commit | 2c879426904efae5f4f409803828be675e45a1f5 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Callum Oakley <hello@callumoakley.net> | Tue Jun 30 16:42:21 2020 +0100 |
committer | Callum Oakley <hello@callumoakley.net> | Tue Jun 30 16:42:21 2020 +0100 |
tree | bb25fdf9b2260b04403fcfbe9fc2c1f5f1cfda07 | |
parent | 6ca553281fd9d09b2810bc9449366cf737570605 [diff] |
cargo fmt
A Rust JSON5 serializer and deserializer which speaks Serde.
Deserialize a JSON5 string with from_str
. Go the other way with to_string
. The serializer is very basic at the moment, it just produces plain old JSON. See the Serde documentation for details on implementing Serialize
and Deserialize
. (Usually it's just a case of sprinkling in some derives.)
The Serde data model is mostly supported, with the exception of bytes and borrowed strings.
Read some config into a struct.
use json5; use serde_derive::Deserialize; #[derive(Deserialize, Debug, PartialEq)] struct Config { message: String, n: i32, } fn main() { let config = " { // A traditional message. message: 'hello world', // A number for some reason. n: 42, } "; assert_eq!( json5::from_str(config), Ok(Config { message: "hello world".to_string(), n: 42, }), ); }