lua-cjson - Fast JSON encoding/parsing
This fork of mpx/lua-cjson is included in the OpenResty bundle and includes a few bugfixes and improvements, especially to facilitate the encoding of empty tables as JSON Arrays.
Please refer to the lua-cjson documentation for standard usage, this README only provides informations regarding this fork's additions.
See mpx/master..openresty/master
for the complete history of changes.
syntax: cjson.encode_empty_table_as_object(true|false|"on"|"off")
Change the default behavior when encoding an empty Lua table.
By default, empty Lua tables are encoded as empty JSON Objects ({}
). If this is set to false,
empty Lua tables will be encoded as empty JSON Arrays instead ([]
).
This method either accepts a boolean or a string ("on"
, "off"
).
syntax: cjson.empty_array
A lightuserdata, similar to cjson.null
, which will be encoded as an empty JSON Array by
cjson.encode()
.
For example, since encode_empty_table_as_object
is true
by default:
local cjson = require "cjson"
local json = cjson.encode({
foo = "bar",
some_object = {},
some_array = cjson.empty_array
})
This will generate:
{
"foo": "bar",
"some_object": {},
"some_array": []
}
syntax: setmetatable({}, cjson.array_mt)
When lua-cjson encodes a table with this metatable, it will systematically
encode it as a JSON Array. The resulting, encoded Array will contain the array
part of the table, and will be of the same length as the #
operator on that
table. Holes in the table will be encoded with the null
JSON value.
Example:
local t = { "hello", "world" }
setmetatable(t, cjson.array_mt)
cjson.encode(t) -- ["hello","world"]
Or:
local t = {}
t[1] = "one"
t[2] = "two"
t[4] = "three"
t.foo = "bar"
setmetatable(t, cjson.array_mt)
cjson.encode(t) -- ["one","two",null,"three"]
This value was introduced in the 2.1.0.5
release of this module.
syntax: setmetatable({}, cjson.empty_array_mt)
A metatable which can "tag" a table as a JSON Array in case it is empty (that is, if the
table has no elements, cjson.encode()
will encode it as an empty JSON Array).
Instead of:
local function serialize(arr)
if #arr < 1 then
arr = cjson.empty_array
end
return cjson.encode({some_array = arr})
end
This is more concise:
local function serialize(arr)
setmetatable(arr, cjson.empty_array_mt)
return cjson.encode({some_array = arr})
end
Both will generate:
{
"some_array": []
}
syntax: cjson.encode_number_precision(precision)
This fork allows encoding of numbers with a precision
up to 16 decimals (vs. 14 in mpx/lua-cjson).
syntax: cjson.encode_escape_forward_slash(enabled)
default: true
If enabled, forward slash '/' will be encoded as '/'.
If disabled, forward slash '/' will be encoded as '/' (no escape is applied).
syntax: cjson.decode_array_with_array_mt(enabled)
default: false
If enabled, JSON Arrays decoded by cjson.decode
will result in Lua
tables with the array_mt
metatable. This can ensure a 1-to-1
relationship between arrays upon multiple encoding/decoding of your
JSON data with this module.
If disabled, JSON Arrays will be decoded to plain Lua tables, without
the array_mt
metatable.
The enabled
argument is a boolean.
Example:
local cjson = require "cjson"
-- default behavior
local my_json = [[{"my_array":[]}]]
local t = cjson.decode(my_json)
cjson.encode(t) -- {"my_array":{}} back to an object
-- now, if this behavior is enabled
cjson.decode_array_with_array_mt(true)
local my_json = [[{"my_array":[]}]]
local t = cjson.decode(my_json)
cjson.encode(t) -- {"my_array":[]} properly re-encoded as an array