{-# LANGUAGE NoImplicitPrelude #-} -- | -- Module: Data.Aeson -- Copyright: (c) 2011-2016 Bryan O'Sullivan -- (c) 2011 MailRank, Inc. -- License: BSD3 -- Maintainer: Bryan O'Sullivan -- Stability: experimental -- Portability: portable -- -- Types and functions for working efficiently with JSON data. -- -- (A note on naming: in Greek mythology, Aeson was the father of Jason.) module Data.Aeson ( -- * How to use this library -- $use -- ** Writing instances by hand -- $manual -- ** Working with the AST -- $ast -- ** Decoding to a Haskell value -- $haskell -- ** Decoding a mixed-type object -- $mixed -- * Encoding and decoding -- $encoding_and_decoding -- ** Direct encoding -- $encoding decode , decode' , eitherDecode , eitherDecode' , encode , encodeFile -- ** Variants for strict bytestrings , decodeStrict , decodeFileStrict , decodeStrict' , decodeFileStrict' , eitherDecodeStrict , eitherDecodeFileStrict , eitherDecodeStrict' , eitherDecodeFileStrict' -- * Core JSON types , Value(..) , Encoding , fromEncoding , Array , Object -- * Convenience types , DotNetTime(..) -- * Type conversion , FromJSON(..) , Result(..) , fromJSON , ToJSON(..) , KeyValue(..) , () , JSONPath -- ** Keys for maps , ToJSONKey(..) , ToJSONKeyFunction(..) , FromJSONKey(..) , FromJSONKeyFunction(..) -- *** Generic keys , GToJSONKey() , genericToJSONKey , GFromJSONKey() , genericFromJSONKey -- ** Liftings to unary and binary type constructors , FromJSON1(..) , parseJSON1 , FromJSON2(..) , parseJSON2 , ToJSON1(..) , toJSON1 , toEncoding1 , ToJSON2(..) , toJSON2 , toEncoding2 -- ** Generic JSON classes and options , GFromJSON , FromArgs , GToJSON , GToEncoding , GToJSON' , ToArgs , Zero , One , genericToJSON , genericLiftToJSON , genericToEncoding , genericLiftToEncoding , genericParseJSON , genericLiftParseJSON -- ** Generic and TH encoding configuration , Options , defaultOptions -- *** Options fields -- $optionsFields , fieldLabelModifier , constructorTagModifier , allNullaryToStringTag , omitNothingFields , sumEncoding , unwrapUnaryRecords , tagSingleConstructors , rejectUnknownFields -- *** Options utilities , SumEncoding(..) , camelTo2 , defaultTaggedObject -- ** Options for object keys , JSONKeyOptions , keyModifier , defaultJSONKeyOptions -- * Inspecting @'Value's@ , withObject , withText , withArray , withScientific , withBool , withEmbeddedJSON -- * Constructors and accessors , Series , pairs , foldable , (.:) , (.:?) , (.:!) , (.!=) , object -- * Parsing , json , json' , parseIndexedJSON ) where import Prelude.Compat import Data.Aeson.Types.FromJSON (ifromJSON, parseIndexedJSON) import Data.Aeson.Encoding (encodingToLazyByteString) import Data.Aeson.Parser.Internal (decodeWith, decodeStrictWith, eitherDecodeWith, eitherDecodeStrictWith, jsonEOF, json, jsonEOF', json') import Data.Aeson.Types import Data.Aeson.Types.Internal (formatError) import qualified Data.ByteString as B import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy as L -- | Efficiently serialize a JSON value as a lazy 'L.ByteString'. -- -- This is implemented in terms of the 'ToJSON' class's 'toEncoding' method. encode :: (ToJSON a) => a -> L.ByteString encode = encodingToLazyByteString . toEncoding -- | Efficiently serialize a JSON value as a lazy 'L.ByteString' and write it to a file. encodeFile :: (ToJSON a) => FilePath -> a -> IO () encodeFile fp = L.writeFile fp . encode -- | Efficiently deserialize a JSON value from a lazy 'L.ByteString'. -- If this fails due to incomplete or invalid input, 'Nothing' is -- returned. -- -- The input must consist solely of a JSON document, with no trailing -- data except for whitespace. -- -- This function parses immediately, but defers conversion. See -- 'json' for details. decode :: (FromJSON a) => L.ByteString -> Maybe a decode = decodeWith jsonEOF fromJSON {-# INLINE decode #-} -- | Efficiently deserialize a JSON value from a strict 'B.ByteString'. -- If this fails due to incomplete or invalid input, 'Nothing' is -- returned. -- -- The input must consist solely of a JSON document, with no trailing -- data except for whitespace. -- -- This function parses immediately, but defers conversion. See -- 'json' for details. decodeStrict :: (FromJSON a) => B.ByteString -> Maybe a decodeStrict = decodeStrictWith jsonEOF fromJSON {-# INLINE decodeStrict #-} -- | Efficiently deserialize a JSON value from a file. -- If this fails due to incomplete or invalid input, 'Nothing' is -- returned. -- -- The input file's content must consist solely of a JSON document, -- with no trailing data except for whitespace. -- -- This function parses immediately, but defers conversion. See -- 'json' for details. decodeFileStrict :: (FromJSON a) => FilePath -> IO (Maybe a) decodeFileStrict = fmap decodeStrict . B.readFile -- | Efficiently deserialize a JSON value from a lazy 'L.ByteString'. -- If this fails due to incomplete or invalid input, 'Nothing' is -- returned. -- -- The input must consist solely of a JSON document, with no trailing -- data except for whitespace. -- -- This function parses and performs conversion immediately. See -- 'json'' for details. decode' :: (FromJSON a) => L.ByteString -> Maybe a decode' = decodeWith jsonEOF' fromJSON {-# INLINE decode' #-} -- | Efficiently deserialize a JSON value from a strict 'B.ByteString'. -- If this fails due to incomplete or invalid input, 'Nothing' is -- returned. -- -- The input must consist solely of a JSON document, with no trailing -- data except for whitespace. -- -- This function parses and performs conversion immediately. See -- 'json'' for details. decodeStrict' :: (FromJSON a) => B.ByteString -> Maybe a decodeStrict' = decodeStrictWith jsonEOF' fromJSON {-# INLINE decodeStrict' #-} -- | Efficiently deserialize a JSON value from a file. -- If this fails due to incomplete or invalid input, 'Nothing' is -- returned. -- -- The input file's content must consist solely of a JSON document, -- with no trailing data except for whitespace. -- -- This function parses and performs conversion immediately. See -- 'json'' for details. decodeFileStrict' :: (FromJSON a) => FilePath -> IO (Maybe a) decodeFileStrict' = fmap decodeStrict' . B.readFile eitherFormatError :: Either (JSONPath, String) a -> Either String a eitherFormatError = either (Left . uncurry formatError) Right {-# INLINE eitherFormatError #-} -- | Like 'decode' but returns an error message when decoding fails. eitherDecode :: (FromJSON a) => L.ByteString -> Either String a eitherDecode = eitherFormatError . eitherDecodeWith jsonEOF ifromJSON {-# INLINE eitherDecode #-} -- | Like 'decodeStrict' but returns an error message when decoding fails. eitherDecodeStrict :: (FromJSON a) => B.ByteString -> Either String a eitherDecodeStrict = eitherFormatError . eitherDecodeStrictWith jsonEOF ifromJSON {-# INLINE eitherDecodeStrict #-} -- | Like 'decodeFileStrict' but returns an error message when decoding fails. eitherDecodeFileStrict :: (FromJSON a) => FilePath -> IO (Either String a) eitherDecodeFileStrict = fmap eitherDecodeStrict . B.readFile {-# INLINE eitherDecodeFileStrict #-} -- | Like 'decode'' but returns an error message when decoding fails. eitherDecode' :: (FromJSON a) => L.ByteString -> Either String a eitherDecode' = eitherFormatError . eitherDecodeWith jsonEOF' ifromJSON {-# INLINE eitherDecode' #-} -- | Like 'decodeStrict'' but returns an error message when decoding fails. eitherDecodeStrict' :: (FromJSON a) => B.ByteString -> Either String a eitherDecodeStrict' = eitherFormatError . eitherDecodeStrictWith jsonEOF' ifromJSON {-# INLINE eitherDecodeStrict' #-} -- | Like 'decodeFileStrict'' but returns an error message when decoding fails. eitherDecodeFileStrict' :: (FromJSON a) => FilePath -> IO (Either String a) eitherDecodeFileStrict' = fmap eitherDecodeStrict' . B.readFile {-# INLINE eitherDecodeFileStrict' #-} -- $use -- -- This section contains basic information on the different ways to -- work with data using this library. These range from simple but -- inflexible, to complex but flexible. -- -- The most common way to use the library is to define a data type, -- corresponding to some JSON data you want to work with, and then -- write either a 'FromJSON' instance, a to 'ToJSON' instance, or both -- for that type. -- -- For example, given this JSON data: -- -- > { "name": "Joe", "age": 12 } -- -- we create a matching data type: -- -- > {-# LANGUAGE DeriveGeneric #-} -- > -- > import GHC.Generics -- > -- > data Person = Person { -- > name :: Text -- > , age :: Int -- > } deriving (Generic, Show) -- -- The @LANGUAGE@ pragma and 'Generic' instance let us write empty -- 'FromJSON' and 'ToJSON' instances for which the compiler will -- generate sensible default implementations. -- -- @ -- instance 'ToJSON' Person where -- \-- No need to provide a 'toJSON' implementation. -- -- \-- For efficiency, we write a simple 'toEncoding' implementation, as -- \-- the default version uses 'toJSON'. -- 'toEncoding' = 'genericToEncoding' 'defaultOptions' -- -- instance 'FromJSON' Person -- \-- No need to provide a 'parseJSON' implementation. -- @ -- -- We can now encode a value like so: -- -- > >>> encode (Person {name = "Joe", age = 12}) -- > "{\"name\":\"Joe\",\"age\":12}" -- $manual -- -- When necessary, we can write 'ToJSON' and 'FromJSON' instances by -- hand. This is valuable when the JSON-on-the-wire and Haskell data -- are different or otherwise need some more carefully managed -- translation. Let's revisit our JSON data: -- -- > { "name": "Joe", "age": 12 } -- -- We once again create a matching data type, without bothering to add -- a 'Generic' instance this time: -- -- > data Person = Person { -- > name :: Text -- > , age :: Int -- > } deriving Show -- -- To decode data, we need to define a 'FromJSON' instance: -- -- > {-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-} -- > -- > instance FromJSON Person where -- > parseJSON = withObject "Person" $ \v -> Person -- > <$> v .: "name" -- > <*> v .: "age" -- -- We can now parse the JSON data like so: -- -- > >>> decode "{\"name\":\"Joe\",\"age\":12}" :: Maybe Person -- > Just (Person {name = "Joe", age = 12}) -- -- To encode data, we need to define a 'ToJSON' instance. Let's begin -- with an instance written entirely by hand. -- -- @ -- instance ToJSON Person where -- \-- this generates a 'Value' -- 'toJSON' (Person name age) = -- 'object' [\"name\" '.=' name, \"age\" '.=' age] -- -- \-- this encodes directly to a bytestring Builder -- 'toEncoding' (Person name age) = -- 'pairs' (\"name\" '.=' 'name' '<>' \"age\" '.=' age) -- @ -- -- We can now encode a value like so: -- -- > >>> encode (Person {name = "Joe", age = 12}) -- > "{\"name\":\"Joe\",\"age\":12}" -- -- There are predefined 'FromJSON' and 'ToJSON' instances for many -- types. Here's an example using lists and 'Int's: -- -- > >>> decode "[1,2,3]" :: Maybe [Int] -- > Just [1,2,3] -- -- And here's an example using the 'Data.Map.Map' type to get a map of -- 'Int's. -- -- > >>> decode "{\"foo\":1,\"bar\":2}" :: Maybe (Map String Int) -- > Just (fromList [("bar",2),("foo",1)]) -- While the notes below focus on decoding, you can apply almost the -- same techniques to /encoding/ data. (The main difference is that -- encoding always succeeds, but decoding has to handle the -- possibility of failure, where an input doesn't match our -- expectations.) -- -- See the documentation of 'FromJSON' and 'ToJSON' for some examples -- of how you can automatically derive instances in many common -- circumstances. -- $ast -- -- Sometimes you want to work with JSON data directly, without first -- converting it to a custom data type. This can be useful if you want -- to e.g. convert JSON data to YAML data, without knowing what the -- contents of the original JSON data was. The 'Value' type, which is -- an instance of 'FromJSON', is used to represent an arbitrary JSON -- AST (abstract syntax tree). Example usage: -- -- > >>> decode "{\"foo\": 123}" :: Maybe Value -- > Just (Object (fromList [("foo",Number 123)])) -- -- > >>> decode "{\"foo\": [\"abc\",\"def\"]}" :: Maybe Value -- > Just (Object (fromList [("foo",Array (fromList [String "abc",String "def"]))])) -- -- Once you have a 'Value' you can write functions to traverse it and -- make arbitrary transformations. -- $haskell -- -- We can decode to any instance of 'FromJSON': -- -- > λ> decode "[1,2,3]" :: Maybe [Int] -- > Just [1,2,3] -- -- Alternatively, there are instances for standard data types, so you -- can use them directly. For example, use the 'Data.Map.Map' type to -- get a map of 'Int's. -- -- > λ> import Data.Map -- > λ> decode "{\"foo\":1,\"bar\":2}" :: Maybe (Map String Int) -- > Just (fromList [("bar",2),("foo",1)]) -- $mixed -- -- The above approach with maps of course will not work for mixed-type -- objects that don't follow a strict schema, but there are a couple -- of approaches available for these. -- -- The 'Object' type contains JSON objects: -- -- > λ> decode "{\"name\":\"Dave\",\"age\":2}" :: Maybe Object -- > Just (fromList [("name",String "Dave"),("age",Number 2)]) -- -- You can extract values from it with a parser using 'parse', -- 'parseEither' or, in this example, 'parseMaybe': -- -- > λ> do result <- decode "{\"name\":\"Dave\",\"age\":2}" -- > flip parseMaybe result $ \obj -> do -- > age <- obj .: "age" -- > name <- obj .: "name" -- > return (name ++ ": " ++ show (age*2)) -- > -- > Just "Dave: 4" -- -- Considering that any type that implements 'FromJSON' can be used -- here, this is quite a powerful way to parse JSON. See the -- documentation in 'FromJSON' for how to implement this class for -- your own data types. -- -- The downside is that you have to write the parser yourself; the -- upside is that you have complete control over the way the JSON is -- parsed. -- $encoding_and_decoding -- -- Decoding is a two-step process. -- -- * When decoding a value, the process is reversed: the bytes are -- converted to a 'Value', then the 'FromJSON' class is used to -- convert to the desired type. -- -- There are two ways to encode a value. -- -- * Convert to a 'Value' using 'toJSON', then possibly further -- encode. This was the only method available in aeson 0.9 and -- earlier. -- -- * Directly encode (to what will become a 'L.ByteString') using -- 'toEncoding'. This is much more efficient (about 3x faster, and -- less memory intensive besides), but is only available in aeson -- 0.10 and newer. -- -- For convenience, the 'encode' and 'decode' functions combine both -- steps. -- $encoding -- -- In older versions of this library, encoding a Haskell value -- involved converting to an intermediate 'Value', then encoding that. -- -- A \"direct\" encoder converts straight from a source Haskell value -- to a 'BL.ByteString' without constructing an intermediate 'Value'. -- This approach is faster than 'toJSON', and allocates less memory. -- The 'toEncoding' method makes it possible to implement direct -- encoding with low memory overhead. -- -- To complicate matters, the default implementation of 'toEncoding' -- uses 'toJSON'. Why? The 'toEncoding' method was added to this -- library much more recently than 'toJSON'. Using 'toJSON' ensures -- that packages written against older versions of this library will -- compile and produce correct output, but they will not see any -- speedup from direct encoding. -- -- To write a minimal implementation of direct encoding, your type -- must implement GHC's 'Generic' class, and your code should look -- like this: -- -- @ -- 'toEncoding' = 'genericToEncoding' 'defaultOptions' -- @ -- -- What if you have more elaborate encoding needs? For example, -- perhaps you need to change the names of object keys, omit parts of -- a value. -- -- To encode to a JSON \"object\", use the 'pairs' function. -- -- @ -- 'toEncoding' (Person name age) = -- 'pairs' (\"name\" '.=' 'name' '<>' \"age\" '.=' age) -- @ -- -- Any container type that implements 'Foldable' can be encoded to a -- JSON \"array\" using 'foldable'. -- -- > > import Data.Sequence as Seq -- > > encode (Seq.fromList [1,2,3]) -- > "[1,2,3]"