package melange-json
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
sha256=df8750ce83f1f20b3c044fbabdc198ee30885ea6b0626454f25b4aee0786aaa9
sha512=8fdc863e8779dae4181524ce95ee0482604ff2159236d5faa0139920255dc0379b4273147bb1e8cf1d1403d2692f1182ff67a233063c0b40a6a6aa57df82808a
README.md.html
melange-json
Compositional JSON encode/decode library for BuckleScript.
Based on @glennsl/bs-json.
The Decode module in particular provides a basic set of decoder functions to be composed into more complex decoders. A decoder is a function that takes a Js.Json.t
and either returns a value of the desired type if successful or raises a DecodeError
exception if not. Other functions accept a decoder and produce another decoder. Like array
, which when given a decoder for type t
will return a decoder that tries to produce a value of type t array
. So to decode an int array
you combine Json.Decode.int
with Json.Decode.array
into Json.Decode.(array int)
. An array of arrays of ints? Json.Decode.(array (array int))
. Dict containing arrays of ints? Json.Decode.(dict (array int))
.
Example
type line = {
start: point,
end_: point,
thickness: option(int)
}
and point = {
x: int,
y: int
};
module Decode = {
let point = json =>
Json.Decode.{
x: json |> field("x", int),
y: json |> field("y", int)
};
let line = json =>
Json.Decode.{
start: json |> field("start", point),
end_: json |> field("end", point),
thickness: json |> optional(field("thickness", int))
};
};
let data = {| {
"start": { "x": 1, "y": -4 },
"end": { "x": 5, "y": 8 }
} |};
let line = data |> Json.parseOrRaise
|> Decode.line;
NOTE: Json.Decode.{ ... }
creates an ordinary record, but also opens the Json.Decode
module locally, within the scope delimited by the curly braces, so we don't have to qualify the functions we use from it, like field
, int
and optional
here. You can also use Json.Decode.( ... )
to open the module locally within the parentheses, if you're not creating a record.
See examples for more.
Installation
Install opam package manager.
Then:
opam pin add melange-json.dev git+https://github.com/melange-community/melange-json.git#main
Setup
Add melange-json
to the libraries
field in your dune
file:
; ...
(libraries melange-json)
; ...
Documentation
API
For the moment, please see the interface files:
Writing custom decoders and encoders
If you look at the type signature of Json.Decode.array
, for example, you'll see it takes an 'a decoder
and returns an 'a array decoder
. 'a decoder
is just an alias for Js.Json.t -> 'a
, so if we expand the type signature of array
we'll get (Js.Json.t -> 'a) -> Js.Json.t -> 'a array
. We can now see that it is a function that takes a decoder and returns a function, itself a decoder. Applying the int
decoder to array
will give us an int array decoder
, a function Js.Json.t -> int array
.
If you've written a function that takes just Js.Json.t
and returns user-defined types of your own, you've already been writing composable decoders! Let's look at Decode.point
from the example above:
let point = json => {
open! Json.Decode;
{
x: json |> field("x", int),
y: json |> field("y", int)
};
};
This is a function Js.Json.t -> point
, or a point decoder
. So if we'd like to decode an array of points, we can just pass it to Json.Decode.array
to get a point array decoder
in return.
Builders
To write a decoder builder like Json.Decode.array
we need to take another decoder as an argument, and thanks to currying we just need to apply it where we'd otherwise use a fixed decoder. Say we want to be able to decode both int point
s and float point
s. First we'd have to parameterize the type:
type point('a) = {
x: 'a,
y: 'a
}
Then we can change our point
function from above to take and use a decoder argument:
let point = (decodeNumber, json) => {
open! Json.Decode;
{
x: json |> field("x", decodeNumber),
y: json |> field("y", decodeNumber)
};
};
And if we wish we can now create aliases for each variant:
let intPoint = point(Json.Decode.int);
let floatPoint = point(Json.Decode.float);
Encoders
Encoders work exactly the same way, just in reverse. 'a encoder
is just an alias for 'a -> Js.Json.t
, and this also transfers to composition: 'a encoder -> 'a array encoder
expands to ('a -> Js.Json.t) -> 'a array -> Js.Json.t
.
License
This work is dual-licensed under LGPL 3.0 and MPL 2.0. You can choose between one of them if you use this work.
Please see LICENSE.LGPL-3.0 and LICENSE.MPL-2.0 for the full text of each license.
SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-3.0 OR MPL-2.0
Changes
5.0.4
Rewrote
Encode.list
to be stack-safe and much faster.
5.0.2
Added
Json.Decode.id
5.0.1
Dual licensed as LGPL-3.0 and MPL-2.0. MPL is mostly equivalent to LGPL but relaxes its restriction on linking, which works better with the JavaScript packaging and distribution model.
5.0.0
Removed deprecated
arrayOf
encoderRenamed
dict
encoder tojsonDict
Added new
dict
encoder that takes an additional encoder argument used to encode the contained values, and so it's consistent with the respectivedict
decoder.
4.0.0
Bumped
bs-platform
peer dependency to 5.0.4 to stop the compiler's complaining.
3.0.0
Replace usage of
Js.Date.toJSON
withJs.Date.toJSONUsafe
, which is exactly the same, just to avoid deprecation warnings for end users (Thanks Bob!)Requires
bs-platform
>= 4.0.2
2.0.0
Removed
Json.Decode.boolean
,Json.Encode.boolean
,Json.Encode.booleanArray
Requires
bs-platform
>= 3.0.0
1.3.1
Reverted commits that broke backwards compatibility despite only affecting the implementation
1.3.0
Deprecated
Json.Decode.boolean
,Json.Encode.boolean
,Json.Encode.booleanArray
Added
Json.Encode.boolArray
1.2.0
Added
Json.Encode.char
andJson.Decode.char
1.1.0
Added "stack traces" to higher-order decoders, making it easier to find the location of an error.
1.0.1
Moved repository from
reasonml-community/bs-json
toglennsl/bs-json
Renamed NPM package from
bs-json
to@glennsl/bs-json
1.0.0
Replaced
Json.Encoder.array
withJson.Encode.arrayOf
renamed toarray
. DeprecatedarrayOf
alias.Added
Json.parse
,Json.parseOrRaise
,Json.stringify
Added
date
encoder and decoderAdded
tuple2
/tuple3
/tuple4
encoders and decodersFixed bug where js integers > 32-bit were rejected as integers by Json.Decode.int (#15)
0.2.4
Added
Json.Encode.bool
Added
Json.Encode.pair
Added
Json.Encode.withDefault
Added
Json.Encode.nullable
Added
Json.Encode.arrayOf
Added
Json.Encode.jsonArray
as replacement forJson.Encode.array
Deprecated
Json.Encode.array
0.2.3
Fixed embarrassing bug where an API was used that isn't available on IE (honestly more embarrassed on behalf of IE though)
0.2.2
Added
Json.Decode.pair
0.2.1
Added
Json.Encode.list
0.2.0
Breaking: Renamed
Json.Encode.object_
toJson.Encode.dict
Added
Json.Encode.object_
taking a list of properties instead of a Json.Dict.t as before