PMJSON
PMJSON provides a pure-Swift strongly-typed JSON encoder/decoder as well as a set of convenience methods for converting to/from Foundation objects and for decoding JSON structures.
The entire JSON encoder/decoder can be used without Foundation, by removing the files ObjectiveC.swift and DecimalNumber.swift from the project. The only dependency the rest of the project has is on Darwin, for strtod() and strtoll(). The file ObjectiveC.swift adds convenience methods for translating between JSON values and Foundation objects as well as decoding from a Data, and DecimalNumber.swift adds convenience accessors for converting values into NSDecimalNumber.
Usage
Before diving into the details, here's a simple example of writing a decoder for a struct. There are a few different options for how to deal with malformed data (e.g. whether to ignore values of wrong types, and whether to try and coerce non-string values to strings or vice versa), but the following example will be fairly strict and throw an error for incorrectly-typed values:
struct Address {
var streetLine1: String
var streetLine2: String?
var city: String
var state: String?
var postalCode: String
var country: String?
init(json: JSON) throws {
streetLine1 = try json.getString("street_line1")
streetLine2 = try json.getStringOrNil("street_line2")
city = try json.getString("city")
state = try json.getStringOrNil("state")
postalCode = try json.toString("postal_code") // coerce numbers to strings
country = try json.getStringOrNil("country")
}
}And here's an example of decoding a nested array of values:
struct Person {
var firstName: String
var lastName: String? // some people don't have last names
var age: Int
var addresses: [Address]
init(json: JSON) throws {
firstName = try json.getString("firstName")
lastName = try json.getStringOrNil("lastName")
age = try json.getInt("age")
addresses = try json.mapArray("addresses", Address.init(json:))
}
}If you don't want to deal with errors and just want to handle optionals, you can do that too:
struct Config {
var name: String?
var doThatThing: Bool
var maxRetries: Int
init(json: JSON) {
name = json["name"]?.string
doThatThing = json["doThatThing"]?.bool ?? false
maxRetries = json["maxRetries"]?.int ?? 10
}
}This library also provides support for Swift.Encoder and Swift.Decoder. See this section for details.
Parsing
The JSON decoder is split into separate parser and decoder stages. The parser consums any sequence of unicode scalars, and produces a sequence of JSON "events" (similar to a SAX XML parser). The decoder accepts a sequence of JSON events and produces a JSON value. This architecture is designed such that you can use just the parser alone in order to decode directly to your own data structures and bypass the JSON representation entirely if desired. However, most clients are expected to use both components, and this is exposed via a simple method JSON.decode(_:options:).
Parsing a JSON string into a JSON value is as simple as:
let json = try JSON.decode(jsonString)Any errors in the JSON parser are represented as JSONParserError values and are thrown from the decode() method. The error contains the precise line and column of the error, and a code that describes the problem.
A convenience method is also provided for decoding from a Data containing data encoded as UTF-8, UTF-16, or UTF-32:
let json = try JSON.decode(data)Encoding a JSON value is also simple:
let jsonString = JSON.encodeAsString(json)You can also encode directly to any TextOutputStream:
JSON.encode(json, toStream: &output)And, again, a convenience method is provided for working with Data:
let data = JSON.encodeAsData(json)JSON Streams
PMJSON supports parsing JSON streams, which are multiple top-level JSON values with optional whitespace delimiters (such as {"a": 1}{"a": 2}). The easiest way to use this is with JSON.decodeStream(_:) which returns a lazy sequence of JSONStreamValues, which contain either a JSON value or a JSONParserError error. You can also use JSONParsers and JSONDecoders directly for more fine-grained control over streaming.
JSONParser and JSONDecoder
As mentioned above, the JSON decoder is split into separate parser and decoder stages. JSONParser is the parser stage, and it wraps any sequence of UnicodeScalars, and itself is a sequence of JSONEvents. A JSONEvent is a single step of JSON parsing, such as .objectStart when a { is encountered, or .stringValue(_) when a "string" is encountered. You can use JSONParser directly to emit a stream of events if you want to do any kind of lazy processing of JSON (such as if you're dealing with a single massive JSON blob and don't want to decode the whole thing into memory at once).
Similarly, JSONDecoder is the decoder stage. It wraps a sequence of JSONEvents, and decodes that sequence into a proper JSON value. The wrapped sequence must also conform to a separate protocol JSONEventIterator that provides line/column information, which are used when emitting errors. You can use JSONDecoder directly if you want to wrap a sequence of events other than JSONParser, or if you want a different interface to JSON stream decoding than JSONStreamDecoder provides.
Because of this split nature, you can easily provide your own event stream, or your own decoding stage. Or you can do things like wrap JSONParser in an adaptor that modfiies the events before passing them to the decoder (which may be more efficient than converting the resulting JSON value).
Accessors
Besides encoding/decoding, this library also provides a comprehensive suite of accessors for getting data out of JSON values. There are 4 types of basic accessors provided:
- Basic property accessors named after types such as
.string. These accessors return the underlying value if it matches the type, ornilif the value is not the right type. For example,.stringreturnsString?. These accessors do not convert between types, e.g.JSON.Int64(42).stringreturnsnil. - Property accessors beginning with the word
as, such as.asString. These accessors also return an optional value, but they convert between types if it makes sense to do so. For example,JSON.Int64(42).asStringreturns"42". - Methods beginnning with
get, such asgetString(). These methods return non-optional values, and throwJSONErrors if the value's type does not match. These methods do not convert between types, e.g.try JSON.Int64(42).getString()throws an error. For every method of this type, there's also a variant ending inOrNil, such asgetStringOrNil(), which does return an optional. These methods only returnnilif the value isnull, otherwise they throw an error. - Methods beginning with
to, such astoString(). These are just like thegetmethods except they convert between types when appropriate, using the same rules that theasmethods do, e.g.try JSON.Int64(42).toString()returns"42". Like thegetmethods, there are also variants ending inOrNil.
JSON also provides both keyed and indexed subscript operators that return a JSON?, and are always safe to call (even with out-of-bounds indexes). And it provides 2 kinds of subscripting accessors:
- For every basic
getaccessor, there's a variant that takes a key or an index. These are equivalent to subscripting the receiver and invoking thegetaccessor on the result, except they produce better errors (and they handle missing keys/out-of-bounds indexes properly). For example,getString("key")orgetString(index). TheOrNilvariants also returnnilif the key doesn't exist or the index is out-of-bounds. - Similarly, there are subscripting equivalents for the
toaccessors as well.
And finally, the getObject() and getArray() accessors provide variants that take a closure. These variants are recommended over the basic accessors as they produce better errors. For example, given the following JSON:
{
"object": {
"elements": [
{
"name": null
}
]
}
}And the following code:
try json.getObject("object").getArray("elements").getObject(0).getString("name")The error thrown by this code will have the description "name: expected string, found null".
But given the following equivalent code:
try json.getObject("object", { try $0.getArray("elements", { try $0.getObject(0, { try $0.getString("name") }) }) })The error thrown by this code will have the description "object.elements[0].name: expected string, found null".
All of these accessors are also available on the JSONObject type (which is the type that represents an object).
The last code snippet above looks very verbose, but in practice you don't end up writing code like that. Instead you'll often end up just writing things like
try json.mapArray("elements", Element.init(json:))Helpers
The JSON type has static methods map(), flatMap(), and compactMap() for working with arrays (since PMJSON does not define its own array type). The benefit of using these methods over using the equivalent SequenceType methods is the PMJSON static methods produce better errors.
There are also helpers for converting to/from Foundation objects. JSON offers an initializer init(ns: Any) throws that converts from any JSON-compatible object to a JSON. JSON and JSONObject both offer the property .ns, which returns a Foundation object equivalent to the JSON, and .nsNoNull which does the same but omits any null values instead of using NSNull.
Codable support
The JSON type conforms to Codable, so it can be encoded to a Swift.Encoder and decoded from a Swift.Decoder. This has been tested against the standard library-provided JSONEncoder and JSONDecoder. Due to limitations in the decoding protocol, decoding a JSON must attempt to decode multiple different types of values, so it's possible that a poorly-written Swift.Decoder may produce surprising results when decoding a JSON.
Encoding to a JSON.Encoder and decoding from a JSON.Decoder is optimized to avoid unnecessary work.
Swift.Encoder and Swift.Decoder
This library provides an implementation of Swift.Encoder called JSON.Encoder. This can encode any Encodable to a JSON, a String, or a Data. It's used similarly to Swift.JSONEncoder (except at this time it doesn't have options to control encoding of specific types).
This library provides an implementation of Swift.Decoder called JSON.Decoder. This can decode any Decodable from a JSON, a String, or a Data. It's used similar to Swift.JSONDecoder (except at this time it doesn't have options to control decoding of specific types).
Performance
The test suite includes some basic performance tests. Decoding ~70KiB of JSON using PMJSON takes about 2.5-3x the time that NSJSONSerialization does, though I haven't tested this with different distributions of inputs and it's possible this performance is specific to the characteristics of the test input. However, encoding the same JSON back to a Data is actually faster with PMJSON, taking around 75% of the time that NSJSONSerialization does. These benchmarks were performed with Swift 2.x and it's possible the numbers have changed since then.
Requirements
Installing as a framework requires a minimum of iOS 8, OS X 10.9, watchOS 2.0, or tvOS 9.0.
Installation
After installing with any mechanism, you can use this by adding import PMJSON to your code.
Swift Package Manager
The Swift Package Manager may be used to install PMJSON by adding it to your dependencies list:
let package = Package(
name: "YourPackage",
dependencies: [
.package(url: "https://github.com/postmates/PMJSON.git", from: "3.0.1")
]
)Carthage
To install using Carthage, add the following to your Cartfile:
github "postmates/PMJSON" ~> 3.0
This release supports Swift 4. If you want Swift 3.x support, you can use
github "postmates/PMJSON" ~> 2.0
CocoaPods
To install using CocoaPods, add the following to your Podfile:
pod 'PMJSON', '~> 3.0'
This release supports Swift 4. If you want Swift 3.x support, you can use
pod 'PMJSON', '~> 2.0'
License
Licensed under either of
- Apache License, Version 2.0 (LICENSE-APACHE or http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0)
- MIT license (LICENSE-MIT or http://opensource.org/licenses/MIT) at your option.
Contribution
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the work by you shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.
Version History
v4.0.0 (2019-11-14)
- Update to Swift 5.
- When encoding/decoding
URLs withJSON.EncoderandJSON.Decoder, encode and decode their absolute string instead of relying on the native implementation which encodes them as an object. This matches the behavior ofJSONEncoderandJSONDecoder. - Fix availability attribute for
JSON.Encoder.DateEncodingStrategy.iso8601WithFractionalSeconds. - Bump
JSON.Encoder.DateEncodingStrategy.iso8601WithFractionalSecondsandJSON.Encoder.DateEncodingStrategy.iso8601WithFractionalSecondsto iOS 11.2+ and tvOS 11.2+ as, despite the constant being marked as available earlier, it's not supported at runtime. (#33) - Convert
JSONObject.nsandJSONObject.nsNoNullto return a[String: Any]instead of an[AnyHashable: Any]. (#25) - Split
JSON.Encoder.encodeAs*andJSON.Decoder.decodemethods into overload pairs where one takesoptions:and the other doesn't. This makes it easier to replace function references toJSONEncoder/JSONDecodermethods with the equivalents from PMJSON. - Add conformance to Combine's
TopLevelEncoderandTopLevelDecoder, usingDataas the input/output type. This means thatJSON.Encoder.encode(_:)is now marked as deprecated instead of unavailable. - Rename
JSON.flatMap*andJSONObject.flatMap*methods to.compactMap*instead when the transformation returns an optional. (#28) - Mark a lot of methods as
@inlinable.
v3.1.2 (2018-11-06)
- Add method
JSONError.withPrefix(_:)that returns a new error by prepending a prefix onto the path. This can be used in custom parsing code to produce good errors if the existing convenience functions don't do what you want. (#26)
v3.1.1 (2018-05-17)
- Squelch Swift 4.1 warnings.
v3.1.0 (2018-02-25)
- Improve
.prettyoutput for empty arrays/dictionaries. - Speed up
JSON.encodeAsData()pretty significantly. It's now very nearly as fast asJSON.encodeAsString(). - Speed up
JSON.Encoder.encodeAsString()andJSON.Encoder.encodeAsData(). - Add a couple of convenience static methods to
JSONthat mimic the enum cases:JSON.int(_:)andJSON.cgFloat(_:). These can be used whenJSON(_:)triggers too much type complexity. Also add aJSON(_:)override forCGFloat. - Add
JSON.Encoder.keyEncodingStrategy. This is very similar to Swift 4.1'sJSONEncoder.keyEncodingStrategy, although by default it won't apply to any nested values of typeJSONorJSONObject(there's another optionapplyKeyEncodingStrategyToJSONObjectthat controls this). - Add
JSON.Decoder.keyDecodingStrategy. This is very similar to Swift 4.1'sJSONDecoder.keyDecodingStrategy, although by default it won't apply to decoding any values of typeJSONorJSONObject(there's another optionapplyKeyDecodingStrategyToJSONObjectthat controls this). - Add
JSON.Encoder.dateEncodingStrategy. This is very similar toJSONEncoder.dateEncodingStrategyexcept it includes another case for encoding ISO8601-formatted dates with fractional seconds (on Apple platforms). - Add
JSON.Decoder.dateDecodingStrategy. This is very similar toJSONDecoder.dateDecodingStrategyexcept it includes another case for decoding ISO8601-formatted dates with fractional seconds (on Apple platforms). - Add
JSON.Encoder.dataEncodingStrategy. This is identical toJSONEncoder.dataEncodingStrategy. - Add
JSON.Decoder.dataDecodingStrategy. This is identical toJSONDecoder.dataDecodingStrategy.
v3.0.2 (2018-02-21)
- Add convenience property
JSONError.path. - Add method
JSONError.withPrefixedCodingPath(_:)to make it easier to useJSONError-throwing methods in aDecodableimplementation.
v3.0.1 (2018-02-18)
- Fix Swift Package Manager support.
v3.0.0 (2018-02-18)
- Convert to Swift 4.
- Implement
CodableonJSON. - Add a
Swift.Decoderimplementation calledJSON.Decoder. - Add a
Swift.Encoderimplementation calledJSON.Encoder.
v2.0.3 (2017-09-12)
- Add Linux support for
Decimal(on Swift 3.1 and later). NOTE: Decimal support is still buggy in Swift 3.1, and the workarounds we employ to get the correct values on Apple platforms don't work on Linux. You probably shouldn't rely on this working correctly on Linux until Swift fixes its Decimal implementation. - Add Linux support for decoding from/encoding to
Data. - Add Linux support for
LocalizedErroron the Error types (only really applies to Swift 3.1 and later). - Fix compilation on Linux using the release configuration.
- Support running the test suite with
swift test.
v2.0.2 (2017-03-06)
- Fix Linux compatibility.
v2.0.1 (2017-02-26)
- Add method
JSON.parser(for:options:)that returns aJSONParser<AnySequence<UnicodeScalar>>from aData. LikeJSON.decode(_:options:), this method automatically detects UTF-8, UTF-16, or UTF-32 input. - Fix compatibility with Swift Package Manager.
v2.0.0 (2017-01-02)
- Add full support for decimal numbers (on supported platforms). This takes the form of a new
JSONvariant.decimal, any relevant accessors, and full parsing/decoding support with the new option.useDecimals. With this option, any number that would have been decoded as aDoublewill be decoded as aDecimalinstead. - Add a set of
forEachaccessors for working with arrays, similar to the existingmapandflatMapaccessors.
v1.2.1 (2016-10-27)
- Handle UTF-32 input.
- Detect UTF-16 and UTF-32 input without a BOM.
- Fix bug where we weren't passing decoder options through for UTF-16 input.
v1.2.0 (2016-10-27)
- Change how options are provided to the encoder/decoder/parser. All options are now provided in the form of a struct that uses array literal syntax (similar to
OptionSets). The old methods that take strict/pretty flags are now marked as deprecated. - Add a new depth limit option to the decoder, with a default of 10,000.
- Implement a new test suite based on JSONTestSuite.
- Fix a crash if the input stream contained a lone trail surrogate without a lead surrogate.
- Fix incorrect parsing of numbers of the form
1e-1or1e+1. - When the
strictoption is specified, stop accepting numbers of the form01or-01. - Add support for UTF-16 when decoding a
Datathat has a UTF-16 BOM. - Skip a UTF-8 BOM if present when decoding a
Data.
v1.1.0 (2016-10-20)
- Add
HashabletoJSONEventandJSONParserError. - Make
JSONParserErrorconform toCustomNSErrorfor better Obj-C errors. - Full JSON stream support.
JSONParserandJSONDecodercan now both operate in streaming mode, a new typeJSONStreamDecoderwas added as a lazy sequence of JSON values, and a convenience methodJSON.decodeStream(_:)was added. - Rename
JSONEventGeneratortoJSONEventIteratorandJSONParserGeneratortoJSONParserIterator. The old names are available (but deprecated) for backwards compatibility. - Add support for pattern matching with
JSONParserError. It should now work just like any other error, allowing you to say e.g.if case JSONParserError.invalidSyntax = error { … }.
v1.0.1 (2016-09-15)
- Fix CocoaPods.
v1.0.0 (2016-09-08)
- Support Swift 3.0.
- Add setters for basic accessors so you can write code like
json["foo"].object?["key"] = "bar". - Provide a localized description for errors when bridged to
NSError. - Add support to
JSONParserfor streams of JSON values (e.g."[1][2]").
v0.9.3 (2016-05-23)
- Add a set of convenience methods on
JSONandJSONObjectfor mapping arrays returned by subscripting with a key or index:mapArray(_:_:),mapArrayOrNil(_:_:),flatMapArray(_:_:), andflatMapArrayOrNil(_:_:). - Add new set of convenience
JSONinitializers. - Change
descriptionanddebugDescriptionforJSONandJSONObjectto be more useful.descriptionis now the JSON-encoded string. - Implement
CustomReflectableforJSONandJSONObject.
v0.9.2 (2016-03-04)
- CocoaPods support.
v0.9.1 (2016-02-19)
- Linux support.
- Swift Package Manager support.
- Rename instances of
plistin the API tons. The old names are still available but marked as deprecated. - Support the latest Swift snapshot (2012-02-08).
v0.9 (2016-02-12)
Initial release.