Utilities for marshalling and unmarshalling polymorphic JSON objects in Go without generating code.
go get github.com/lovromazgon/jsonpoly@latest
Say that you have an interface Shape and two structs Triangle and Square
that implement it. The structs have a method Kind that returns the name of
the shape.
package shapes
type Shape interface {
Kind() string
}
func (Triangle) Kind() string { return "triangle" }
func (Square) Kind() string { return "square" }
type Square struct {
TopLeft [2]int `json:"top-left"`
Width int `json:"width"`
}
type Triangle struct {
P0 [2]int `json:"p0"`
P1 [2]int `json:"p1"`
P2 [2]int `json:"p2"`
}You need to define a type that implements the jsonpoly.Helper interface and
can marshal and unmarshal the field(s) used to determine the type of the object.
In this case, the field is kind. You also need to define a map that maps the
values of the field to the types.
var knownShapes = map[string]Shape{
Triangle{}.Kind(): Triangle{},
Square{}.Kind(): Square{},
}
type ShapeJSONHelper struct {
Kind string `json:"kind"`
}
func (h *ShapeJSONHelper) Get() Shape {
return knownShapes[h.Kind]
}
func (h *ShapeJSONHelper) Set(s Shape) {
h.Kind = s.Kind()
}Now you can marshal and unmarshal polymorphic JSON objects using jsonpoly.Container.
inputShape := Square{TopLeft: [2]int{1, 2}, Width: 4}
var c jsonpoly.Container[Shape, *ShapeJSONHelper]
c.Value = inputShape
b, err := json.Marshal(c)
fmt.Println(string(b)) // {"kind":"square","top-left":[1,2],"width":4}
c.Value = nil // reset before unmarshalling
err = json.Unmarshal(b, &c)
fmt.Printf("%T\n", c.Value) // shapes.SquareAlso check out the marshalling and unmarshalling examples on the package documentation.
How is this different than github.com/polyfloyd/gopolyjson?
gopolyjson is a great package, but it has its limitations. Here's a list of
differences that can help you determine what package to use:
gopolyjsonrequires you to add a private method to your interface without parameters or return arguments. As a consequence, you have to put all types that implement the interface in the same package.jsonpolydoes not require you to add any methods to your types.gopolyjsonrequires you to generate code for each type you want to serialize. Since the generated code adds methods to the types, you can not generate the code for types from external packages.jsonpolyworks without generating code.- Because
gopolyjsonuses generated code, it can be faster thanjsonpoly. gopolyjsononly supports a single field at the root of the JSON to determine the type of the object, whilejsonpolysupports multiple fields.gopolyjsondoes not handle unknown types which can be an issue with backwards compatibility.jsonpolycan handle unknown types by having a "catch-all" type.
If you want to handle unknown types, you can define a "catch-all" type. The type
should be returned by the Get method of the jsonpoly.Helper implementation
whenever the type of the object is not recognized.
Keep in mind that the field used to determine the type of the object should be
marked with the json:"-" tag, as it is normally handled by the helper. Not
doing so will result in duplicating the field.
type Unknown struct {
XKind string `json:"-"`
json.RawMessage // Store the raw json if needed.
}
func (u Unknown) Kind() string { return u.XKind }
type ShapeJSONHelper struct {
Kind string `json:"kind"`
}
func (h *ShapeJSONHelper) Get() Shape {
s, ok := knownShapes[h.Kind]
if !ok {
return Unknown{XKind: h.Kind}
}
return s
}Yes, you can use any number of fields to determine the type of the object. You
just need to define a struct that contains all the fields and implements the
jsonpoly.Helper interface.
For more information on how to do this, check the example directory.