NAME
JSON::MaybeXS - Use Cpanel::JSON::XS with a fallback to JSON::XS and JSON::PP
SYNOPSIS
use JSON::MaybeXS;
my $data_structure = decode_json($json_input);
my $json_output = encode_json($data_structure);
my $json = JSON->new;
my $json_with_args = JSON::MaybeXS->new(utf8 => 1); # or { utf8 => 1 }
DESCRIPTION
This module first checks to see if either Cpanel::JSON::XS or JSON::XS is already loaded, in which case it uses that module. Otherwise it tries to load Cpanel::JSON::XS, then JSON::XS, then JSON::PP in order, and either uses the first module it finds or throws an error.
It then exports the encode_json
and decode_json
functions from the loaded module, along with a JSON
constant that returns the class name for calling new
on.
If you're writing fresh code rather than replacing JSON.pm usage, you might want to pass options as constructor args rather than calling mutators, so we provide our own new
method that supports that.
EXPORTS
encode_json
, decode_json
and JSON
are exported by default; is_bool
is exported on request.
To import only some symbols, specify them on the use
line:
use JSON::MaybeXS qw(encode_json decode_json is_bool); # functions only
use JSON::MaybeXS qw(JSON); # JSON constant only
To import all available sensible symbols (encode_json
, decode_json
, and is_bool
), use :all
:
use JSON::MaybeXS ':all';
To import all symbols including those needed by legacy apps that use JSON::PP:
use JSON::MaybeXS ':legacy';
This imports the to_json
and from_json
symbols as well as everything in :all
. NOTE: This is to support legacy code that makes extensive use of to_json
and from_json
which you are not yet in a position to refactor. DO NOT use this import tag in new code, in order to avoid the crawling horrors of getting UTF-8 support subtly wrong. See the documentation for JSON for further details.
encode_json
This is the encode_json
function provided by the selected implementation module, and takes a perl data structure which is serialised to JSON text.
my $json_text = encode_json($data_structure);
decode_json
This is the decode_json
function provided by the selected implementation module, and takes a string of JSON text to deserialise to a perl data structure.
my $data_structure = decode_json($json_text);
to_json, from_json
See JSON for details. These are included to support legacy code only.
JSON
The JSON
constant returns the selected implementation module's name for use as a class name - so:
my $json_obj = JSON->new; # returns a Cpanel::JSON::XS or JSON::PP object
and that object can then be used normally:
my $data_structure = $json_obj->decode($json_text); # etc.
is_bool
$is_boolean = is_bool($scalar)
Returns true if the passed scalar represents either true
or false
, two constants that act like 1
and 0
, respectively and are used to represent JSON true
and false
values in Perl.
Since this is a bare sub in the various backend classes, it cannot be called as a class method like the other interfaces; it must be called as a function, with no invocant. It supports the representation used in all JSON backends.
CONSTRUCTOR
new
With JSON::PP, JSON::XS and Cpanel::JSON::XS you are required to call mutators to set options, such as:
my $json = $class->new->utf8(1)->pretty(1);
Since this is a trifle irritating and noticeably un-perlish, we also offer:
my $json = JSON::MaybeXS->new(utf8 => 1, pretty => 1);
which works equivalently to the above (and in the usual tradition will accept a hashref instead of a hash, should you so desire).
The resulting object is blessed into the underlying backend, which offers (at least) the methods encode
and decode
.
BOOLEANS
To include JSON-aware booleans (true
, false
) in your data, just do:
use JSON::MaybeXS;
my $true = JSON->true;
my $false = JSON->false;
CONVERTING FROM JSON::Any
JSON::Any used to be the favoured compatibility layer above the various JSON backends, but over time has grown a lot of extra code to deal with legacy backends (e.g. JSON::Syck) that are no longer needed. This is a rough guide of translating such code:
Change code from:
use JSON::Any;
my $json = JSON::Any->new->objToJson($data); # or to_json($data), or Dump($data)
to:
use JSON::MaybeXS;
my $json = encode_json($data);
Change code from:
use JSON::Any;
my $data = JSON::Any->new->jsonToObj($json); # or from_json($json), or Load($json)
to:
use JSON::MaybeXS;
my $json = decode_json($data);
CAVEATS
The new()
method in this module is technically a factory, not a constructor, because the objects it returns will NOT be blessed into the JSON::MaybeXS
class.
If you are using an object returned by this module as a Moo(se) attribute, this type constraint code:
is 'json' => ( isa => 'JSON::MaybeXS' );
will NOT do what you expect. Instead, either rely on the JSON
class constant described above, as so:
is 'json' => ( isa => JSON::MaybeXS::JSON() );
Alternatively, you can use duck typing:
use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints 'duck_type';
is 'json' => ( isa => Object , duck_type([qw/ encode decode /]));
AUTHOR
mst - Matt S. Trout (cpan:MSTROUT) <mst@shadowcat.co.uk>
CONTRIBUTORS
Clinton Gormley <drtech@cpan.org>
Karen Etheridge <ether@cpan.org>
Kieren Diment <diment@gmail.com>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (c) 2013 the JSON::MaybeXS
"AUTHOR" and "CONTRIBUTORS" as listed above.
LICENSE
This library is free software and may be distributed under the same terms as perl itself.