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PicoJSON - a C++ JSON parser / serializer

Copyright © 2009-2010 Cybozu Labs, Inc. Copyright © 2011 Kazuho Oku

Introduction

PicoJSON is a tiny JSON parser / serializer for C++ with following properties:

  • header-file only
  • no external dependencies (only uses standard C++ libraries)
  • STL-frendly (arrays are represented by using std::vector, objects are std::map)
  • provides both pull interface and streaming (event-based) interface
  • licensed under the new BSD License

Reading JSON using the pull interface

There are two ways to use the pull (DOM-like) interface of picojson. One is to use operator<<, and the other is by specifying a set of iterators specifying the range from where the JSON stream should be read.

picojson::value v;
std::cin >> v;
std::string err = picojson::get_last_error();
if (! err.empty()) {
  std::cerr << err << std::endl;
}
std::istream_iterator input(cin);
picojson::value v;
std::string err;
input = picojson::parse(v, input, std::istream_iterator(), &err);
if (! err.empty()) {
  std::cerr << err << std::endl;
}
const char* json = "{\"a\":1}";
picojson::value v;
std::string err;
picojson::parse(v, json, json + strlen(json), &err);
if (! err.empty()) {
  std::cerr << err << std::endl;
}

Accessing the values

Values of a JSON object is represented as instances of picojson::value class.

namespace picojson {

  class value {
    ...

  public:

    typedef std::vector<value> array;
    typedef std::map<std::string, value> object;

    value();                               // create a null object
    explicit value(bool b);                // create a boolean object
    explicit value(double n);              // create a number object
    explicit value(const std::string& s);  // create a string object
    explicit value(const array& a);        // create an array object
    explicit value(const object& o);       // create an "object"

    bool is<picojson::null>() const;       // check if the object is "null"

    bool is<bool>() const;                 // check if the object is a boolean
    const bool& get<bool>() const;         // const accessor (usable only if the object is a boolean)
    bool& get<bool>();                     // non-const accessor (usable only if the object is a boolean)

    bool is<double>() const;               // check if the object is a number
    const double& get<double>() const;     // const accessor (usable only if the object is a number)
    double& get<double>();                 // non-const accessor (usable only if the object is a number)

    bool is<std::string>() const;          // check if the object is a string
    const std::string& get<std::string>() const;
                                           // const accessor (usable only if the object is a string)
    std::string& get<std::string>();       // non-const accessor (usable only if the object is a string)

    bool is<array>() const;                // check if the object is an array
    const array& get<array>() const;       // const accessor (usable only if the object is an array)
    array& get<array>();                   // non-const accessor (usable only if the object is an array)

    bool is<object>() const;               // check if the object is an "object"
    const object& get<object>() const;     // const accessor (usable only if the object is an object)
    object& get<object>();                 // non-const accessor (usable only if the object is an array)

    bool evaluate_as_boolean() const;      // evaluates the object as a boolean

    std::string serialize() const;         // returns the object in JSON representation
    template void serialize(Iter os) const;
                                           // serializes the object in JSON representation through an output iterator

    std::string to_str() const;            // returns the object in string (for casual use)

  };

}

The code below parses a JSON string and prints the contents of the object.

picojson::value v;

// parse the input
std::cin >> v;
std::string err = picojson::get_last_error();
if (! err.empty()) {
  std::cerr << err << std::endl;
  exit(1);
}

// check if the type of the value is "object"
if (! v.is<picojson::object>()) {
  std::cerr << "JSON is not an object" << std::endl;
  exit(2);
}

// obtain a const reference to the map, and print the contents
const picojson::value::object& obj = v.get<picojson::object>();
for (picojson::value::object::const_iterator i = obj.begin();
     i != obj.end();
     ++i) {
  std::cout << i->first << ': ' << i->second.to_str() << std::endl;
}

Please note that the type check is mandatory; do not forget to check the type of the object by calling is<type>() before accessing the value by calling get<type>().

Reading JSON using the streaming (event-driven) interface

Please refer to the implementation of picojson::default_parse_context and picojson::null_parse_context. There is also an example (examples/streaming.cc) .

Serializing to JSON

Instances of the picojson::value class can be serialized in three ways, to ostream, to std::string, or to an output iterator.

picojson::value v;
...
std::cout << v;
picojson::value v;
...
std::string json = v.serialize();
picojson::value v;
...
v.serialize(std::ostream_iterator(std::cout));

Further reading

Examples can be found in the examples directory.

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  • C 76.6%
  • C++ 23.4%