NAME
JSON::Tiny - Minimalistic JSON. No dependencies.
SYNOPSIS
use JSON::Tiny qw(decode_json encode_json);
# Encode and decode JSON (die on errors)
my $bytes = encode_json({foo => [1, 2], bar => 'hello!', baz => \1});
my $hash = decode_json($bytes);
# Handle errors
my $json = JSON::Tiny->new;
if(defined(my $hash = $json->decode($bytes))) { say $hash->{message} }
else { say 'Error: ', $json->error }
# Use the shortcut interface (die on errors)
use JSON::Tiny 'j';
my $bytes = j({foo => [1, 2], bar => 'hello!', baz => \1});
my $hash = j($bytes);
DESCRIPTION
JSON::Tiny is a minimalistic standalone adaptation of Mojo::JSON, from the Mojolicious framework. It is a single-source-file module with 350 lines of code and core-only dependencies.
Key features include RFC 4627 JSON, transparent Unicode support, speed, small memory footprint, and a minimal code base ideal for bundling or inlining. JSON::Tiny and Mojo::JSON are possibly the fastest pure-Perl implementations of RFC 4627.
JSON::Tiny supports normal Perl data types like Scalar
, Array
reference, Hash
reference and will try to call the TO_JSON
method on blessed references, or stringify them if it doesn't exist.
[1, -2, 3] -> [1, -2, 3]
{"foo": "bar"} -> {foo => 'bar'}
Literal names will be translated to and from JSON::Tiny constants or a similar native Perl value. In addition Scalar
references will be used to generate booleans, based on if their values are true or false.
true -> JSON::Tiny->true
false -> JSON::Tiny->false
null -> undef
Decoding UTF-16 (LE/BE) and UTF-32 (LE/BE) will be handled transparently, encoding will only generate UTF-8. The two Unicode whitespace characters u2028
and u2029
will always be escaped to make JSONP easier.
FUNCTIONS
JSON::Tiny implements the following functions, which can be imported individually.
decode_json
my $array = decode_json($bytes);
my $hash = decode_json($bytes);
Decode JSON to Perl data structure and die if decoding fails.
encode_json
my $bytes = encode_json([1, 2, 3]);
my $bytes = encode_json({foo => 'bar'});
Encode Perl data structure to JSON.
j
my $bytes = j([1, 2, 3]);
my $bytes = j({foo => 'bar'});
my $array = j($bytes);
my $hash = j($bytes);
Encode Perl data structure or decode JSON and return undef
if decoding fails.
Dies with a JSON::Tiny::error
message on decode failure.
ATTRIBUTES
JSON::Tiny implements the following attributes.
error
my $err = $json->error;
$json = $json->error('Parser error');
Parser errors.
METHODS
JSON::Tiny implements the following methods.
new
my $json = JSON::Tiny->new;
Instantiate a JSON::Tiny object.
decode
my $array = $json->decode($bytes);
my $hash = $json->decode($bytes);
Decode JSON to Perl data structure and return undef
if decoding fails.
encode
my $bytes = $json->encode([1, 2, 3]);
my $bytes = $json->encode({foo => 'bar'});
Encode Perl data structure to JSON.
false
my $false = JSON::Tiny->false;
my $false = $json->false;
False value, used because Perl has no native equivalent.
true
my $true = JSON::Tiny->true;
my $true = $json->true;
True value, used because Perl has no native equivalent.
More on Booleans
A reference to a scalar (even if blessed) will also be encoded as a Boolean value unless it has a TO_JSON method.
my $json = $j->encode( { b => \1, a => \0 } ); # {"b":true,"a":false}
Boolean false and true values returned when JSON is decoded are JSON::Tiny::_Bool objects with stringification and numeric overloading. As an advanced option, if the user requires a plain old literal 0
or 1
, setting $JSON::Tiny::FALSE = 0;
and $JSON::Tiny::TRUE = 1;
, or some other value, including blessed references prior to calling the decode
method will have the desired effect. Use local
to prevent the change from causing errors at a distance.
Tiny
Comparing JSON::Tiny with JSON::PP from the JSON distribution:
JSON::PP is configurable, but more complex. JSON::Tiny offers sane defaults, and zero configuration.
Installation with
cpanm
: JSON::PP, 5.2 seconds. JSON::Tiny, 1.9 seconds (including download).Minimal Dependencies: Both JSON::PP and JSON::Tiny only use core dependencies. JSON::Tiny requires Perl 5.8.4, while JSON::PP requires 5.6.
Simple Design: JSON has 2254 lines of code in six modules and five files, and a dist tarball of 84KB. JSON::Tiny has under 350 lines of code; a single module in a single file -- great for embedding. The tarball is 19KB.
JSON::PP has 42 functions and methods. JSON::Tiny has seven.
Performance (Benchmarks):
Rate JSON_PP JSON_Tiny JSON_PP 288/s -- -62% JSON_Tiny 767/s 166% --
The benchmark code is included in this distribution's
examples/
folder. JSON will automatically use JSON::XS if it's available, in which case JSON::XS wins.JSON::Tiny's lightweight design also reduces its startup time as compared to the JSON module. This may be beneficial in applications such as CGI, where processes are started frequently.
Light Memory Needs: Memory usage was tested with http://valgrind.org/valgrind and Devel::MemoryTrace::Lite by running
examples/json_pp_alone.pl
andexamples/json_tiny_alone.pl
.JSON (JSON::PP) -- Devel::MemoryTrace::Lite: 1.7MB. valgrind: 6.1MB.
JSON::Tiny -- Devel::MemoryTrace::Lite: 1.1MB. valgrind: 5.4MB.
These utilities show that JSON::Tiny is 600-700KB smaller than JSON::PP.
CONFIGURATION AND ENVIRONMENT
No configuration.
DEPENDENCIES
Perl 5.8.4 or newer.
INCOMPATIBILITIES
Incompatible with Exporter versions that predate Perl 5.8.4. Perl 5.8.4 shipped with Exporter v5.58. Exporter became dual-life as of v5.59. Upgrade Exporter to v5.59 or newer for Perl versions older than 5.8.4.
AUTHOR
David Oswald, <davido at cpan.org>
Code and tests were adapted from Mojo::JSON.
SUPPORT
Directed support requests to the author. Direct bug reports to CPAN's Request Tracker (RT).
You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
perldoc JSON::Tiny
You may look for additional information at:
Github: Development is hosted on Github at:
RT: CPAN's request tracker (report bugs here)
AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation
CPAN Ratings
Search CPAN
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The Mojolicious team for producing an excellent product that offers light-weight implementations of many useful tools. This module was adapted directly from Mojo::JSON, which was chosen as a model because it is robust, minimal, and well tested. Mojo::JSON's tests were also adapted to a dependency-free design.
Christian Hansen, whos GitHub Gist provided the basis for Mojo::JSON, from which this module is derived.
Randal Schwartz for showing Los Angeles Perl Mongers (Sept 2012) his pure-regexp JSON parser (PerlMonks). He wasn't involved in JSON::Tiny, but it was exploring alternatives to his solution that led to this fork of Mojo::JSON.
LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2012-2013 David Oswald.
This program is free software, you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the Artistic License version 2.0.
See http://www.perlfoundation.org/artistic_license_2_0 for more information.