF:encode(etc) .. ")" |
|
end |
|
|
|
if self.assert then |
|
self.assert(false, message) |
|
else |
|
assert(false, message) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
function OBJDEF:onTrailingGarbage(json_text, location, parsed_value, etc) |
|
return self:onDecodeError("trailing garbage", json_text, location, etc) |
|
end |
|
|
|
OBJDEF.onDecodeOfNilError = OBJDEF.onDecodeError |
|
OBJDEF.onDecodeOfHTMLError = OBJDEF.onDecodeError |
|
|
|
function OBJDEF:onEncodeError(message, etc) |
|
if etc ~= nil then |
|
message = message .. " (" .. OBJDEF:encode(etc) .. ")" |
|
end |
|
|
|
if self.assert then |
|
self.assert(false, message) |
|
else |
|
assert(false, message) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
local function grok_number(self, text, start, options) |
|
-- |
|
-- Grab the integer part |
|
-- |
|
local integer_part = text:match('^-?[1-9]%d*', start) |
|
or text:match("^-?0", start) |
|
|
|
if not integer_part then |
|
self:onDecodeError("expected number", text, start, options.etc) |
|
return nil, start -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
local i = start + integer_part:len() |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Grab an optional decimal part |
|
-- |
|
local decimal_part = text:match('^%.%d+', i) or "" |
|
|
|
i = i + decimal_part:len() |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Grab an optional exponential part |
|
-- |
|
local exponent_part = text:match('^[eE][-+]?%d+', i) or "" |
|
|
|
i = i + exponent_part:len() |
|
|
|
local full_number_text = integer_part .. decimal_part .. exponent_part |
|
|
|
if options.decodeNumbersAsObjects then |
|
return OBJDEF:asNumber(full_number_text), i |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- If we're told to stringify under certain conditions, so do. |
|
-- We punt a bit when there's an exponent by just stringifying no matter what. |
|
-- I suppose we should really look to see whether the exponent is actually big enough one |
|
-- way or the other to trip stringification, but I'll be lazy about it until someone asks. |
|
-- |
|
if (options.decodeIntegerStringificationLength |
|
and |
|
(integer_part:len() >= options.decodeIntegerStringificationLength or exponent_part:len() > 0)) |
|
|
|
or |
|
|
|
(options.decodeDecimalStringificationLength |
|
and |
|
(decimal_part:len() >= options.decodeDecimalStringificationLength or exponent_part:len() > 0)) |
|
then |
|
return full_number_text, i -- this returns the exact string representation seen in the original JSON |
|
end |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
local as_number = tonumber(full_number_text) |
|
|
|
if not as_number then |
|
self:onDecodeError("bad number", text, start, options.etc) |
|
return nil, start -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
return as_number, i |
|
end |
|
|
|
|
|
local function grok_string(self, text, start, options) |
|
|
|
if text:sub(start,start) ~= '"' then |
|
self:onDecodeError("expected string's opening quote", text, start, options.etc) |
|
return nil, start -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
local i = start + 1 -- +1 to bypass the initial quote |
|
local text_len = text:len() |
|
local VALUE = "" |
|
while i <= text_len do |
|
local c = text:sub(i,i) |
|
if c == '"' then |
|
return VALUE, i + 1 |
|
end |
|
if c ~= '\\' then |
|
VALUE = VALUE .. c |
|
i = i + 1 |
|
elseif text:match('^\\b', i) then |
|
VALUE = VALUE .. "\b" |
|
i = i + 2 |
|
elseif text:match('^\\f', i) then |
|
VALUE = VALUE .. "\f" |
|
i = i + 2 |
|
elseif text:match('^\\n', i) then |
|
VALUE = VALUE .. "\n" |
|
i = i + 2 |
|
elseif text:match('^\\r', i) then |
|
VALUE = VALUE .. "\r" |
|
i = i + 2 |
|
elseif text:match('^\\t', i) then |
|
VALUE = VALUE .. "\t" |
|
i = i + 2 |
|
else |
|
local hex = text:match('^\\u([0123456789aAbBcCdDeEfF][0123456789aAbBcCdDeEfF][0123456789aAbBcCdDeEfF][0123456789aAbBcCdDeEfF])', i) |
|
if hex then |
|
i = i + 6 -- bypass what we just read |
|
|
|
-- We have a Unicode codepoint. It could be standalone, or if in the proper range and |
|
-- followed by another in a specific range, it'll be a two-code surrogate pair. |
|
local codepoint = tonumber(hex, 16) |
|
if codepoint >= 0xD800 and codepoint <= 0xDBFF then |
|
-- it's a hi surrogate... see whether we have a following low |
|
local lo_surrogate = text:match('^\\u([dD][cdefCDEF][0123456789aAbBcCdDeEfF][0123456789aAbBcCdDeEfF])', i) |
|
if lo_surrogate then |
|
i = i + 6 -- bypass the low surrogate we just read |
|
codepoint = 0x2400 + (codepoint - 0xD800) * 0x400 + tonumber(lo_surrogate, 16) |
|
else |
|
-- not a proper low, so we'll just leave the first codepoint as is and spit it out. |
|
end |
|
end |
|
VALUE = VALUE .. unicode_codepoint_as_utf8(codepoint) |
|
|
|
else |
|
|
|
-- just pass through what's escaped |
|
VALUE = VALUE .. text:match('^\\(.)', i) |
|
i = i + 2 |
|
end |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
self:onDecodeError("unclosed string", text, start, options.etc) |
|
return nil, start -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
local function skip_whitespace(text, start) |
|
|
|
local _, match_end = text:find("^[ \n\r\t]+", start) -- [http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt] Section 2 |
|
if match_end then |
|
return match_end + 1 |
|
else |
|
return start |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
local grok_one -- assigned later |
|
|
|
local function grok_object(self, text, start, options) |
|
|
|
if text:sub(start,start) ~= '{' then |
|
self:onDecodeError("expected '{'", text, start, options.etc) |
|
return nil, start -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
local i = skip_whitespace(text, start + 1) -- +1 to skip the '{' |
|
|
|
local VALUE = self.strictTypes and self:newObject { } or { } |
|
|
|
if text:sub(i,i) == '}' then |
|
return VALUE, i + 1 |
|
end |
|
local text_len = text:len() |
|
while i <= text_len do |
|
local key, new_i = grok_string(self, text, i, options) |
|
|
|
i = skip_whitespace(text, new_i) |
|
|
|
if text:sub(i, i) ~= ':' then |
|
self:onDecodeError("expected colon", text, i, options.etc) |
|
return nil, i -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
i = skip_whitespace(text, i + 1) |
|
|
|
local new_val, new_i = grok_one(self, text, i, options) |
|
|
|
VALUE[key] = new_val |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Expect now either '}' to end things, or a ',' to allow us to continue. |
|
-- |
|
i = skip_whitespace(text, new_i) |
|
|
|
local c = text:sub(i,i) |
|
|
|
if c == '}' then |
|
return VALUE, i + 1 |
|
end |
|
|
|
if text:sub(i, i) ~= ',' then |
|
self:onDecodeError("expected comma or '}'", text, i, options.etc) |
|
return nil, i -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
i = skip_whitespace(text, i + 1) |
|
end |
|
|
|
self:onDecodeError("unclosed '{'", text, start, options.etc) |
|
return nil, start -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
local function grok_array(self, text, start, options) |
|
if text:sub(start,start) ~= '[' then |
|
self:onDecodeError("expected '['", text, start, options.etc) |
|
return nil, start -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
local i = skip_whitespace(text, start + 1) -- +1 to skip the '[' |
|
local VALUE = self.strictTypes and self:newArray { } or { } |
|
if text:sub(i,i) == ']' then |
|
return VALUE, i + 1 |
|
end |
|
|
|
local VALUE_INDEX = 1 |
|
|
|
local text_len = text:len() |
|
while i <= text_len do |
|
local val, new_i = grok_one(self, text, i, options) |
|
|
|
-- can't table.insert(VALUE, val) here because it's a no-op if val is nil |
|
VALUE[VALUE_INDEX] = val |
|
VALUE_INDEX = VALUE_INDEX + 1 |
|
|
|
i = skip_whitespace(text, new_i) |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Expect now either ']' to end things, or a ',' to allow us to continue. |
|
-- |
|
local c = text:sub(i,i) |
|
if c == ']' then |
|
return VALUE, i + 1 |
|
end |
|
if text:sub(i, i) ~= ',' then |
|
self:onDecodeError("expected comma or ']'", text, i, options.etc) |
|
return nil, i -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
i = skip_whitespace(text, i + 1) |
|
end |
|
self:onDecodeError("unclosed '['", text, start, options.etc) |
|
return nil, i -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
|
|
grok_one = function(self, text, start, options) |
|
-- Skip any whitespace |
|
start = skip_whitespace(text, start) |
|
|
|
if start > text:len() then |
|
self:onDecodeError("unexpected end of string", text, nil, options.etc) |
|
return nil, start -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
if text:find('^"', start) then |
|
return grok_string(self, text, start, options.etc) |
|
|
|
elseif text:find('^[-0123456789 ]', start) then |
|
return grok_number(self, text, start, options) |
|
|
|
elseif text:find('^%{', start) then |
|
return grok_object(self, text, start, options) |
|
|
|
elseif text:find('^%[', start) then |
|
return grok_array(self, text, start, options) |
|
|
|
elseif text:find('^true', start) then |
|
return true, start + 4 |
|
|
|
elseif text:find('^false', start) then |
|
return false, start + 5 |
|
|
|
elseif text:find('^null', start) then |
|
return nil, start + 4 |
|
|
|
else |
|
self:onDecodeError("can't parse JSON", text, start, options.etc) |
|
return nil, 1 -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
function OBJDEF:decode(text, etc, options) |
|
-- |
|
-- If the user didn't pass in a table of decode options, make an empty one. |
|
-- |
|
if type(options) ~= 'table' then |
|
options = {} |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- If they passed in an 'etc' argument, stuff it into the options. |
|
-- (If not, any 'etc' field in the options they passed in remains to be used) |
|
-- |
|
if etc ~= nil then |
|
options.etc = etc |
|
end |
|
|
|
|
|
if type(self) ~= 'table' or self.__index ~= OBJDEF then |
|
local error_message = "JSON:decode must be called in method format" |
|
OBJDEF:onDecodeError(error_message, nil, nil, options.etc) |
|
return nil, error_message -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
if text == nil then |
|
local error_message = "nil passed to JSON:decode()" |
|
self:onDecodeOfNilError(error_message, nil, nil, options.etc) |
|
return nil, error_message -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
|
|
elseif type(text) ~= 'string' then |
|
local error_message = "expected string argument to JSON:decode()" |
|
self:onDecodeError(string.format("%s, got %s", error_message, type(text)), nil, nil, options.etc) |
|
return nil, error_message -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
if text:match('^%s*$') then |
|
-- an empty string is nothing, but not an error |
|
return nil |
|
end |
|
|
|
if text:match('^%s*<') then |
|
-- Can't be JSON... we'll assume it's HTML |
|
local error_message = "HTML passed to JSON:decode()" |
|
self:onDecodeOfHTMLError(error_message, text, nil, options.etc) |
|
return nil, error_message -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Ensure that it's not UTF-32 or UTF-16. |
|
-- Those are perfectly valid encodings for JSON (as per RFC 4627 section 3), |
|
-- but this package can't handle them. |
|
-- |
|
if text:sub(1,1):byte() == 0 or (text:len() >= 2 and text:sub(2,2):byte() == 0) then |
|
local error_message = "JSON package groks only UTF-8, sorry" |
|
self:onDecodeError(error_message, text, nil, options.etc) |
|
return nil, error_message -- in case the error method doesn't abort, return something sensible |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- apply global options |
|
-- |
|
if options.decodeNumbersAsObjects == nil then |
|
options.decodeNumbersAsObjects = self.decodeNumbersAsObjects |
|
end |
|
if options.decodeIntegerStringificationLength == nil then |
|
options.decodeIntegerStringificationLength = self.decodeIntegerStringificationLength |
|
end |
|
if options.decodeDecimalStringificationLength == nil then |
|
options.decodeDecimalStringificationLength = self.decodeDecimalStringificationLength |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Finally, go parse it |
|
-- |
|
local success, value, next_i = pcall(grok_one, self, text, 1, options) |
|
|
|
if success then |
|
if next_i ~= #text + 1 then |
|
-- something's left over after we parsed the first thing.... whitespace is allowed. |
|
next_i = skip_whitespace(text, next_i) |
|
|
|
-- if we have something left over now, it's trailing garbage |
|
local error_message |
|
if next_i ~= #text + 1 then |
|
value, error_message = self:onTrailingGarbage(text, next_i, value, options.etc) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
return value, error_message |
|
|
|
else |
|
|
|
-- If JSON:onDecodeError() didn't abort out of the pcall, we'll have received |
|
-- the error message here as "value", so pass it along as an assert. |
|
local error_message = value |
|
if self.assert then |
|
self.assert(false, error_message) |
|
else |
|
assert(false, error_message) |
|
end |
|
-- and if we're still here, return a nil and throw the error message on as a second arg |
|
return nil, error_message |
|
|
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
local function backslash_replacement_function(c) |
|
if c == "\n" then |
|
return "\\n" |
|
elseif c == "\r" then |
|
return "\\r" |
|
elseif c == "\t" then |
|
return "\\t" |
|
elseif c == "\b" then |
|
return "\\b" |
|
elseif c == "\f" then |
|
return "\\f" |
|
elseif c == '"' then |
|
return '\\"' |
|
elseif c == '\\' then |
|
return '\\\\' |
|
else |
|
return string.format("\\u%04x", c:byte()) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
local chars_to_be_escaped_in_JSON_string |
|
= '[' |
|
.. '"' -- class sub-pattern to match a double quote |
|
.. '%\\' -- class sub-pattern to match a backslash |
|
.. '%z' -- class sub-pattern to match a null |
|
.. '\001' .. '-' .. '\031' -- class sub-pattern to match control characters |
|
.. ']' |
|
|
|
|
|
local LINE_SEPARATOR_as_utf8 = unicode_codepoint_as_utf8(0x2028) |
|
local PARAGRAPH_SEPARATOR_as_utf8 = unicode_codepoint_as_utf8(0x2029) |
|
local function json_string_literal(value, options) |
|
local newval = value:gsub(chars_to_be_escaped_in_JSON_string, backslash_replacement_function) |
|
if options.stringsAreUtf8 then |
|
-- |
|
-- This feels really ugly to just look into a string for the sequence of bytes that we know to be a particular utf8 character, |
|
-- but utf8 was designed purposefully to make this kind of thing possible. Still, feels dirty. |
|
-- I'd rather decode the byte stream into a character stream, but it's not technically needed so |
|
-- not technically worth it. |
|
-- |
|
newval = newval:gsub(LINE_SEPARATOR_as_utf8, '\\u2028'):gsub(PARAGRAPH_SEPARATOR_as_utf8,'\\u2029') |
|
end |
|
return '"' .. newval .. '"' |
|
end |
|
|
|
local function object_or_array(self, T, etc) |
|
-- |
|
-- We need to inspect all the keys... if there are any strings, we'll convert to a JSON |
|
-- object. If there are only numbers, it's a JSON array. |
|
-- |
|
-- If we'll be converting to a JSON object, we'll want to sort the keys so that the |
|
-- end result is deterministic. |
|
-- |
|
local string_keys = { } |
|
local number_keys = { } |
|
local number_keys_must_be_strings = false |
|
local maximum_number_key |
|
|
|
for key in pairs(T) do |
|
if type(key) == 'string' then |
|
table.insert(string_keys, key) |
|
elseif type(key) == 'number' then |
|
table.insert(number_keys, key) |
|
if key <= 0 or key >= math.huge then |
|
number_keys_must_be_strings = true |
|
elseif not maximum_number_key or key > maximum_number_key then |
|
maximum_number_key = key |
|
end |
|
else |
|
self:onEncodeError("can't encode table with a key of type " .. type(key), etc) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
if #string_keys == 0 and not number_keys_must_be_strings then |
|
-- |
|
-- An empty table, or a numeric-only array |
|
-- |
|
if #number_keys > 0 then |
|
return nil, maximum_number_key -- an array |
|
elseif tostring(T) == "JSON array" then |
|
return nil |
|
elseif tostring(T) == "JSON object" then |
|
return { } |
|
else |
|
-- have to guess, so we'll pick array, since empty arrays are likely more common than empty objects |
|
return nil |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
table.sort(string_keys) |
|
|
|
local map |
|
if #number_keys > 0 then |
|
-- |
|
-- If we're here then we have either mixed string/number keys, or numbers inappropriate for a JSON array |
|
-- It's not ideal, but we'll turn the numbers into strings so that we can at least create a JSON object. |
|
-- |
|
|
|
if self.noKeyConversion then |
|
self:onEncodeError("a table with both numeric and string keys could be an object or array; aborting", etc) |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Have to make a shallow copy of the source table so we can remap the numeric keys to be strings |
|
-- |
|
map = { } |
|
for key, val in pairs(T) do |
|
map[key] = val |
|
end |
|
|
|
table.sort(number_keys) |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Throw numeric keys in there as strings |
|
-- |
|
for _, number_key in ipairs(number_keys) do |
|
local string_key = tostring(number_key) |
|
if map[string_key] == nil then |
|
table.insert(string_keys , string_key) |
|
map[string_key] = T[number_key] |
|
else |
|
self:onEncodeError("conflict converting table with mixed-type keys into a JSON object: key " .. number_key .. " exists both as a string and a number.", etc) |
|
end |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
return string_keys, nil, map |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Encode |
|
-- |
|
-- 'options' is nil, or a table with possible keys: |
|
-- |
|
-- pretty -- If true, return a pretty-printed version. |
|
-- |
|
-- indent -- A string (usually of spaces) used to indent each nested level. |
|
-- |
|
-- align_keys -- If true, align all the keys when formatting a table. |
|
-- |
|
-- null -- If this exists with a string value, table elements with this value are output as JSON null. |
|
-- |
|
-- stringsAreUtf8 -- If true, consider Lua strings not as a sequence of bytes, but as a sequence of UTF-8 characters. |
|
-- (Currently, the only practical effect of setting this option is that Unicode LINE and PARAGRAPH |
|
-- separators, if found in a string, are encoded with a JSON escape instead of as raw UTF-8. |
|
-- The JSON is valid either way, but encoding this way, apparently, allows the resulting JSON |
|
-- to also be valid Java.) |
|
-- |
|
-- |
|
local encode_value -- must predeclare because it calls itself |
|
function encode_value(self, value, parents, etc, options, indent, for_key) |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- keys in a JSON object can never be null, so we don't even consider options.null when converting a key value |
|
-- |
|
if value == nil or (not for_key and options and options.null and value == options.null) then |
|
return 'null' |
|
|
|
elseif type(value) == 'string' then |
|
return json_string_literal(value, options) |
|
|
|
elseif type(value) == 'number' then |
|
if value ~= value then |
|
-- |
|
-- NaN (Not a Number). |
|
-- JSON has no NaN, so we have to fudge the best we can. This should really be a package option. |
|
-- |
|
return "null" |
|
elseif value >= math.huge then |
|
-- |
|
-- Positive infinity. JSON has no INF, so we have to fudge the best we can. This should |
|
-- really be a package option. Note: at least with some implementations, positive infinity |
|
-- is both ">= math.huge" and "<= -math.huge", which makes no sense but that's how it is. |
|
-- Negative infinity is properly "<= -math.huge". So, we must be sure to check the ">=" |
|
-- case first. |
|
-- |
|
return "1e+9999" |
|
elseif value <= -math.huge then |
|
-- |
|
-- Negative infinity. |
|
-- JSON has no INF, so we have to fudge the best we can. This should really be a package option. |
|
-- |
|
return "-1e+9999" |
|
else |
|
return tostring(value) |
|
end |
|
|
|
elseif type(value) == 'boolean' then |
|
return tostring(value) |
|
|
|
elseif type(value) ~= 'table' then |
|
self:onEncodeError("can't convert " .. type(value) .. " to JSON", etc) |
|
|
|
elseif getmetatable(value) == isNumber then |
|
return tostring(value) |
|
else |
|
-- |
|
-- A table to be converted to either a JSON object or array. |
|
-- |
|
local T = value |
|
|
|
if type(options) ~= 'table' then |
|
options = {} |
|
end |
|
if type(indent) ~= 'string' then |
|
indent = "" |
|
end |
|
|
|
if parents[T] then |
|
self:onEncodeError("table " .. tostring(T) .. " is a child of itself", etc) |
|
else |
|
parents[T] = true |
|
end |
|
|
|
local result_value |
|
|
|
local object_keys, maximum_number_key, map = object_or_array(self, T, etc) |
|
if maximum_number_key then |
|
-- |
|
-- An array... |
|
-- |
|
local ITEMS = { } |
|
for i = 1, maximum_number_key do |
|
table.insert(ITEMS, encode_value(self, T[i], parents, etc, options, indent)) |
|
end |
|
|
|
if options.pretty then |
|
result_value = "[ " .. table.concat(ITEMS, ", ") .. " ]" |
|
else |
|
result_value = "[" .. table.concat(ITEMS, ",") .. "]" |
|
end |
|
|
|
elseif object_keys then |
|
-- |
|
-- An object |
|
-- |
|
local TT = map or T |
|
|
|
if options.pretty then |
|
|
|
local KEYS = { } |
|
local max_key_length = 0 |
|
for _, key in ipairs(object_keys) do |
|
local encoded = encode_value(self, tostring(key), parents, etc, options, indent, true) |
|
if options.align_keys then |
|
max_key_length = math.max(max_key_length, #encoded) |
|
end |
|
table.insert(KEYS, encoded) |
|
end |
|
local key_indent = indent .. tostring(options.indent or "") |
|
local subtable_indent = key_indent .. string.rep(" ", max_key_length) .. (options.align_keys and " " or "") |
|
local FORMAT = "%s%" .. string.format("%d", max_key_length) .. "s: %s" |
|
|
|
local COMBINED_PARTS = { } |
|
for i, key in ipairs(object_keys) do |
|
local encoded_val = encode_value(self, TT[key], parents, etc, options, subtable_indent) |
|
table.insert(COMBINED_PARTS, string.format(FORMAT, key_indent, KEYS[i], encoded_val)) |
|
end |
|
result_value = "{\n" .. table.concat(COMBINED_PARTS, ",\n") .. "\n" .. indent .. "}" |
|
|
|
else |
|
|
|
local PARTS = { } |
|
for _, key in ipairs(object_keys) do |
|
local encoded_val = encode_value(self, TT[key], parents, etc, options, indent) |
|
local encoded_key = encode_value(self, tostring(key), parents, etc, options, indent, true) |
|
table.insert(PARTS, string.format("%s:%s", encoded_key, encoded_val)) |
|
end |
|
result_value = "{" .. table.concat(PARTS, ",") .. "}" |
|
|
|
end |
|
else |
|
-- |
|
-- An empty array/object... we'll treat it as an array, though it should really be an option |
|
-- |
|
result_value = "[]" |
|
end |
|
|
|
parents[T] = false |
|
return result_value |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
local function top_level_encode(self, value, etc, options) |
|
local val = encode_value(self, value, {}, etc, options) |
|
if val == nil then |
|
--PRIVATE("may need to revert to the previous public verison if I can't figure out what the guy wanted") |
|
return val |
|
else |
|
return val |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
function OBJDEF:encode(value, etc, options) |
|
if type(self) ~= 'table' or self.__index ~= OBJDEF then |
|
OBJDEF:onEncodeError("JSON:encode must be called in method format", etc) |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- If the user didn't pass in a table of decode options, make an empty one. |
|
-- |
|
if type(options) ~= 'table' then |
|
options = {} |
|
end |
|
|
|
return top_level_encode(self, value, etc, options) |
|
end |
|
|
|
function OBJDEF:encode_pretty(value, etc, options) |
|
if type(self) ~= 'table' or self.__index ~= OBJDEF then |
|
OBJDEF:onEncodeError("JSON:encode_pretty must be called in method format", etc) |
|
end |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- If the user didn't pass in a table of decode options, use the default pretty ones |
|
-- |
|
if type(options) ~= 'table' then |
|
options = default_pretty_options |
|
end |
|
|
|
return top_level_encode(self, value, etc, options) |
|
end |
|
|
|
function OBJDEF.__tostring() |
|
return "JSON encode/decode package" |
|
end |
|
|
|
OBJDEF.__index = OBJDEF |
|
|
|
function OBJDEF:new(args) |
|
local new = { } |
|
|
|
if args then |
|
for key, val in pairs(args) do |
|
new[key] = val |
|
end |
|
end |
|
|
|
return setmetatable(new, OBJDEF) |
|
end |
|
|
|
return OBJDEF:new() |
|
|
|
-- |
|
-- Version history: |
|
-- |
|
-- 20161103.20 Used to silently ignore trailing garbage when decoding. Now fails via JSON:onTrailingGarbage() |
|
-- http://seriot.ch/parsing_json.php |
|
-- |
|
-- Built-in error message about "expected comma or ']'" had mistakenly referred to '[' |
|
-- |
|
-- Updated the built-in error reporting to refer to bytes rather than characters. |
|
-- |
|
-- The decode() method no longer assumes that error handlers abort. |
|
-- |
|
-- Made the VERSION string a string instead of a number |
|
-- |
|
-- |
|
-- 20160916.19 Fixed the isNumber.__index assignment (thanks to Jack Taylor) |
|
-- |
|
-- 20160730.18 Added JSON:forceString() and JSON:forceNumber() |
|
-- |
|
-- 20160728.17 Added concatenation to the metatable for JSON:asNumber() |
|
-- |
|
-- 20160709.16 Could crash if not passed an options table (thanks jarno heikkinen <[email protected]>). |
|
-- |
|
-- Made JSON:asNumber() a bit more resilient to being passed the results of itself. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20160526.15 Added the ability to easily encode null values in JSON, via the new "null" encoding option. |
|
-- (Thanks to Adam B for bringing up the issue.) |
|
-- |
|
-- Added some support for very large numbers and precise floats via |
|
-- JSON.decodeNumbersAsObjects |
|
-- JSON.decodeIntegerStringificationLength |
|
-- JSON.decodeDecimalStringificationLength |
|
-- |
|
-- Added the "stringsAreUtf8" encoding option. (Hat tip to http://lua-users.org/wiki/JsonModules ) |
|
-- |
|
-- 20141223.14 The encode_pretty() routine produced fine results for small datasets, but isn't really |
|
-- appropriate for anything large, so with help from Alex Aulbach I've made the encode routines |
|
-- more flexible, and changed the default encode_pretty() to be more generally useful. |
|
-- |
|
-- Added a third 'options' argument to the encode() and encode_pretty() routines, to control |
|
-- how the encoding takes place. |
|
-- |
|
-- Updated docs to add assert() call to the loadfile() line, just as good practice so that |
|
-- if there is a problem loading JSON.lua, the appropriate error message will percolate up. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20140920.13 Put back (in a way that doesn't cause warnings about unused variables) the author string, |
|
-- so that the source of the package, and its version number, are visible in compiled copies. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20140911.12 Minor lua cleanup. |
|
-- Fixed internal reference to 'JSON.noKeyConversion' to reference 'self' instead of 'JSON'. |
|
-- (Thanks to SmugMug's David Parry for these.) |
|
-- |
|
-- 20140418.11 JSON nulls embedded within an array were being ignored, such that |
|
-- ["1",null,null,null,null,null,"seven"], |
|
-- would return |
|
-- {1,"seven"} |
|
-- It's now fixed to properly return |
|
-- {1, nil, nil, nil, nil, nil, "seven"} |
|
-- Thanks to "haddock" for catching the error. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20140116.10 The user's JSON.assert() wasn't always being used. Thanks to "blue" for the heads up. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20131118.9 Update for Lua 5.3... it seems that tostring(2/1) produces "2.0" instead of "2", |
|
-- and this caused some problems. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20131031.8 Unified the code for encode() and encode_pretty(); they had been stupidly separate, |
|
-- and had of course diverged (encode_pretty didn't get the fixes that encode got, so |
|
-- sometimes produced incorrect results; thanks to Mattie for the heads up). |
|
-- |
|
-- Handle encoding tables with non-positive numeric keys (unlikely, but possible). |
|
-- |
|
-- If a table has both numeric and string keys, or its numeric keys are inappropriate |
|
-- (such as being non-positive or infinite), the numeric keys are turned into |
|
-- string keys appropriate for a JSON object. So, as before, |
|
-- JSON:encode({ "one", "two", "three" }) |
|
-- produces the array |
|
-- ["one","two","three"] |
|
-- but now something with mixed key types like |
|
-- JSON:encode({ "one", "two", "three", SOMESTRING = "some string" })) |
|
-- instead of throwing an error produces an object: |
|
-- {"1":"one","2":"two","3":"three","SOMESTRING":"some string"} |
|
-- |
|
-- To maintain the prior throw-an-error semantics, set |
|
-- JSON.noKeyConversion = true |
|
-- |
|
-- 20131004.7 Release under a Creative Commons CC-BY license, which I should have done from day one, sorry. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20130120.6 Comment update: added a link to the specific page on my blog where this code can |
|
-- be found, so that folks who come across the code outside of my blog can find updates |
|
-- more easily. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20111207.5 Added support for the 'etc' arguments, for better error reporting. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20110731.4 More feedback from David Kolf on how to make the tests for Nan/Infinity system independent. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20110730.3 Incorporated feedback from David Kolf at http://lua-users.org/wiki/JsonModules: |
|
-- |
|
-- * When encoding lua for JSON, Sparse numeric arrays are now handled by |
|
-- spitting out full arrays, such that |
|
-- JSON:encode({"one", "two", [10] = "ten"}) |
|
-- returns |
|
-- ["one","two",null,null,null,null,null,null,null,"ten"] |
|
-- |
|
-- In 20100810.2 and earlier, only up to the first non-null value would have been retained. |
|
-- |
|
-- * When encoding lua for JSON, numeric value NaN gets spit out as null, and infinity as "1+e9999". |
|
-- Version 20100810.2 and earlier created invalid JSON in both cases. |
|
-- |
|
-- * Unicode surrogate pairs are now detected when decoding JSON. |
|
-- |
|
-- 20100810.2 added some checking to ensure that an invalid Unicode character couldn't leak in to the UTF-8 encoding |
|
-- |
|
-- 20100731.1 initial public release |
|
--
|
|
|