= libjson README = libjson is a simple library without any dependancies to parse and pretty print the json format (RFC4627). The JSON format is a concise and structured data format. libjson parser is an interruptible handcoded state parse. the parser takes character or string as input. Since it's interruptible, it's up to the user to feed the stream to the parser, which permits complete flexibility as to whether the data is coming from a pipe, a network socket, a file on disk, a serial line, or crafted by the user. The parser doesn't create an object tree for you, but each time it comes up with an element in this data, it just callback to the user with the type found and for some type, the data associated with it. it can be compared to the SAX way of XML, hence it's called SAJ (Simple API for JSon). The parser doesn't convert number to any native C format, but instead callback with a string that is a valid JSon number. JSon number can be of any size, so that's up to user to decide whetever or not, the number can map to native C type int32_t, int64_t, or a complex integer type. As well the user has a choice to refuse the integer at the callback stage if the length is not appropriate. The parser optionally allows YAML and/or C comments to be ignored if the config structure is set accordingly, otherwise a JSON_ERROR_COMMENT_NOT_ALLOWED is returned. the parser API is really simple, totaling only 5 API calls: * json_parser_init * json_parser_char * json_parser_string * json_parser_is_done * json_parser_free json_parser_init initializes a new parser context from a parser config and takes a callback + userdata. This callback function is used everything the parser need to communicate a type and value to the client side of the library. json_parser_char take one character and inject it in the parser. on parsing success it will return a 0 value, but on parsing error it returns a parsing error that represents the type of the error encounters. see JSON_ERROR_* for the full set of return values. json_parser_string is similar to json_parser_char except that it takes a string and a length. it also returns the number of character processed, which is useful when an parser error happened in the stream to pinpoint where. json_parser_is_done permits to test whetever or not the parser is in a terminated state. it involves not beeing into any structure. json_parser_free is the opposite of init, it just free the allocated structure. the printer API is simple too: * json_printer_init * json_printer_free * json_printer_pretty * json_printer_raw json_printer_init initialise a printing context and takes a callback + userdata that will be called for every character that the printer wants to output. the caller can have the printer callback redirect to anything it wants. json_printer_free is the opposite of init json_printer_raw takes a json type and an optional data and length value depending on the type. it's up to the caller to verify that the order of type are JSON-compliant, otherwise the generated document won't be able to be parsed again. json_printer_pretty works like json_printer_raw but is targetted for human reading by appending newlines and spaces