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Yes, it's another C++ JSON parser and DOM! One header, one .cpp. No dependencies. Friendly to use.

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vjson

vjson is a lightweight but friendly-to-use JSON parser and DOM in C++.

Design goals:

  • Good ergonomics when traversing the DOM (see below). This is the most unique goal among the many other libraries available.
  • Small: one ~700-line header, one .cpp file
  • No external dependencies. (No, not even boost.)
  • Use STL containers for storage: std::vector for arrays; std::map for objects.
  • Strings and keys stored as std::string, but access using const char * is possible in most places.
  • No use of exceptions, RTTI, iostream, etc.
  • DOM-style interface: read the whole document into some data structures at once. (No SAX-style / treaming) interface.)
  • Parser only accepts the document as memory block, so entire source must fit in memory. (No istream, FILE*, iterator interface, etc)
  • Printing options: Some basic options for minified or indented. (No framework for detailed customization.)
  • If parsing fails, provide a good error message with a line number (important for "pretty" / hand-edited JSON) and byte offset (important for "minified" JSON).
  • Parsing options: Comments and trailing commas can be optionally ignored.

Here are some goals this library doesn't have. (If you beed these, try one of the other libraries below.)

  • Remember formatting or comments, to support automated modification of documents
  • Super-fast or efficient. This lib aims to not be grossly inefficient, but it also avoids weird/complicated stuff in the name of efficiency. See some of the libs below if you need fast parsing or to load in huge documents.
  • Header-only library. I consider putting all the guts of the parsing code in a header an anti-pattern.
  • Super streamlined syntax for constructing a DOM in C++ code

Really? Another JSON parser?

My biggest complaint with other JSON libs is how tedius it can be to write code to load up a file. Specifically:

  • Code to traverse the DOM should not require an excessive number of if statements to handle common situations:
    • An object does not have a value with the specified name
    • An object or array has a value, but it's the wrong type
  • Handling "Booleanish" values in a reasonably generous way, such as treating a numeric 0 as false.
  • Make it easy to deal with 64-bit numbers as strings. (JSON only supports "numbers", which are usually represented as doubles. A 64-bit value encoded as a "number" is very likely to be mutated in transit.)

If you want to be extremely strict about extra/missing keys, values of the wrong type, etc. then there really is no shortcut for writing detailed, explicit error handling. vjson makes it easy to write that kind of code when the situation calls for it. But most of us have the more modest aim of "detect common errors, but otherwise just do 'something reasonable' with a malformed document, with the least amount of coding effort possible". That's when vjson shines. For example:

  • If a key is missing, it can supply the default in a single function call.
  • If an array or object is missing, return an empty one.
  • If a value is present at the given key, but the wrong type, just act as if it it missing.
  • If an array is only suoposed to contain a certin type of value, iterate over the elements with that type in an idiomatic way, ignoring any elements that are the wrong type.
  • When loading/parsing a document that is supposed to be a single JSON object, just fail if the input is some other JSON value, and don't make me write an explicit check for that case.

TL;DR: Error handling should not constitute the majority of the code to load up a document, when your goal is simply "do something reasonable and don't crash."

Building

Add vjson.cpp to your project and compile it.

Other C++ JSON libraries

Here are a few C++ JSON libraries.

JsonCpp is the library I found that came closest to meeting my needs. The thing I ended up with meets my needs better (especially the ergonimics and avoiding all the if() statements when traversing a DOM), and I like my library better for my needs, but I must admit that the difference is small enough and if I would have found this library earlier I might not have written mine.

  • JsonCpp Good library that is pretty lean. Uses exceptions, but only if you have a bug. (Importantly: does not use exceptions for bad files.) Has a unique feature to preserve comments and reserialize. Slightly bigger than my lib, but satisfies many of the same goals.

Here are some other JSON libraries I looked into. They don't satisfy the particular goals I have for most of my projects, but they offer unique features and tradeoffs and might be more appropriate for your project.

  • minijson. Just a parser, no DOM.
  • ThorsSerializer not a simple DOM. More like go's approach to JSON serialization, it wants you to annotate your classes and load data directly into them.
  • jvar Has a boost dependency. Looks like a good, simple alternative if you don't mind that.
  • JSONCONS is a very fully-featured library. Much bigger than mine. Has a boost dependency. Uses exceptions.
  • rapidjson Claims to be very fast. Has a SaX model, which might be useful if you want that. Too big for my needs, nearly 40 headers.
  • JSON for Modern C++ A 23K line header file. One design goal was the ability to put "JSON" loking syntax directly in C++ code and use Modern C++ be able to parse it into a data structure.
  • ujson A tiny library that I was using for a while at Valve. I found some bugs and reported them, the project has been abandoned. The main reason for mentioning it is that it is partly the namesake of this library.
  • picojson I used this at Valve for a while after abandoning ujson. It uses exceptions and streams.

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