This document contains all the API usage and examples for the yyjson library.
All public functions and structs are prefixed with yyjson_
, and all constants are prefixed with YYJSON_
.
The library have 2 types of data structures: immutable and mutable:
Immutable | Mutable | |
---|---|---|
Document | yyjson_doc | yyjson_mut_doc |
Value | yyjson_val | yyjson_mut_val |
When reading a JSON, yyjson returns immutable documents and values.
When building a JSON, yyjson creates mutable documents and values.
The document holds the memory for all its JSON values and strings.
For most immutable APIs, you can just add a mut
after yyjson_
to get the mutable version, for example:
char *yyjson_write(yyjson_doc *doc, ...);
char *yyjson_mut_write(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, ...);
bool yyjson_is_str(yyjson_val *val);
bool yyjson_mut_is_str(yyjson_mut_val *val);
The library also provides some functions to convert values between immutable and mutable:
// doc -> mut_doc
yyjson_mut_doc *yyjson_doc_mut_copy(yyjson_doc *doc, ...);
// val -> mut_val
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_val_mut_copy(yyjson_val *val, ...);
// mut_doc -> doc
yyjson_doc *yyjson_mut_doc_imut_copy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, ...);
// mut_val -> val
yyjson_doc *yyjson_mut_val_imut_copy(yyjson_mut_val *val, ...);
The library supports strings with or without null-terminator ('\0').
When you need to use a string without a null-terminator or when you explicitly know the length of the string, you can use the function that ends with n
, for example:
// null-terminator is required
bool yyjson_equals_str(yyjson_val *val, const char *str);
// null-terminator is optional
bool yyjson_equals_strn(yyjson_val *val, const char *str, size_t len);
When creating JSON, yyjson treats strings as constants for better performance. However, if your string will be modified, you should use a function with a cpy
to copy the string to the document, for example:
// reference only, null-terminated is required
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_str(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *str);
// reference only, null-terminator is optional
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_strn(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *str, size_t len);
// copied, null-terminated is required
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_strcpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *str);
// copied, null-terminator is optional
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_strncpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *str, size_t len);
The library provides 4 functions for reading JSON.
Each function accepts an input of UTF-8 data or a file,
returns a document if it successful or NULL
if it fails.
The dat
should be a UTF-8 string, null-terminator is not required.
The len
is the byte length of dat
.
The flg
is reader flag, pass 0 if you don't need it, see reader flag
for details.
If input is invalid, NULL
is returned.
yyjson_doc *yyjson_read(const char *dat,
size_t len,
yyjson_read_flag flg);
Sample code:
const char *str = "[1,2,3,4]";
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read(str, strlen(str), 0);
if (doc) {...}
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
The path
is JSON file path.
The flg
is reader flag, pass 0 if you don't need it, see reader flag
for details.
The alc
is memory allocator, pass NULL if you don't need it, see memory allocator
for details.
The err
is a pointer to receive error message, pass NULL if you don't need it.
If input is invalid, NULL
is returned.
yyjson_doc *yyjson_read_file(const char *path,
yyjson_read_flag flg,
const yyjson_alc *alc,
yyjson_read_err *err);
Sample code:
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_file("/tmp/test.json", 0, NULL, NULL);
if (doc) {...}
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
The fp
is file pointer. The data will be read from the current position of the FILE to the end.
The flg
is reader flag, pass 0 if you don't need it, see reader flag
for details.
The alc
is memory allocator, pass NULL if you don't need it, see memory allocator
for details.
The err
is a pointer to receive error message, pass NULL if you don't need it.
If input is invalid, NULL
is returned.
yyjson_doc *yyjson_read_fp(FILE *fp,
yyjson_read_flag flg,
const yyjson_alc *alc,
yyjson_read_err *err);
Sample code:
FILE *fp = fdopen(fd, "rb"); // POSIX file descriptor (fd)
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_fp(fp, 0, NULL, NULL);
if (fp) fclose(fp);
if (doc) {...}
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
The dat
should be a UTF-8 string, you can pass a const string if you don't use YYJSON_READ_INSITU
flag.
The len
is the dat
's length in bytes.
The flg
is reader flag, pass 0 if you don't need it, see reader flag
for details.
The alc
is memory allocator, pass NULL if you don't need it, see memory allocator
for details.
The err
is a pointer to receive error message, pass NULL if you don't need it.
yyjson_doc *yyjson_read_opts(char *dat,
size_t len,
yyjson_read_flag flg,
const yyjson_alc *alc,
yyjson_read_err *err);
Sample code:
const char *dat = your_file.bytes;
size_t len = your_file.size;
yyjson_read_flag flg = YYJSON_READ_ALLOW_COMMENTS | YYJSON_READ_ALLOW_INF_AND_NAN;
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_opts((char *)dat, len, flg, NULL, NULL);
if (doc) {...}
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
When reading JSON fails and you need error information, you can pass a yyjson_read_err
pointer to the yyjson_read_xxx()
functions to receive the error details.
Sample code:
char *dat = ...;
size_t dat_len = ...;
yyjson_read_err err;
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_opts(dat, dat_len, 0, NULL, &err);
if (!doc) {
printf("read error: %s, code: %u at byte position: %lu\n",
err.msg, err.code, err.pos);
// printed:
// read error: trailing comma is not allowed, code: 7, at byte position: 40
}
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
The pos in the error information indicates the byte position where the error occurred. If you need the line and column number of the error, you can use the yyjson_locate_pos()
function. Note that the line
and column
start from 1, while character
starts from 0. All values are calculated based on Unicode characters to ensure compatibility with various text editors.
Sample code:
char *dat = ...;
size_t dat_len = ...;
yyjson_read_err err = ...;
size_t line, col, chr;
if (yyjson_locate_pos(dat, dat_len, err.pos, &line, &col, &chr)) {
printf("error at line: %lu, column: %lu, character index: %lu\n",
line, col, chr);
// printed:
// error at line: 3, column: 5, character index: 32
}
The library provides a set of flags for JSON reader.
You can use a single flag, or combine multiple flags with bitwise |
operator.
● YYJSON_READ_NOFLAG = 0
This is the default flag for JSON reader (RFC-8259 or ECMA-404 compliant):
- Read positive integer as
uint64_t
. - Read negative integer as
int64_t
. - Read floating-point number as
double
with correct rounding. - Read integer which cannot fit in
uint64_t
orint64_t
asdouble
. - Report error if double number is infinity.
- Report error if string contains invalid UTF-8 character or BOM.
- Report error on trailing commas, comments,
Inf
andNaN
literals.
● YYJSON_READ_INSITU
Read the input data in-situ.
This option allows the reader to modify and use the input data to store string values, which can slightly improve reading speed. However, the caller must ensure that the input data is held until the document is freed. The input data must be padded with at least YYJSON_PADDING_SIZE
bytes. For example: [1,2]
should be [1,2]\0\0\0\0
, input length should be 5.
Sample code:
size_t dat_len = ...;
char *buf = malloc(dat_len + YYJSON_PADDING_SIZE); // create a buffer larger than (len + 4)
read_from_socket(buf, ...);
memset(buf + file_size, 0, YYJSON_PADDING_SIZE); // set 4-byte padding after data
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_opts(buf, dat_len, YYJSON_READ_INSITU, NULL, NULL);
if (doc) {...}
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
free(buf); // the input dat should free after document.
● YYJSON_READ_STOP_WHEN_DONE
Stop parsing when reaching the end of a JSON document instead of issues an error if there's additional content after it.
This option is useful for parsing small pieces of JSON within larger data, such as NDJSON.
Sample code:
// Single file with multiple JSON, such as:
// [1,2,3] [4,5,6] {"a":"b"}
size_t file_size = ...;
char *dat = malloc(file_size + 4);
your_read_file(dat, file);
memset(dat + file_size, 0, 4); // add padding
char *hdr = dat;
char *end = dat + file_size;
yyjson_read_flag flg = YYJSON_READ_INSITU | YYJSON_READ_STOP_WHEN_DONE;
while (true) {
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_opts(hdr, end - hdr, flg, NULL, NULL);
if (!doc) break;
your_doc_process(doc);
hdr += yyjson_doc_get_read_size(doc); // move to next position
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
}
free(dat);
● YYJSON_READ_ALLOW_TRAILING_COMMAS
Allow a single trailing comma at the end of an object or array (non-standard), for example:
{
"a": 1,
"b": 2,
}
[
"a",
"b",
]
● YYJSON_READ_ALLOW_COMMENTS
Allow C-style single line and multiple line comments (non-standard), for example:
{
"name": "Harry", // single line comment
"id": /* multiple line comment */ 123
}
● YYJSON_READ_ALLOW_INF_AND_NAN
Allow nan/inf number or case-insensitive literal (non-standard), for example:
{
"large": 123e999,
"nan1": NaN,
"nan2": nan,
"inf1:" Inf,
"inf2": -Infinity
}
● YYJSON_READ_NUMBER_AS_RAW
Read all numbers as raw strings without parsing.
This flag is useful if you want to handle number parsing yourself.
You can use the following functions to extract raw strings:
bool yyjson_is_raw(yyjson_val *val);
const char *yyjson_get_raw(yyjson_val *val);
size_t yyjson_get_len(yyjson_val *val)
● YYJSON_READ_BIGNUM_AS_RAW
Read big numbers as raw strings.
This flag is useful if you want to parse these big numbers yourself.
These big numbers include integers that cannot be represented by int64_t
and uint64_t
, and floating-point numbers that cannot be represented by finite double
.
Note that this flag will be overridden by YYJSON_READ_NUMBER_AS_RAW
flag.
● YYJSON_READ_ALLOW_INVALID_UNICODE
Allow reading invalid unicode when parsing string values (non-standard),
for example:
"\x80xyz"
"\xF0\x81\x81\x81"
This flag permits invalid characters to appear in the string values, but it still reports errors for invalid escape sequences. It does not impact the performance of correctly encoded strings.
Warning: when using this option, be aware that strings within JSON values may contain incorrect encoding, so you need to handle these strings carefully to avoid security risks.
The library provides 4 sets of functions for writing JSON.
Each function accepts an input of JSON document or root value, and returns a UTF-8 string or file.
The doc/val
is JSON document or root value, if you pass NULL, you will get NULL result.
The flg
is writer flag, pass 0 if you don't need it, see writer flag
for details.
The len
is a pointer to receive output length (not including the
null-terminator), pass NULL if you don't need it.
This function returns a new JSON string, or NULL if error occurs.
The string is encoded as UTF-8 with a null-terminator.
You should use free() or alc->free() to release it when it's no longer needed.
// doc -> str
char *yyjson_write(const yyjson_doc *doc, yyjson_write_flag flg, size_t *len);
// mut_doc -> str
char *yyjson_mut_write(const yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_write_flag flg, size_t *len);
// val -> str
char *yyjson_val_write(const yyjson_val *val, yyjson_write_flag flg, size_t *len);
// mut_val -> str
char *yyjson_mut_val_write(const yyjson_mut_val *val, yyjson_write_flag flg, size_t *len);
Sample code 1:
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read("[1,2,3]", 7, 0);
char *json = yyjson_write(doc, YYJSON_WRITE_PRETTY, NULL);
printf("%s\n", json);
free(json);
Sample code 2:
yyjson_mut_doc *doc = yyjson_mut_doc_new(NULL);
yyjson_mut_val *arr = yyjson_mut_arr(doc);
yyjson_mut_doc_set_root(doc, arr);
yyjson_mut_arr_add_int(doc, arr, 1);
yyjson_mut_arr_add_int(doc, arr, 2);
yyjson_mut_arr_add_int(doc, arr, 3);
char *json = yyjson_mut_write(doc, YYJSON_WRITE_PRETTY, NULL);
printf("%s\n", json);
free(json);
The path
is output JSON file path, If the path is invalid, you will get an error. If the file is not empty, the content will be discarded.
The doc/val
is JSON document or root value, if you pass NULL, you will get an error.
The flg
is writer flag, pass 0 if you don't need it, see writer flag
for details.
The alc
is memory allocator, pass NULL if you don't need it, see memory allocator
for details.
The err
is a pointer to receive error message, pass NULL if you don't need it.
This function returns true on success, or false if error occurs.
// doc -> file
bool yyjson_write_file(const char *path, const yyjson_doc *doc, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, yyjson_write_err *err);
// mut_doc -> file
bool yyjson_mut_write_file(const char *path, const yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, yyjson_write_err *err);
// val -> file
bool yyjson_val_write_file(const char *path, const yyjson_val *val, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, yyjson_write_err *err);
// mut_val -> file
bool yyjson_mut_val_write_file(const char *path, const yyjson_mut_val *val, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, yyjson_write_err *err);
Sample code:
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_file("/tmp/test.json", 0, NULL, NULL);
bool suc = yyjson_write_file("tmp/test.json", doc, YYJSON_WRITE_PRETTY, NULL, NULL);
if (suc) printf("OK");
The fp
is output file pointer, The data will be written to the current position of the file.
The doc/val
is JSON document or root value, if you pass NULL, you will get an error.
The flg
is writer flag, pass 0 if you don't need it, see writer flag
for details.
The alc
is memory allocator, pass NULL if you don't need it, see memory allocator
for details.
The err
is a pointer to receive error message, pass NULL if you don't need it.
This function returns true on success, or false if error occurs.
// doc -> file
bool yyjson_write_fp(FILE *fp, const yyjson_doc *doc, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, yyjson_write_err *err);
// mut_doc -> file
bool yyjson_mut_write_fp(FILE *fp, const yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, yyjson_write_err *err);
// val -> file
bool yyjson_val_write_fp(FILE *fp, const yyjson_val *val, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, yyjson_write_err *err);
// mut_val -> file
bool yyjson_mut_val_write_fp(FILE *fp, const yyjson_mut_val *val, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, yyjson_write_err *err);
Sample code:
FILE *fp = fdopen(fd, "wb"); // POSIX file descriptor (fd)
bool suc = yyjson_write_fp(fp, doc, YYJSON_WRITE_PRETTY, NULL, NULL);
if (fp) fclose(fp);
if (suc) printf("OK");
The doc/val
is JSON document or root value, if you pass NULL, you will get NULL result.
The flg
is writer flag, pass 0 if you don't need it, see writer flag
for details.
The alc
is memory allocator, pass NULL if you don't need it, see memory allocator
for details.
The len
is a pointer to receive output length (not including the
null-terminator), pass NULL if you don't need it.
The err
is a pointer to receive error message, pass NULL if you don't need it.
This function returns a new JSON string, or NULL if error occurs.
The string is encoded as UTF-8 with a null-terminator.
You should use free() or alc->free() to release it when it's no longer needed.
char *yyjson_write_opts(const yyjson_doc *doc, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, size_t *len, yyjson_write_err *err);
char *yyjson_mut_write_opts(const yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, size_t *len, yyjson_write_err *err);
char *yyjson_val_write_opts(const yyjson_val *val, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, size_t *len, yyjson_write_err *err);
char *yyjson_mut_val_write_opts(const yyjson_mut_val *val, yyjson_write_flag flg, const yyjson_alc *alc, size_t *len, yyjson_write_err *err);
Sample code:
yyjson_doc *doc = ...;
// init an allocator with stack memory
char buf[64 * 1024];
yyjson_alc alc;
yyjson_alc_pool_init(&alc, buf, sizeof(buf));
// write
size_t len;
yyjson_write_err err;
char *json = yyjson_write_opts(doc, YYJSON_WRITE_PRETTY | YYJSON_WRITE_ESCAPE_UNICODE, &alc, &len, &err);
// get result
if (json) {
printf("suc: %lu\n%s\n", len, json);
} else {
printf("err: %u msg:%s\n", err.code, err.msg);
}
alc.free(alc.ctx, json);
The library provides a set of flags for JSON writer.
You can use a single flag, or combine multiple flags with bitwise |
operator.
● YYJSON_WRITE_NOFLAG = 0
This is the default flag for JSON writer:
- Writes JSON in minified format.
- Reports an error on encountering
inf
ornan
number. - Reports an error on encountering invalid UTF-8 strings.
- Does not escape unicode or slashes.
● YYJSON_WRITE_PRETTY
Writes JSON with a pretty format uing a 4-space indent.
● YYJSON_WRITE_PRETTY_TWO_SPACES
Writes JSON with a pretty format uing a 2-space indent.
This flag will override YYJSON_WRITE_PRETTY
flag.
● YYJSON_WRITE_ESCAPE_UNICODE
Escape unicode as \uXXXX
, making the output ASCII-only, for example:
["Alizée, 😊"]
["Aliz\\u00E9e, \\uD83D\\uDE0A"]
● YYJSON_WRITE_ESCAPE_SLASHES
Escapes the forward slash character /
as \/
, for example:
["https://github.com"]
["https:\/\/github.com"]
● YYJSON_WRITE_ALLOW_INF_AND_NAN
Writes inf/nan numbers as Infinity
and NaN
literals instead of reporting errors.
Note that this output is NOT standard JSON and may be rejected by other JSON libraries, for example:
{"not_a_number":NaN,"large_number":Infinity}
● YYJSON_WRITE_INF_AND_NAN_AS_NULL
Writes inf/nan numbers as null
literals instead of reporting errors.
This flag will override YYJSON_WRITE_ALLOW_INF_AND_NAN
flag, for example:
{"not_a_number":null,"large_number":null}
● YYJSON_WRITE_ALLOW_INVALID_UNICODE
Allows invalid unicode when encoding string values.
Invalid characters within string values will be copied byte by byte. If YYJSON_WRITE_ESCAPE_UNICODE
flag is also set, invalid characters will be escaped as \uFFFD
(replacement character).
This flag does not affect the performance of correctly encoded string.
● YYJSON_WRITE_NEWLINE_AT_END
Adds a newline character \n
at the end of the JSON.
This can be helpful for text editors or NDJSON.
● YYJSON_WRITE_FP_TO_FLOAT
Write floating-point numbers using single-precision (float).
This casts double
to float
before serialization.
This will produce shorter output, but may lose some precision.
This flag is ignored if YYJSON_WRITE_FP_TO_FIXED(prec)
is also used.
● YYJSON_WRITE_FP_TO_FIXED(prec)
Write floating-point number using fixed-point notation.
This is similar to ECMAScript Number.prototype.toFixed(prec)
,
but with trailing zeros removed. The prec
ranges from 1 to 15.
This will produce shorter output but may lose some precision.
You can access the content of a document with the following functions:
// Get the root value of this JSON document.
yyjson_val *yyjson_doc_get_root(yyjson_doc *doc);
// Get how many bytes are read when parsing JSON.
// e.g. "[1,2,3]" returns 7.
size_t yyjson_doc_get_read_size(yyjson_doc *doc);
// Get total value count in this JSON document.
// e.g. "[1,2,3]" returns 4 (1 array and 3 numbers).
size_t yyjson_doc_get_val_count(yyjson_doc *doc);
A document holds all the memory for its internal values and strings. When you no longer need it, you should release the document and free up all the memory:
// Free the document; if NULL is passed in, do nothing.
void yyjson_doc_free(yyjson_doc *doc);
Each JSON Value has a type and subtype, as specified in the table:
Type | Subtype | |
---|---|---|
YYJSON_TYPE_NONE | Invalid value | |
YYJSON_TYPE_RAW | Raw string | |
YYJSON_TYPE_NULL | null literal |
|
YYJSON_TYPE_BOOL | YYJSON_SUBTYPE_FALSE | false literal |
YYJSON_TYPE_BOOL | YYJSON_SUBTYPE_TRUE | true literal |
YYJSON_TYPE_NUM | YYJSON_SUBTYPE_UINT | uint64_t nummer |
YYJSON_TYPE_NUM | YYJSON_SUBTYPE_SINT | int64_t number |
YYJSON_TYPE_NUM | YYJSON_SUBTYPE_REAL | double number |
YYJSON_TYPE_STR | String value | |
YYJSON_TYPE_STR | YYJSON_SUBTYPE_NOESC | String value, no-escape |
YYJSON_TYPE_ARR | Array value | |
YYJSON_TYPE_OBJ | Object value |
YYJSON_TYPE_NONE
means invalid value, it does not appear when the JSON is successfully parsed.YYJSON_TYPE_RAW
only appears when the corresponding flagYYJSON_READ_XXX_AS_RAW
is used.YYJSON_SUBTYPE_NOESC
is used to optimize the writing speed of strings that do not need to be escaped. This subtype is used internally, and the user does not need to handle it.
The following functions can be used to determine the type of a JSON value.
// Returns the type and subtype of a JSON value.
// Returns 0 if the input is NULL.
yyjson_type yyjson_get_type(yyjson_val *val);
yyjson_subtype yyjson_get_subtype(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns value's tag, see `Data Structures` doc for details.
uint8_t yyjson_get_tag(yyjson_val *val);
// returns type description, such as:
// "null", "string", "array", "object", "true", "false",
// "uint", "sint", "real", "unknown"
const char *yyjson_get_type_desc(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns true if the JSON value is specified type.
// Returns false if the input is NULL or not the specified type.
bool yyjson_is_null(yyjson_val *val); // null
bool yyjson_is_true(yyjson_val *val); // true
bool yyjson_is_false(yyjson_val *val); // false
bool yyjson_is_bool(yyjson_val *val); // true/false
bool yyjson_is_uint(yyjson_val *val); // uint64_t
bool yyjson_is_sint(yyjson_val *val); // int64_t
bool yyjson_is_int(yyjson_val *val); // uint64_t/int64_t
bool yyjson_is_real(yyjson_val *val); // double
bool yyjson_is_num(yyjson_val *val); // uint64_t/int64_t/double
bool yyjson_is_str(yyjson_val *val); // string
bool yyjson_is_arr(yyjson_val *val); // array
bool yyjson_is_obj(yyjson_val *val); // object
bool yyjson_is_ctn(yyjson_val *val); // array/object
bool yyjson_is_raw(yyjson_val *val); // raw string
The following functions can be used to get the contents of the JSON value.
// Returns the raw string, or NULL if `val` is not raw type.
const char *yyjson_get_raw(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns bool value, or false if `val` is not bool type.
bool yyjson_get_bool(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns uint64_t value, or 0 if `val` is not uint type.
uint64_t yyjson_get_uint(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns int64_t value, or 0 if `val` is not sint type.
int64_t yyjson_get_sint(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns int value (may overflow), or 0 if `val` is not uint/sint type.
int yyjson_get_int(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns double value, or 0 if `val` is not real type.
double yyjson_get_real(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns double value (typecast), or 0 if `val` is not uint/sint/real type.
double yyjson_get_num(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns the string value, or NULL if `val` is not string type.
const char *yyjson_get_str(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns the content length (string length in bytes, array size,
// object size), or 0 if the value does not contains length data.
size_t yyjson_get_len(yyjson_val *val);
// Returns whether the value is equals to a string.
// Returns false if input is NULL or `val` is not string.
bool yyjson_equals_str(yyjson_val *val, const char *str);
bool yyjson_equals_strn(yyjson_val *val, const char *str, size_t len);
The following functions can be used to modify the content of a JSON value.
Warning: For immutable documents, these functions will break the immutable
convention, you should use this set of APIs with caution (e.g. make sure the document is only accessed in a single thread).
// Set the value to new type and content.
// Returns false if input is NULL or `val` is object or array.
bool yyjson_set_raw(yyjson_val *val, const char *raw, size_t len);
bool yyjson_set_null(yyjson_val *val);
bool yyjson_set_bool(yyjson_val *val, bool num);
bool yyjson_set_uint(yyjson_val *val, uint64_t num);
bool yyjson_set_sint(yyjson_val *val, int64_t num);
bool yyjson_set_int(yyjson_val *val, int num);
bool yyjson_set_float(yyjson_val *val, float num);
bool yyjson_set_double(yyjson_val *val, double num);
bool yyjson_set_real(yyjson_val *val, double num);
// The string is not copied, should be held by caller.
bool yyjson_set_str(yyjson_val *val, const char *str);
bool yyjson_set_strn(yyjson_val *val, const char *str, size_t len);
The following functions can be used to access a JSON array.
Note that accessing elements by index may take a linear search time. Therefore, if you need to iterate through an array, it is recommended to use the iterator API.
// Returns the number of elements in this array.
// Returns 0 if the input is not an array.
size_t yyjson_arr_size(yyjson_val *arr);
// Returns the element at the specified position (linear search time).
// Returns NULL if the index is out of bounds, or input is not an array.
yyjson_val *yyjson_arr_get(yyjson_val *arr, size_t idx);
// Returns the first element of this array (constant time).
// Returns NULL if array is empty or intput is not an array.
yyjson_val *yyjson_arr_get_first(yyjson_val *arr);
// Returns the last element of this array (linear search time).
// Returns NULL if array is empty or intput is not an array.
yyjson_val *yyjson_arr_get_last(yyjson_val *arr);
There are two ways to traverse an array:
Sample code 1 (iterator API):
yyjson_val *arr; // the array to be traversed
yyjson_val *val;
yyjson_arr_iter iter = yyjson_arr_iter_with(arr);
while ((val = yyjson_arr_iter_next(&iter))) {
your_func(val);
}
Sample code 2 (foreach macro):
yyjson_val *arr; // the array to be traversed
size_t idx, max;
yyjson_val *val;
yyjson_arr_foreach(arr, idx, max, val) {
your_func(idx, val);
}
There's also mutable version API to traverse an mutable array:
Sample code 1 (mutable iterator API):
yyjson_mut_val *arr; // the array to be traversed
yyjson_mut_val *val;
yyjson_mut_arr_iter iter = yyjson_mut_arr_iter_with(arr);
while ((val = yyjson_mut_arr_iter_next(&iter))) {
if (your_val_is_unused(val)) {
// you can remove current value inside iteration
yyjson_mut_arr_iter_remove(&iter);
}
}
Sample code 2 (mutable foreach macro):
yyjson_mut_val *arr; // the array to be traversed
size_t idx, max;
yyjson_mut_val *val;
yyjson_mut_arr_foreach(arr, idx, max, val) {
your_func(idx, val);
}
The following functions can be used to access a JSON object.
Note that accessing elements by key may take a linear search time. Therefore, if you need to iterate through an object, it is recommended to use the iterator API.
// Returns the number of key-value pairs in this object.
// Returns 0 if input is not an object.
size_t yyjson_obj_size(yyjson_val *obj);
// Returns the value to which the specified key is mapped.
// Returns NULL if this object contains no mapping for the key.
yyjson_val *yyjson_obj_get(yyjson_val *obj, const char *key);
yyjson_val *yyjson_obj_getn(yyjson_val *obj, const char *key, size_t key_len);
// If the order of object's key is known at compile-time,
// you can use this method to avoid searching the entire object.
// e.g. { "x":1, "y":2, "z":3 }
yyjson_val *obj = ...;
yyjson_obj_iter iter = yyjson_obj_iter_with(obj);
yyjson_val *x = yyjson_obj_iter_get(&iter, "x");
yyjson_val *z = yyjson_obj_iter_get(&iter, "z");
There are two ways to traverse an object:
Sample code 1 (iterator API):
yyjson_val *obj; // the object to be traversed
yyjson_val *key, *val;
yyjson_obj_iter iter = yyjson_obj_iter_with(obj);
while ((key = yyjson_obj_iter_next(&iter))) {
val = yyjson_obj_iter_get_val(key);
your_func(key, val);
}
Sample code 2 (foreach macro):
yyjson_val *obj; // this is your object
size_t idx, max;
yyjson_val *key, *val;
yyjson_obj_foreach(obj, idx, max, key, val) {
your_func(key, val);
}
There's also mutable version API to traverse an mutable object:
Sample code 1 (mutable iterator API):
yyjson_mut_val *obj; // the object to be traversed
yyjson_mut_val *key, *val;
yyjson_mut_obj_iter iter = yyjson_mut_obj_iter_with(obj);
while ((key = yyjson_mut_obj_iter_next(&iter))) {
val = yyjson_mut_obj_iter_get_val(key);
if (your_key_is_unused(key)) {
// you can remove current kv pair inside iteration
yyjson_mut_obj_iter_remove(&iter);
}
}
Sample code 2 (mutable foreach macro):
yyjson_mut_val *obj; // the object to be traversed
size_t idx, max;
yyjson_val *key, *val;
yyjson_obj_foreach(obj, idx, max, key, val) {
your_func(key, val);
}
The yyjson_mut_doc
and related APIs are used to build JSON documents.
Please note that yyjson_mut_doc
uses a memory pool to hold all strings and values. The pool can only be created, grown, or freed in its entirety. Therefore, yyjson_mut_doc
is more suitable for write-once than mutation of an existing document.
JSON objects and arrays are composed of linked lists, so each yyjson_mut_val
can only be added to one object or array.
Sample code:
// Build this JSON:
// {
// "page": 123,
// "names": [ "Harry", "Ron", "Hermione" ]
// }
// Create a mutable document.
yyjson_mut_doc *doc = yyjson_mut_doc_new(NULL);
// Create an object, the value's memory is held by doc.
yyjson_mut_val *root = yyjson_mut_obj(doc);
// Create key and value, add to the root object.
yyjson_mut_val *key = yyjson_mut_str(doc, "page");
yyjson_mut_val *num = yyjson_mut_int(doc, 123);
yyjson_mut_obj_add(root, key, num);
// Create 3 string value, add to the array object.
yyjson_mut_val *names = yyjson_mut_arr(doc);
yyjson_mut_val *name1 = yyjson_mut_str(doc, "Harry");
yyjson_mut_val *name2 = yyjson_mut_str(doc, "Ron");
yyjson_mut_val *name3 = yyjson_mut_str(doc, "Hermione");
yyjson_mut_arr_append(names, name1);
yyjson_mut_arr_append(names, name2);
yyjson_mut_arr_append(names, name3);
yyjson_mut_obj_add(root, yyjson_mut_str(doc, "names"), names);
// ❌ Wrong! the value is already added to another container.
yyjson_mut_obj_add(root, key, name1);
// Set the document's root value.
yyjson_mut_doc_set_root(doc, root);
// Write to JSON string
const char *json = yyjson_mut_write(doc, 0, NULL);
// Free the memory of doc and all values which is created from this doc.
yyjson_mut_doc_free(doc);
The following functions are used to create, modify, copy, and destroy a JSON document.
// Creates and returns a new mutable JSON document.
// Returns NULL on error (e.g. memory allocation failure).
// If `alc` is NULL, the default allocator will be used.
yyjson_mut_doc *yyjson_mut_doc_new(yyjson_alc *alc);
// Delete the JSON document, free the memory of this doc
// and all values created from this doc
void yyjson_mut_doc_free(yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
// Set the internal memory pool size (string length and value count).
// It can be used to reserve memory for the next string and value creation.
bool yyjson_mut_doc_set_str_pool_size(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, size_t len);
bool yyjson_mut_doc_set_val_pool_size(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, size_t count);
// Get or set the root value of this JSON document.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_get_root(yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
void yyjson_mut_doc_set_root(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *root);
// Copies and returns a new mutable document/value from input.
// Returns NULL on error (e.g. memory allocation failure).
// doc -> mut_doc
yyjson_mut_doc *yyjson_doc_mut_copy(yyjson_doc *doc, const yyjson_alc *alc);
// val -> mut_val
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_val_mut_copy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_val *val);
// mut_doc -> mut_doc
yyjson_mut_doc *yyjson_mut_doc_mut_copy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const yyjson_alc *alc);
// mut_val -> mut_val
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_val_mut_copy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *val);
// mut_doc -> doc
yyjson_doc *yyjson_mut_doc_imut_copy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_alc *alc);
// mut_val -> doc
yyjson_doc *yyjson_mut_val_imut_copy(yyjson_mut_val *val, yyjson_alc *alc);
The following functions are used to create mutable JSON value,
the value's memory is held by the document.
// Creates and returns a new value, returns NULL on error.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_null(yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_true(yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_false(yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_bool(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, bool val);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_uint(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, uint64_t num);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_sint(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, int64_t num);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_int(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, int64_t num);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_float(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, float num);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_double(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, double num);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_real(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, double num);
// Creates a string value, the input string is NOT copied.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_str(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *str);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_strn(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *str, size_t len);
// Creates a string value, the input string is copied and held by the document.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_strcpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *str);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_strncpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *str, size_t len);
The following functions are used to create mutable JSON array.
// Creates and returns an empty mutable array, returns NULL on error.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr(yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
// Creates and returns a mutable array with c array.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_bool(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, bool *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_sint(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, int64_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_uint(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, uint64_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_real(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, double *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_sint8(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, int8_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_sint16(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, int16_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_sint32(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, int32_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_sint64(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, int64_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_uint8(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, uint8_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_uint16(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, uint16_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_uint32(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, uint32_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_uint64(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, uint64_t *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_float(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, float *vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_double(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, double *vals, size_t count);
// sample code:
int vals[3] = {-1, 0, 1};
yyjson_mut_val *arr = yyjson_mut_arr_with_sint32(doc, vals, 3);
// Creates and returns a mutable array with strings,
// the strings should be encoded as UTF-8.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_str(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char **vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_strn(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char **vals, const size_t *lens, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_strcpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char **vals, size_t count);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_with_strncpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char **vals, const size_t *lens, size_t count);
// sample code:
const char strs[3] = {"Jan", "Feb", "Mar"};
yyjson_mut_val *arr = yyjson_mut_arr_with_str(doc, strs, 3);
The following functions are used to modify the contents of a JSON array.
// Inserts a value into an array at a given index.
// Returns false on error (e.g. out of bounds).
// Note that this function takes a linear search time.
bool yyjson_mut_arr_insert(yyjson_mut_val *arr, yyjson_mut_val *val, size_t idx);
// Inserts a val at the end of the array, returns false on error.
bool yyjson_mut_arr_append(yyjson_mut_val *arr, yyjson_mut_val *val);
// Inserts a val at the head of the array, returns false on error.
bool yyjson_mut_arr_prepend(yyjson_mut_val *arr, yyjson_mut_val *val);
// Replaces a value at index and returns old value, returns NULL on error.
// Note that this function takes a linear search time.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_replace(yyjson_mut_val *arr, size_t idx, yyjson_mut_val *val);
// Removes and returns a value at index, returns NULL on error.
// Note that this function takes a linear search time.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_remove(yyjson_mut_val *arr, size_t idx);
// Removes and returns the first value in this array, returns NULL on error.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_remove_first(yyjson_mut_val *arr);
// Removes and returns the last value in this array, returns NULL on error.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_remove_last(yyjson_mut_val *arr);
// Removes all values within a specified range in the array.
// Note that this function takes a linear search time.
bool yyjson_mut_arr_remove_range(yyjson_mut_val *arr, size_t idx, size_t len);
// Removes all values in this array.
bool yyjson_mut_arr_clear(yyjson_mut_val *arr);
// Convenience API:
// Adds a value at the end of this array, returns false on error.
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_val(yyjson_mut_val *arr, yyjson_mut_val *val);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_null(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_true(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_false(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_bool(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, bool val);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_uint(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, uint64_t num);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_sint(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, int64_t num);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_int(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, int64_t num);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_float(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, float num);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_double(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, double num);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_real(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, double num);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_str(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, const char *str);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_strn(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, const char *str, size_t len);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_strcpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, const char *str);
bool yyjson_mut_arr_add_strncpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr, const char *str, size_t len);
// Convenience API:
// Creates and adds a new array at the end of the array.
// Returns the new array, or NULL on error.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_add_arr(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr);
// Convenience API:
// Creates and adds a new object at the end of the array.
// Returns the new object, or NULL on error.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_arr_add_obj(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *arr);
The following functions are used to create mutable JSON object.
// Creates and returns a mutable object, returns NULL on error.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_obj(yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
// Creates and returns a mutable object with keys and values,
// returns NULL on error. The keys and values are NOT copied.
// The strings should be encoded as UTF-8 with null-terminator.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_obj_with_str(yyjson_mut_doc *doc,
const char **keys,
const char **vals,
size_t count);
// sample code:
const char keys[] = {"name", "type", "id"};
const char *vals[] = {"Harry", "student", "123456"};
yyjson_mut_obj_with_str(doc, keys, vals, 3);
// Creates and returns a mutable object with key-value pairs,
// returns NULL on error. The keys and values are NOT copied.
// The strings should be encoded as UTF-8 with null-terminator.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_obj_with_kv(yyjson_mut_doc *doc,
const char **kv_pairs,
size_t pair_count);
// sample code:
const char *pairs[] = {"name", "Harry", "type", "student", "id", "123456"};
yyjson_mut_obj_with_kv(doc, pairs, 3);
The following functions are used to modify the contents of a JSON object.
// Adds a key-value pair at the end of the object.
// The key must be a string value.
// This function allows duplicated key in one object.
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add(yyjson_mut_val *obj, yyjson_mut_val *key,yyjson_mut_val *val);
// Adds a key-value pair to the object.
// The key must be a string value.
// This function may remove all key-value pairs for the given key before add.
// Note that this function takes a linear search time.
bool yyjson_mut_obj_put(yyjson_mut_val *obj, yyjson_mut_val *key, yyjson_mut_val *val);
// Removes key-value pair from the object with a given key.
// Note that this function takes a linear search time.
bool yyjson_mut_obj_remove(yyjson_mut_val *obj, yyjson_mut_val *key);
// Removes all key-value pairs in this object.
bool yyjson_mut_obj_clear(yyjson_mut_val *obj);
// Convenience API:
// Adds a key-value pair at the end of the object. The key is not copied.
// Note that these functions allow duplicated key in one object.
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_null(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_true(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_false(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_bool(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, bool val);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_uint(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, uint64_t val);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_sint(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, int64_t val);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_int(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, int64_t val);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_float(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, float val);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_double(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, double val);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_real(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, double val);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_str(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, const char *val);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_strn(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, const char *val, size_t len);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_strcpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, const char *val);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_add_strncpy(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, const char *val, size_t len);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_obj_add_arr(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *_key);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_obj_add_obj(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *_key);
// Convenience API:
// Removes all key-value pairs for the given key.
// Note that this function takes a linear search time.
bool yyjson_mut_obj_remove_str(yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key);
bool yyjson_mut_obj_remove_strn(yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, size_t len);
// Convenience API:
// Replaces all matching keys with the new key.
// Returns true if at least one key was renamed.
// This function takes a linear search time.
yyjson_api_inline bool yyjson_mut_obj_rename_key(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, const char *new_key);
yyjson_api_inline bool yyjson_mut_obj_rename_keyn(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, yyjson_mut_val *obj, const char *key, size_t len, const char *new_key, size_t new_len);
The library supports querying JSON values using JSON Pointer
(RFC 6901).
// `JSON pointer` is a null-terminated string.
yyjson_val *yyjson_ptr_get(yyjson_val *val, const char *ptr);
yyjson_val *yyjson_doc_ptr_get(yyjson_doc *doc, const char *ptr);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_ptr_get(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_get(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr);
// `JSON pointer` with string length, allow NUL (Unicode U+0000) characters inside.
yyjson_val *yyjson_ptr_getn(yyjson_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len);
yyjson_val *yyjson_doc_ptr_getn(yyjson_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_ptr_getn(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_getn(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len);
// `JSON pointer` with string length, context and error information.
yyjson_val *yyjson_ptr_getx(yyjson_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
yyjson_val *yyjson_doc_ptr_getx(yyjson_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_ptr_getx(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_getx(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
For example, given the JSON document:
{
"size" : 3,
"users" : [
{"id": 1, "name": "Harry"},
{"id": 2, "name": "Ron"},
{"id": 3, "name": "Hermione"}
]
}
The following JSON strings evaluate to the accompanying values:
Pointer | Matched Value |
---|---|
"" |
the whole document |
"/size" |
3 |
"/users/0" |
{"id": 1, "name": "Harry"} |
"/users/1/name" |
"Ron" |
"/no_match" |
NULL |
"no_slash" |
NULL |
"/" |
NULL (match to empty key: root[""]) |
yyjson_doc *doc = ...;
yyjson_val *val = yyjson_doc_ptr_get(doc, "/users/1/name");
printf("%s\n", yyjson_get_str(val)); // Ron
yyjson_ptr_err err;
yyjson_val *val2 = yyjson_doc_ptr_getx(doc, "/", 1, &err);
if (!val2) printf("err %d: %s\n", err.code, err.msg); // err 3: cannot be resolved
The library also supports modifying JSON values using JSON Pointer
.
// Add or insert a new value.
bool yyjson_mut_ptr_add(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
bool yyjson_mut_ptr_addn(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
bool yyjson_mut_ptr_addx(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, yyjson_mut_doc *doc, bool create_parent, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
bool yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_add(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, yyjson_mut_val *new_val);
bool yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_addn(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val);
bool yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_addx(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, bool create_parent, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
// Set a new value (add if it doesn't exist, replace if it does).
bool yyjson_mut_ptr_set(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
bool yyjson_mut_ptr_setn(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, yyjson_mut_doc *doc);
bool yyjson_mut_ptr_setx(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, yyjson_mut_doc *doc, bool create_parent, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
bool yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_set(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, yyjson_mut_val *new_val);
bool yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_setn(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val);
bool yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_setx(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, bool create_parent, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
// Replace an existing value.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_ptr_replace(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, yyjson_mut_val *new_val);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_ptr_replacen(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_ptr_replacex(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_replace(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, yyjson_mut_val *new_val);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_replacen(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_replacex(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_mut_val *new_val, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
// Remove an existing value.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_ptr_remove(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_ptr_removen(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_ptr_removex(yyjson_mut_val *val, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_remove(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_removen(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_removex(yyjson_mut_doc *doc, const char *ptr, size_t len, yyjson_ptr_ctx *ctx, yyjson_ptr_err *err);
For example:
yyjson_mut_doc *doc = ...;
// doc: {"a":0,"b":[1,2,3]}
yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_set(doc, "/a", yyjson_mut_int(doc, 9));
// now: {"a":9,"b":[1,2,3]}
yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_add(doc, "/b/-", yyjson_mut_int(doc, 4));
// now: {"a":9,"b":[1,2,3,4]}
yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_remove(doc, "/b");
// now: {"a":9}
All the above functions ending with x
can be used to get the result context ctx
, and the error message err
. For example:
// doc: {"a":0,"b":[null,2,3]}
yyjson_mut_doc *doc = ...;
// get error code and message
yyjson_ptr_err err;
yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_setx(doc, "/b/99", 4, yyjson_mut_int(doc, 99), true, NULL, &err);
if (err.code) printf("err: %s\n", err.msg); // err: cannot resolve
// get target value's context
// perform some operations without re-parsing the JSON Pointer
yyjson_mut_val *val = yyjson_mut_doc_ptr_getx(doc, "/b/0", 4, &ctx, &err);
if (yyjson_mut_is_null(val)) yyjson_ptr_ctx_remove(&ctx);
// now: {"a":0,"b":[2,3]}
The library supports JSON Patch (RFC 6902). Specification and example: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6902
// Creates and returns a patched JSON value.
// Returns NULL if the patch could not be applied.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_patch(yyjson_mut_doc *doc,
yyjson_val *orig,
yyjson_val *patch,
yyjson_patch_err *err);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_patch(yyjson_mut_doc *doc,
yyjson_mut_val *orig,
yyjson_mut_val *patch,
yyjson_patch_err *err);
The library supports JSON Merge Patch (RFC 7386). Specification and example: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7386
// Creates and returns a merge-patched JSON value.
// Returns NULL if the patch could not be applied.
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_merge_patch(yyjson_mut_doc *doc,
yyjson_val *orig,
yyjson_val *patch);
yyjson_mut_val *yyjson_mut_merge_patch(yyjson_mut_doc *doc,
yyjson_mut_val *orig,
yyjson_mut_val *patch);
The library has a built-in high-performance number reader,
it will read numbers according to these rules by default:
- Positive integers are read as
uint64_t
. If an overflow occurs, it is converted todouble
. - Negative integers are read as
int64_t
. If an overflow occurs, it is converted todouble
. - Floating-point numbers are read as
double
with correct rounding. - If a
double
number overflow (reaches infinity), an error is reported. - If a number does not conform to the JSON standard, an error is reported.
There are 3 flags that can be used to adjust the number parsing strategy:
YYJSON_READ_ALLOW_INF_AND_NAN
: read nan/inf number or literal asdouble
(non-standard).YYJSON_READ_NUMBER_AS_RAW
: read all numbers as raw strings without parsing.YYJSON_READ_BIGBER_AS_RAW
: read big numbers (overflow or infinity) as raw strings without parsing.
See the Reader flag
section for more details.
The library has a built-in high-performance number writer,
it will write numbers according to these rules by default:
- Positive integers are written without a sign.
- Negative integers are written with a negative sign.
- Floating-point numbers are written using the ECMAScript format, with the following modifications:
- If the number is
Infinity
orNaN
, an error is reported. - The negative sign of
-0.0
is preserved to maintain input information. - The positive sign in the exponent part is removed.
- If the number is
- The floating-point number writer will generate the shortest correctly rounded decimal representation.
There are several flags that can be used to adjust the number writing strategy:
YYJSON_WRITE_ALLOW_INF_AND_NAN
writes inf/nan numbers asInfinity
andNaN
literals without error (non-standard).YYJSON_WRITE_INF_AND_NAN_AS_NULL
writes inf/nan numbers asnull
literal.YYJSON_WRITE_FP_TO_FLOAT
writes real numbers asfloat
instead ofdouble
.YYJSON_WRITE_FP_TO_FIXED(prec)
writes real numbers using fixed-point notation.
See the Writer flag
section for more details.
There are also some helper functions to control the output format of individual values:
yyjson_set_fp_to_float(yyjson_val *val, bool fpt)
andyyjson_mut_set_fp_to_float(yyjson_mut_val *val, bool flt)
write this real number withfloat
ordouble
precision.yyjson_set_fp_to_fixed(yyjson_val *val, int prec)
andyyjson_mut_set_fp_to_fixed(yyjson_mut_val *val, int prec)
write this real number using fixed-point notation, the prec should be in the range of 1 to 15.
This library only supports UTF-8 encoding without BOM, as specified in RFC 8259:
JSON text exchanged between systems that are not part of a closed ecosystem MUST be encoded using UTF-8. Implementations MUST NOT add a byte order mark (U+FEFF) to the beginning of a networked-transmitted JSON text.
By default, yyjson performs strict UTF-8 encoding validation on input strings. If an invalid character is encountered, an error will be reported.
You can use YYJSON_READ_ALLOW_INVALID_UNICODE
and YYJSON_WRITE_ALLOW_INVALID_UNICODE
flags to allow invalid Unicode encoding. However, please note that if you enable these flags, the resulting values from yyjson may contain invalid characters, which could be used by other code and introduce security risks.
You can use yyjson_set_str_noesc(yyjson_val *val, bool noesc)
or yyjson_mut_set_str_noesc(yyjson_mut_val *val, bool noesc)
to mark a string as not needing to be escaped during JSON writing. This will make string writing faster and preserve the original string bytes.
This library supports the NUL
character (also known as the null terminator
, or Unicode U+0000
, ASCII \0
) inside strings.
When reading JSON, \u0000
will be unescaped to NUL
character. If a string contains the NUL
character, the length obtained with strlen()
will be inaccurate, and you should use yyjson_get_len()
to get the actual length.
When building JSON, the input string is treated as null-terminated by default. If you need to pass in a string that contains the NUL
character, you should use the API with the n
suffix and provide the actual length of the string.
For example:
// null-terminated string
yyjson_mut_str(doc, str);
yyjson_obj_get(obj, str);
// any string, with or without null terminator
yyjson_mut_strn(doc, str, len);
yyjson_obj_getn(obj, str, len);
// C++ string
std::string sstr = ...;
yyjson_obj_getn(obj, sstr.data(), sstr.length());
The library does not directly call libc's memory allocation functions (malloc/realloc/free). Instead, when memory allocation is required, yyjson's API takes a parameter named alc
that allows the caller to pass in an allocator. If the alc
is NULL, yyjson will use the default memory allocator, which is a simple wrapper of libc's functions.
Using a custom memory allocator allows you to have more control over memory allocation, here are a few examples:
If you need to parse multiple small JSON one by one, you can use a single allocator to avoid multiple memory allocations.
Sample code:
// max data size for single JSON
size_t max_json_size = 64 * 1024;
// calculate the max memory usage for a single JSON
size_t buf_size = yyjson_read_max_memory_usage(max_json_size, 0);
// create a buffer for allocator
void *buf = malloc(buf_size);
// setup the allocator with buffer
yyjson_alc alc;
yyjson_alc_pool_init(&alc, buf, buf_size);
// read multiple JSON using one allocator
for(int i = 0, i < your_json_file_count; i++) {
const char *your_json_file_path = ...;
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_file(your_json_file_path, 0, &alc, NULL);
...
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
}
// free the buffer
free(buf);
If you are not sure about the amount of memory required to process JSON, you can use the dynamic allocator.
// create a dynamic allocator
yyjson_alc *alc = yyjson_alc_dyn_new();
// read multiple JSON using one allocator
for(int i = 0, i < your_json_file_count; i++) {
const char *your_json_file_path = ...;
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_file(your_json_file_path, 0, alc, NULL);
...
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
}
// free the allocator
yyjson_alc_dyn_free(alc);
If the JSON is small enough, you can use stack memory to read or write it.
Sample code:
char buf[128 * 1024]; // stack buffer
yyjson_alc alc;
yyjson_alc_pool_init(&alc, buf, sizeof(buf));
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read_opts(dat, len, 0, &alc, NULL);
...
yyjson_doc_free(doc); // this is optional, as the memory is on stack
You can use a third-party high-performance memory allocator for yyjson, such as jemalloc, tcmalloc, mimalloc. You can also refer to the following code to implement your own allocator.
Sample code:
// Use https://github.com/microsoft/mimalloc
#include <mimalloc.h>
// same as malloc(size)
static void *priv_malloc(void *ctx, size_t size) {
return mi_malloc(size);
}
// same as realloc(ptr, size)
// `old_size` is the size of the originally allocated memory
static void *priv_realloc(void *ctx, void *ptr, size_t old_size, size_t size) {
return mi_realloc(ptr, size);
}
// same as free(ptr)
static void priv_free(void *ctx, void *ptr) {
mi_free(ptr);
}
// the allocator object
static const yyjson_alc PRIV_ALC = {
priv_malloc,
priv_realloc,
priv_free,
NULL // `ctx` which will be passed into the functions above
};
// Read with custom allocator
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_doc_read_opts(dat, len, 0, &PRIV_ALC, NULL);
...
yyjson_doc_free(doc);
// Write with custom allocator
yyjson_alc *alc = &PRIV_ALC;
char *json = yyjson_doc_write(doc, 0, alc, NULL, NULL);
...
alc->free(alc->ctx, json);
Most functions in the library use fixed-size stack memory. This includes functions for JSON reading and writing, as well as JSON Pointer handling.
However, a few functions use recursion and may cause a stack overflow if the object level is too deep. These functions are marked with the following warning in the header file:
@warning This function is recursive and may cause a stack overflow if the object level is too deep.
The library's public APIs perform a null check
for every input parameter to prevent crashes.
For example, when reading a JSON, you don't need to perform null checks or type checks on each value:
yyjson_doc *doc = yyjson_read(NULL, 0, 0); // doc is NULL
yyjson_val *val = yyjson_doc_get_root(doc); // val is NULL
const char *str = yyjson_get_str(val); // str is NULL
if (!str) printf("err!");
yyjson_doc_free(doc); // do nothing
However, if you are certain that a value is non-null and matches the expected type, you can use the unsafe
prefix API to avoid the null check.
For example, when iterating over an array or object, the value and key must be non-null:
size_t idx, max;
yyjson_val *key, *val;
yyjson_obj_foreach(obj, idx, max, key, val) {
// this is a valid JSON, so the key must be a valid string
if (unsafe_yyjson_equals_str(key, "id") &&
unsafe_yyjson_is_uint(val) &&
unsafe_yyjson_get_uint(val) == 1234) {
...
}
}
The library does not use global variables. Therefore, if you can ensure that the input parameters of a function are thread-safe, then the function calls are also thread-safe.
In general, yyjson_doc
and yyjson_val
are immutable and thread-safe, while yyjson_mut_doc
and yyjson_mut_val
are mutable and not thread-safe.
The library is designed to be locale-independent.
However, there are certain conditions that you should be aware of:
- You use libc's
setlocale()
function to change the locale. - Your environment does not adhere the IEEE 754 floating-point standard (e.g. some IBM mainframes), or you explicitly set
YYJSON_DISABLE_FAST_FP_CONV
during build, in such case yyjson will usestrtod()
to parse floating-point numbers.
If both of these conditions are met, it is recommended to avoid calling setlocale()
while another thread is parsing JSON. Otherwise, an error may be returned during JSON floating-point number parsing.