Commit 7116c355 authored by John Stiles's avatar John Stiles

Merge remote-tracking branch 'miloyip/master' into issue845_native_strlen

parents 66b564f3 02de6989
File mode changed from 100755 to 100644
File mode changed from 100755 to 100644
File mode changed from 100755 to 100644
File mode changed from 100755 to 100644
File mode changed from 100755 to 100644
File mode changed from 100755 to 100644
File mode changed from 100755 to 100644
......@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@ In RapidJSON, `Reader` (typedef of `GenericReader<...>`) is the SAX-style parser
# Reader {#Reader}
`Reader` parses a JSON from a stream. While it reads characters from the stream, it analyze the characters according to the syntax of JSON, and publish events to a handler.
`Reader` parses a JSON from a stream. While it reads characters from the stream, it analyzes the characters according to the syntax of JSON, and publishes events to a handler.
For example, here is a JSON.
......@@ -24,7 +24,7 @@ For example, here is a JSON.
}
~~~~~~~~~~
While a `Reader` parses this JSON, it publishes the following events to the handler sequentially:
When a `Reader` parses this JSON, it publishes the following events to the handler sequentially:
~~~~~~~~~~
StartObject()
......@@ -50,7 +50,7 @@ EndArray(4)
EndObject(7)
~~~~~~~~~~
These events can be easily matched with the JSON, except some event parameters need further explanation. Let's see the `simplereader` example which produces exactly the same output as above:
These events can be easily matched with the JSON, but some event parameters need further explanation. Let's see the `simplereader` example which produces exactly the same output as above:
~~~~~~~~~~cpp
#include "rapidjson/reader.h"
......@@ -91,11 +91,11 @@ void main() {
}
~~~~~~~~~~
Note that, RapidJSON uses template to statically bind the `Reader` type and the handler type, instead of using class with virtual functions. This paradigm can improve the performance by inlining functions.
Note that RapidJSON uses templates to statically bind the `Reader` type and the handler type, instead of using classes with virtual functions. This paradigm can improve performance by inlining functions.
## Handler {#Handler}
As the previous example showed, user needs to implement a handler, which consumes the events (function calls) from `Reader`. The handler must contain the following member functions.
As shown in the previous example, the user needs to implement a handler which consumes the events (via function calls) from the `Reader`. The handler must contain the following member functions.
~~~~~~~~~~cpp
class Handler {
......@@ -122,15 +122,15 @@ class Handler {
When the `Reader` encounters a JSON number, it chooses a suitable C++ type mapping. And then it calls *one* function out of `Int(int)`, `Uint(unsigned)`, `Int64(int64_t)`, `Uint64(uint64_t)` and `Double(double)`. If `kParseNumbersAsStrings` is enabled, `Reader` will always calls `RawNumber()` instead.
`String(const char* str, SizeType length, bool copy)` is called when the `Reader` encounters a string. The first parameter is pointer to the string. The second parameter is the length of the string (excluding the null terminator). Note that RapidJSON supports null character `\0` inside a string. If such situation happens, `strlen(str) < length`. The last `copy` indicates whether the handler needs to make a copy of the string. For normal parsing, `copy = true`. Only when *insitu* parsing is used, `copy = false`. And beware that, the character type depends on the target encoding, which will be explained later.
`String(const char* str, SizeType length, bool copy)` is called when the `Reader` encounters a string. The first parameter is pointer to the string. The second parameter is the length of the string (excluding the null terminator). Note that RapidJSON supports null character `\0` inside a string. If such situation happens, `strlen(str) < length`. The last `copy` indicates whether the handler needs to make a copy of the string. For normal parsing, `copy = true`. Only when *insitu* parsing is used, `copy = false`. And be aware that the character type depends on the target encoding, which will be explained later.
When the `Reader` encounters the beginning of an object, it calls `StartObject()`. An object in JSON is a set of name-value pairs. If the object contains members it first calls `Key()` for the name of member, and then calls functions depending on the type of the value. These calls of name-value pairs repeats until calling `EndObject(SizeType memberCount)`. Note that the `memberCount` parameter is just an aid for the handler, user may not need this parameter.
When the `Reader` encounters the beginning of an object, it calls `StartObject()`. An object in JSON is a set of name-value pairs. If the object contains members it first calls `Key()` for the name of member, and then calls functions depending on the type of the value. These calls of name-value pairs repeat until calling `EndObject(SizeType memberCount)`. Note that the `memberCount` parameter is just an aid for the handler; users who do not need this parameter may ignore it.
Array is similar to object but simpler. At the beginning of an array, the `Reader` calls `BeginArary()`. If there is elements, it calls functions according to the types of element. Similarly, in the last call `EndArray(SizeType elementCount)`, the parameter `elementCount` is just an aid for the handler.
Arrays are similar to objects, but simpler. At the beginning of an array, the `Reader` calls `BeginArary()`. If there is elements, it calls functions according to the types of element. Similarly, in the last call `EndArray(SizeType elementCount)`, the parameter `elementCount` is just an aid for the handler.
Every handler functions returns a `bool`. Normally it should returns `true`. If the handler encounters an error, it can return `false` to notify event publisher to stop further processing.
Every handler function returns a `bool`. Normally it should return `true`. If the handler encounters an error, it can return `false` to notify the event publisher to stop further processing.
For example, when we parse a JSON with `Reader` and the handler detected that the JSON does not conform to the required schema, then the handler can return `false` and let the `Reader` stop further parsing. And the `Reader` will be in error state with error code `kParseErrorTermination`.
For example, when we parse a JSON with `Reader` and the handler detects that the JSON does not conform to the required schema, the handler can return `false` and let the `Reader` stop further parsing. This will place the `Reader` in an error state, with error code `kParseErrorTermination`.
## GenericReader {#GenericReader}
......@@ -149,19 +149,19 @@ typedef GenericReader<UTF8<>, UTF8<> > Reader;
} // namespace rapidjson
~~~~~~~~~~
The `Reader` uses UTF-8 as both source and target encoding. The source encoding means the encoding in the JSON stream. The target encoding means the encoding of the `str` parameter in `String()` calls. For example, to parse a UTF-8 stream and outputs UTF-16 string events, you can define a reader by:
The `Reader` uses UTF-8 as both source and target encoding. The source encoding means the encoding in the JSON stream. The target encoding means the encoding of the `str` parameter in `String()` calls. For example, to parse a UTF-8 stream and output UTF-16 string events, you can define a reader by:
~~~~~~~~~~cpp
GenericReader<UTF8<>, UTF16<> > reader;
~~~~~~~~~~
Note that, the default character type of `UTF16` is `wchar_t`. So this `reader`needs to call `String(const wchar_t*, SizeType, bool)` of the handler.
Note that, the default character type of `UTF16` is `wchar_t`. So this `reader` needs to call `String(const wchar_t*, SizeType, bool)` of the handler.
The third template parameter `Allocator` is the allocator type for internal data structure (actually a stack).
## Parsing {#SaxParsing}
The one and only one function of `Reader` is to parse JSON.
The main function of `Reader` is used to parse JSON.
~~~~~~~~~~cpp
template <unsigned parseFlags, typename InputStream, typename Handler>
......@@ -172,7 +172,30 @@ template <typename InputStream, typename Handler>
bool Parse(InputStream& is, Handler& handler);
~~~~~~~~~~
If an error occurs during parsing, it will return `false`. User can also calls `bool HasParseEror()`, `ParseErrorCode GetParseErrorCode()` and `size_t GetErrorOffset()` to obtain the error states. Actually `Document` uses these `Reader` functions to obtain parse errors. Please refer to [DOM](doc/dom.md) for details about parse error.
If an error occurs during parsing, it will return `false`. User can also call `bool HasParseError()`, `ParseErrorCode GetParseErrorCode()` and `size_t GetErrorOffset()` to obtain the error states. In fact, `Document` uses these `Reader` functions to obtain parse errors. Please refer to [DOM](doc/dom.md) for details about parse errors.
## Token-by-Token Parsing {#TokenByTokenParsing}
Some users may wish to parse a JSON input stream a single token at a time, instead of immediately parsing an entire document without stopping. To parse JSON this way, instead of calling `Parse`, you can use the `IterativeParse` set of functions:
~~~~~~~~~~cpp
void IterativeParseInit();
template <unsigned parseFlags, typename InputStream, typename Handler>
bool IterativeParseNext(InputStream& is, Handler& handler);
bool IterativeParseComplete();
~~~~~~~~~~
Here is an example of iteratively parsing JSON, token by token:
~~~~~~~~~~cpp
reader.IterativeParseInit();
while (!reader.IterativeParseComplete()) {
reader.IterativeParseNext<kParseDefaultFlags>(is, handler);
// Your handler has been called once.
}
~~~~~~~~~~
# Writer {#Writer}
......
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