NAME
Devel::JSON - Easy JSON output for one-liners
SYNOPSIS
$ perl -d:JSON -e '[ 1..3 ]'
[
1,
2,
3
]
$ perl -d:JSON -e '{b => 2, c => 4}'
{
"b": 2,
"c": 4
}
Default output encoding is UTF-x if this is the charset of the locale:
$ perl -d:JSON -e "qq<\N{SNOWMAN}>"
"☃"
Force ASCII output:
$ perl -d:JSON=ascii -e "qq<\N{SNOWMAN}>"
"\u2603"
DESCRIPTION
If you use this module from the command-line, the last value of your one-liner (-e
) code will be serialized as JSON data. The expression is evaluated in scalar context.
The output will be either UTF-x (UTF-8, UTF-16...) or just ASCII, depending on your locale (check LC_CTYPE
on Unix or GNU).
As a convenience (because you may want to deal with non-ASCII content in your -e
source), your code is converted from bytes using the current locale.
The following JSON options are enabled by default:
pretty
canonical
allow_nonref
You can enable more options by giving import arguments (a '-' prefix disables the option):
# Force ASCII output
$ perl -d:JSON=ascii -e '[1..3]'
# Disable pretty (note '-' before the name)
$ perl -d:JSON=-pretty -e '[1..3]'
# Non-ASCII in -e
$ perl -d:JSON=ascii -e '"Mengué"'
"Mengu\u00e9"
SEE ALSO
JSON, JSON::MaybeXS, json-to (App::JSON::to).
AUTHOR
Olivier Mengué, mailto:dolmen@cpan.org.
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright © 2015 Olivier Mengué.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.