NAME
TOML::Tiny - a minimal, pure perl TOML parser and serializer
VERSION
version 0.16
SYNOPSIS
use TOML::Tiny qw(from_toml to_toml);
binmode STDIN, ':encoding(UTF-8)';
binmode STDOUT, ':encoding(UTF-8)';
# Decoding TOML
my $toml = do{ local $/; <STDIN> };
my ($parsed, $error) = from_toml $toml;
# Encoding TOML
say to_toml({
stuff => {
about => ['other', 'stuff'],
},
});
# Object API
my $parser = TOML::Tiny->new;
my $data = $parser->decode($toml);
say $parser->encode($data);
DESCRIPTION
TOML::Tiny
implements a pure-perl parser and generator for the TOML data format. It conforms to TOML v1.0 (with a few caveats; see "strict").
TOML::Tiny
strives to maintain an interface compatible to the TOML and TOML::Parser modules, and could even be used to override $TOML::Parser
:
use TOML;
use TOML::Tiny;
local $TOML::Parser = TOML::Tiny->new(...);
say to_toml(...);
EXPORTS
TOML::Tiny
exports the following to functions for compatibility with the TOML module. See "FUNCTIONS" in TOML.
from_toml
Parses a string of TOML
-formatted source and returns the resulting data structure. Any arguments after the first are passed to TOML::Tiny::Parser's constructor.
If there is a syntax error in the TOML
source, from_toml
will die with an explanation which includes the line number of the error.
my $result = eval{ from_toml($toml_string) };
Alternately, this routine may be called in list context, in which case syntax errors will result in returning two values, undef
and an error message.
my ($result, $error) = from_toml($toml_string);
Additional arguments may be passed after the toml source string; see "new".
GOTCHAS
- Big integers and floats
-
TOML
supports integers and floats larger than what many perls support. WhenTOML::Tiny
encounters a value it may not be able to represent as a number, it will instead return a Math::BigInt or Math::BigFloat. This behavior can be overridden by providing inflation routines:my $toml = TOML::Tiny->new( inflate_float => sub{ return do_something_else_with_floats( $_[0] ); }; );
to_toml
Encodes a hash ref as a TOML
-formatted string.
my $toml = to_toml({foo => {'bar' => 'bat'}});
# [foo]
# bar="bat"
mapping perl to TOML types
table
array
boolean
numeric types
These are tricky in perl. When encountering a Math::Big[Int|Float]
, that representation is used.
If the value is a defined (non-ref) scalar with the SVf_IOK
or SVf_NOK
flags set, the value will be emitted unchanged. This is in line with most other packages, so the normal hinting hacks for typed output apply:
number => 0 + $number,
string => "" . $string,
- Math::BigInt
- Math::BigFloat
- numerical scalars
datetime
- RFC3339-formatted string
-
e.g.,
"1985-04-12T23:20:50.52Z"
- DateTime
-
DateTimes are formatted as
RFC3339
, as expected byTOML
. However,TOML
supports the concept of a "local" time zone, which strays fromRFC3339
by allowing a datetime without a time zone offset. This is represented in perl by aDateTime
with a floating time zone.
string
All other non-ref scalars are treated as strings.
OBJECT API
new
- inflate_datetime
-
By default,
TOML::Tiny
treats TOML datetimes as strings in the generated data structure. Theinflate_datetime
parameter allows the caller to provide a routine to intercept those as they are generated:use DateTime::Format::RFC3339; my $parser = TOML::Tiny->new( inflate_datetime => sub{ my ($dt_string) = @_; # DateTime::Format::RFC3339 will set the resulting DateTime's formatter # to itself. Fallback is the DateTime default, ISO8601, with a possibly # floating time zone. return eval{ DateTime::Format::RFC3339->parse_datetime($dt_string) } || DateTime::Format::ISO8601->parse_datetime($dt_string); }, );
- inflate_boolean
-
By default, boolean values in a
TOML
document result in a1
or0
. If Types::Serialiser is installed, they will instead beTypes::Serialiser::true
orTypes::Serialiser::false
.If you wish to override this, you can provide your own routine to generate values:
my $parser = TOML::Tiny->new( inflate_boolean => sub{ my $bool = shift; if ($bool eq 'true') { return 'The Truth'; } else { return 'A Lie'; } }, );
- inflate_integer
-
TOML integers are 64 bit and may not match the size of the compiled perl's internal integer type. By default,
TOML::Tiny
coerces numbers that fit within a perl number by adding0
. For bignums, a Math::BigInt is returned. This may be overridden by providing an inflation routine:my $parser = TOML::Tiny->new( inflate_integer => sub{ my $parsed = shift; return sprintf 'the number "%d"', $parsed; }; );
- inflate_float
-
TOML floats are 64 bit and may not match the size of the compiled perl's internal float type. As with integers, floats are coerced to numbers and large floats are upgraded to Math::BigFloats. The special strings
NaN
andinf
may also be returned. You can override this by specifying an inflation routine.my $parser = TOML::Tiny->new( inflate_float => sub{ my $parsed = shift; return sprintf '"%0.8f" is a float', $parsed; }; );
- strict
-
strict
imposes some miscellaneous strictures onTOML
input, such as disallowing trailing commas in inline tables and failing on invalid UTF8 input.Note:
strict
was previously calledstrict_arrays
. Both are accepted for backward compatibility, although enforcement of homogenous arrays is no longer supported as it has been dropped from the spec.
decode
Decodes TOML
and returns a hash ref. Dies on parse error.
encode
Encodes a perl hash ref as a TOML
-formatted string.
parse
Alias for decode
to provide compatibility with TOML::Parser
when overriding the parser by setting $TOML::Parser
.
DIFFERENCES FROM TOML AND TOML::Parser
TOML::Tiny
differs in a few significant ways from the TOML module, particularly in adding support for newer TOML
features and strictness.
TOML defaults to lax parsing and provides strict_mode
to (slightly) tighten things up. TOML::Tiny
defaults to (somewhat) stricter parsing, enabling some extra strictures with "strict".
TOML::Tiny
supports a number of options which do not exist in TOML: "inflate_integer", "inflate_float", and "strict".
TOML::Tiny
ignores invalid surrogate pairs within basic and multiline strings (TOML may attempt to decode an invalid pair). Additionally, only those character escapes officially supported by TOML are interpreted as such by TOML::Tiny
.
TOML::Tiny
supports stripping initial whitespace and handles lines terminating with a backslash correctly in multilne strings:
# TOML input
x="""
foo"""
y="""\
how now \
brown \
bureaucrat.\
"""
# Perl output
{x => 'foo', y => 'how now brown bureaucrat.'}
TOML::Tiny
includes support for integers specified in binary, octal or hex as well as the special float values inf
and nan
.
SEE ALSO
- TOML::Tiny::Grammar
-
Regexp scraps used by
TOML::Tiny
to parse TOML source.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Thanks to ZipRecruiter for encouraging their employees to contribute back to the open source ecosystem. Without their dedication to quality software development this distribution would not exist.
A big thank you to those who have contributed code or bug reports:
AUTHOR
Jeff Ober <sysread@fastmail.fm>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2023 by Jeff Ober.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.