Crates.io | jsonptr |
lib.rs | jsonptr |
version | 0.6.3 |
source | src |
created_at | 2022-06-02 13:47:07.079252 |
updated_at | 2024-10-01 18:15:32.893726 |
description | Data structures and logic for resolving, assigning, and deleting by JSON Pointers (RFC 6901) |
homepage | https://github.com/chanced/jsonptr |
repository | https://github.com/chanced/jsonptr |
max_upload_size | |
id | 598871 |
size | 250,961 |
JSON Pointers (RFC 6901)
defines a string syntax for identifying a specific location within a JSON, or
similar, document. This crate provides two types, Pointer
and PointerBuf
(akin to Path
and PathBuf
), for working with them abstractly.
A pointer is composed of zero or more Token
s, single segments which
represent a field of an object or an index
of an array, and are bounded by
either '/'
or the end of the string. Tokens are lightly encoded, where '~'
is escaped as "~0"
due to it signaling encoding and '/'
is escaped as "~1"
because '/'
separates tokens and would split the token into two otherwise.
Token
s can be iterated over using either Tokens
, returned from the
tokens
method of a pointer or Components
, returned from the
components
method. The difference being that Tokens
iterates over each
token in the pointer, while Components
iterates over Component
s, which can
represent the root of the document or a single token of the pointer.
Operations resolve
, assign
and delete
are provided as traits with
corresponding methods on pointer types. Implementations of each trait are
provided for value types of the crates serde_json
and toml
. All
operations are enabled by default but are gated by feature
flags.
To parse a Pointer
from a string, use either Pointer::parse
, for
potentially fallible parsing, or the const fn
from_static
to produce a
&'static Pointer
from a string that is known to be valid.
use jsonptr::Pointer;
let ptr = Pointer::parse("/examples/0/name").unwrap();
let static_ptr = Pointer::from_static("/examples/0/name");
assert_eq!(ptr, static_ptr);
let parent = ptr.parent().unwrap();
assert_eq!(parent, Pointer::parse("/examples/0").unwrap());
let (token, remaining) = ptr.split_front().unwrap();
assert_eq!(token.decoded(), "examples");
assert_eq!(remaining, Pointer::parse("/0/name").unwrap());
PointerBuf
s can be parsed using PointerBuf::parse
or constructed from an
iterator of Token
s with the from_tokens
method:
use jsonptr::PointerBuf;
let mut buf = PointerBuf::parse("/examples/0/name").unwrap();
let from_tokens = PointerBuf::from_tokens(["examples", "0", "name"]);
assert_eq!(&buf, &from_tokens);
buf.push_front("pointer");
buf.push_front("~");
buf.push_back("/");
assert_eq!(buf.as_str(), "/~0/pointer/examples/0/name/~1");
Iterating over the tokens or components of a pointer:
use jsonptr::{Pointer, Component, Token};
let ptr = Pointer::from_static("/path/to/value");
// Using the `tokens` method:
let tokens: Vec<_> = ptr.tokens().collect();
assert_eq!(tokens, vec![Token::new("path"), Token::new("to"), Token::new("value")]);
// Using the `components` method:
let mut components = ptr.components();
assert_eq!(components.next(), Some(Component::Root));
assert_eq!(components.next(), Some(Component::Token(Token::new("path"))));
assert_eq!(components.next(), Some(Component::Token(Token::new("to"))));
assert_eq!(components.next(), Some(Component::Token(Token::new("value"))));
To get a value at the location of a pointer, use either the Resolve
and
ResolveMut
traits or Pointer::resolve
and Pointer::resolve_mut
methods. See the resolve
mod for more information.
use jsonptr::Pointer;
use serde_json::json;
let ptr = Pointer::parse("/foo/bar").unwrap();
let data = json!({"foo": { "bar": 34 }});
let bar = ptr.resolve(&data).unwrap();
assert_eq!(bar, &json!(34));
Values can be set, with path expansion, using the either the Assign
trait or
Pointer::assign
. See assign
for more information.
use jsonptr::Pointer;
use serde_json::json;
let ptr = Pointer::parse("/secret/universe").unwrap();
let mut data = json!({"secret": { "universe": 42 }});
let replaced = ptr.assign(&mut data, json!(34)).unwrap();
assert_eq!(replaced, Some(json!(42)));
assert_eq!(data, json!({"secret": { "universe": 34 }}));
Values can be removed with the either the Delete
trait or
Pointer::delete
. See delete
for more information.
use jsonptr::Pointer;
use serde_json::json;
let ptr = Pointer::parse("/secret/universe").unwrap();
let mut data = json!({"secret": { "universe": 42 }});
let replaced = ptr.assign(&mut data, json!(34)).unwrap();
assert_eq!(replaced, Some(json!(42)));
assert_eq!(data, json!({"secret": { "universe": 34 }}));
Flag | Description | Enables | Default |
---|---|---|---|
"std" |
Implements std::error::Error for error types |
✓ | |
"serde" |
Enables serde support for types |
✓ | |
"json" |
Implements ops for serde_json::Value |
"serde" |
✓ |
"toml" |
Implements ops for toml::Value |
"std" , toml |
|
"assign" |
Enables the assign module and related pointer methods, providing a means to assign a value to a specific location within a document |
✓ | |
"resolve" |
Enables the resolve module and related pointer methods, providing a means to resolve a value at a specific location within a document |
✓ | |
"delete" |
Enables the delete module and related pointer methods, providing a means to delete a value at a specific location within a document |
"resolve" |
✓ |
Licensed under either of
at your convenience.
Contributions and feedback are always welcome and appreciated. If you find an issue, please open a ticket or a pull request.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.