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JSON done right 🤦

Project README

jason

Test Matrix GitHub release (latest by date) Minimum supported Nim version License

mostly compile-time JSON encoding

"I don't care." -- Araq, 2020

Why?

  • This is the fastest known JSON serializer for Nim.
  • It's pretty hard to misuse, but as simple as it is, it will get even better if a new concepts implementation lands in Nim.
  • It's not fully optimized yet; there's quite a bit more room to improve.
  • I may add a deserializer if a strong candidate doesn't materialize. 🤔

Advantages of jason over other serializers:

  1. encoding of tuples, objects, and iterators is "free" -- no loops to write and few-to-zero copies

  2. no runtime serialization exceptions and a distinct JSON type for safety

  3. easy custom serialization for your types, and even custom compile-time serialization

Usage

# an integer
echo 45.jason                  # 45

# a float
echo jason(5.0)                # 5.0

# a bool
echo jason true                # true

# an enum (see below for custom serialization overriding)
echo Two.jason                 # 2

# a string
echo jason"foo"                # "foo"

# ref types are fine
echo jason((ref string) nil)   # null

Tuples without named fields become JSON arrays. Tuples with named fields become JSON objects.

echo (1, 2, 3).jason                       # [1,2,3]
echo (cats: "meow", dogs: "woof").jason    # {"cats":"meow","dogs":"woof"}

Objects are supported, with or without ref fields.

type
  O = object
   cats: string
   dogs: int
   q: ref O

let o = O(cats: "yuk", dogs: 2)
echo o.jason   # {"cats":"yuk","dogs":2,"q":null}

Custom serialization is trivial; just implement jason for your type. No need to guess as to whether you've implemented all necessary serializers; if it compiles, you're golden.

type
  B = object
    x: int
    y: string
  C = seq[B]

let b = B(x: 3, y: "sup")
let c: C = @[ B(x: 1), B(x: 2), B(x: 3) ]

const a = B(x: 4, y: "compile-time!")

func jason(n: B): Jason =
  if n.x mod 2 == 0: jason"even"
  else:              jason"odd"

# enabling compile-time encoding is easy
staticJason C

# or you can define static encoding yourself
macro jason(n: static[B]): Jason =
  if n.x mod 2 == 0: jasonify"1"
  else:              jasonify"0"

check a.jason == "1"
check b.jason == """"odd""""
check c.jason == """["odd","even","odd"]"""

Jason is a proper type.

var n: string = jason"foo"      # type error
var x: string = $"foo".jason    # ok
var y = jason"foo"              # ok
y.add "bif"                     # type error

Benchmarks

jason versus jsony

This is a comparison with the jsony library.

jsony

jason versus std/json

The source to the benchmark is found in the tests directory.

bench

jason versus packedjson

There is also a benchmark for the packedjson library. Note: The primary reason to choose packedjson is low memory overhead during deserialization.

packedjson

jason versus eminim

This is a comparison with the eminim library. As eminim serializes only to streams, we similarly issue a stream write in the jason benchmarks here, so that fair comparison may be made.

eminim

Installation

$ nimph clone jason

or if you're still using Nimble like it's 2012,

$ nimble install https://github.com/disruptek/jason

Documentation

I'm going to try a little harder with these docs by using runnableExamples so the documentation demonstrates current usage examples and working tests.

See the documentation for the jason module as generated directly from the source.

License

MIT

Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Disruptek Jason" Project. README Source: disruptek/jason
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