[−][src]Module serialize::json
JSON parsing and serialization
What is JSON?
JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) is a way to write data in Javascript. Like XML, it allows to encode structured data in a text format that can be easily read by humans Its simple syntax and native compatibility with JavaScript have made it a widely used format.
Data types that can be encoded are JavaScript types (see the Json
enum for more details):
Boolean
: equivalent to rust'sbool
Number
: equivalent to rust'sf64
String
: equivalent to rust'sString
Array
: equivalent to rust'sVec<T>
, but also allowing objects of different types in the same arrayObject
: equivalent to rust'sBTreeMap<String, json::Json>
Null
An object is a series of string keys mapping to values, in "key": value
format.
Arrays are enclosed in square brackets ([ ... ]) and objects in curly brackets ({ ... }).
A simple JSON document encoding a person, their age, address and phone numbers could look like
{
"FirstName": "John",
"LastName": "Doe",
"Age": 43,
"Address": {
"Street": "Downing Street 10",
"City": "London",
"Country": "Great Britain"
},
"PhoneNumbers": [
"+44 1234567",
"+44 2345678"
]
}
Rust Type-based Encoding and Decoding
Rust provides a mechanism for low boilerplate encoding & decoding of values to and from JSON via
the serialization API.
To be able to encode a piece of data, it must implement the serialize::RustcEncodable
trait.
To be able to decode a piece of data, it must implement the serialize::RustcDecodable
trait.
The Rust compiler provides an annotation to automatically generate the code for these traits:
#[derive(RustcDecodable, RustcEncodable)]
The JSON API provides an enum json::Json
and a trait ToJson
to encode objects.
The ToJson
trait provides a to_json
method to convert an object into a json::Json
value.
A json::Json
value can be encoded as a string or buffer using the functions described above.
You can also use the json::Encoder
object, which implements the Encoder
trait.
When using ToJson
the RustcEncodable
trait implementation is not mandatory.
Examples of use
Using Autoserialization
Create a struct called TestStruct
and serialize and deserialize it to and from JSON using the
serialization API, using the derived serialization code.
extern crate serialize as rustc_serialize; // for the deriving below use rustc_serialize::json; // Automatically generate `Decodable` and `Encodable` trait implementations #[derive(RustcDecodable, RustcEncodable)] pub struct TestStruct { data_int: u8, data_str: String, data_vector: Vec<u8>, } fn main() { let object = TestStruct { data_int: 1, data_str: "homura".to_string(), data_vector: vec![2,3,4,5], }; // Serialize using `json::encode` let encoded = json::encode(&object).unwrap(); // Deserialize using `json::decode` let decoded: TestStruct = json::decode(&encoded[..]).unwrap(); }Run
Using the ToJson
trait
The examples above use the ToJson
trait to generate the JSON string, which is required
for custom mappings.
Simple example of ToJson
usage
extern crate serialize; use serialize::json::{self, ToJson, Json}; // A custom data structure struct ComplexNum { a: f64, b: f64, } // JSON value representation impl ToJson for ComplexNum { fn to_json(&self) -> Json { Json::String(format!("{}+{}i", self.a, self.b)) } } // Only generate `RustcEncodable` trait implementation #[derive(Encodable)] pub struct ComplexNumRecord { uid: u8, dsc: String, val: Json, } fn main() { let num = ComplexNum { a: 0.0001, b: 12.539 }; let data: String = json::encode(&ComplexNumRecord{ uid: 1, dsc: "test".to_string(), val: num.to_json(), }).unwrap(); println!("data: {}", data); // data: {"uid":1,"dsc":"test","val":"0.0001+12.539i"}; }Run
Verbose example of ToJson
usage
extern crate serialize; use std::collections::BTreeMap; use serialize::json::{self, Json, ToJson}; // Only generate `Decodable` trait implementation #[derive(Decodable)] pub struct TestStruct { data_int: u8, data_str: String, data_vector: Vec<u8>, } // Specify encoding method manually impl ToJson for TestStruct { fn to_json(&self) -> Json { let mut d = BTreeMap::new(); // All standard types implement `to_json()`, so use it d.insert("data_int".to_string(), self.data_int.to_json()); d.insert("data_str".to_string(), self.data_str.to_json()); d.insert("data_vector".to_string(), self.data_vector.to_json()); Json::Object(d) } } fn main() { // Serialize using `ToJson` let input_data = TestStruct { data_int: 1, data_str: "madoka".to_string(), data_vector: vec![2,3,4,5], }; let json_obj: Json = input_data.to_json(); let json_str: String = json_obj.to_string(); // Deserialize like before let decoded: TestStruct = json::decode(&json_str).unwrap(); }Run
Structs
AsJson | |
AsPrettyJson | |
Builder | A Builder consumes a json::Parser to create a generic Json structure. |
Decoder | A structure to decode JSON to values in rust. |
Encoder | A structure for implementing serialization to JSON. |
Parser | A streaming JSON parser implemented as an iterator of JsonEvent, consuming an iterator of char. |
PrettyEncoder | Another encoder for JSON, but prints out human-readable JSON instead of compact data |
PrettyJson | |
Stack | A Stack represents the current position of the parser in the logical structure of the JSON stream. For example foo.bar[3].x |
Enums
DecoderError | |
EncoderError | |
ErrorCode | The errors that can arise while parsing a JSON stream. |
Json | Represents a json value |
JsonEvent | The output of the streaming parser. |
ParserError | |
StackElement | StackElements compose a Stack. For example, StackElement::Key("foo"), StackElement::Key("bar"), StackElement::Index(3) and StackElement::Key("x") are the StackElements compositing the stack that represents foo.bar[3].x |
Traits
ToJson | A trait for converting values to JSON |
Functions
as_json | Creates an |
as_pretty_json | Creates an |
decode | Shortcut function to decode a JSON |
encode | Shortcut function to encode a |
error_str | Returns a readable error string for a given error code. |
from_reader | Decodes a json value from an |
from_str | Decodes a json value from a string |
Type Definitions
Array | |
BuilderError | |
DecodeResult | |
EncodeResult | |
Object |