# basic_json::accept ```cpp // (1) template static bool accept(InputType&& i, const bool ignore_comments = false); // (2) static bool accept(iterator first, iterator last, const bool ignore_comments = false); static bool accept(const_iterator first, const_iterator last, const bool ignore_comments = false); ``` Checks whether the input is valid JSON. 1. Reads from a compatible input. 2. Reads from a pair of character iterators The value_type of the iterator must be a integral type with size of 1, 2 or 4 bytes, which will be interpreted respectively as UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32. Unlike the [`parse`](parse.md) function, this function neither throws an exception in case of invalid JSON input (i.e., a parse error) nor creates diagnostic information. ## Template parameters `InputType` : A compatible input, for instance: - an `std::istream` object - a `FILE` pointer - a C-style array of characters - a pointer to a null-terminated string of single byte characters - an object `obj` for which `begin(obj)` and `end(obj)` produces a valid pair of iterators. ## Parameters `i` (in) : Input to parse from. `ignore_comments` (in) : whether comments should be ignored and treated like whitespace (`#!cpp true`) or yield a parse error (`#!cpp false`); (optional, `#!cpp false` by default) `first` (in) : iterator to start of character range `last` (in) : iterator to end of character range ## Return value Whether the input is valid JSON. ## Exception safety Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no changes in the JSON value. ## Complexity Linear in the length of the input. The parser is a predictive LL(1) parser. ## Notes (1) A UTF-8 byte order mark is silently ignored. ## Examples ??? example The example below demonstrates the `accept()` function reading from a string. ```cpp --8<-- "examples/accept__string.cpp" ``` Output: ```json --8<-- "examples/accept__string.output" ``` ## Version history - Added in version 3.0.0. - Ignoring comments via `ignore_comments` added in version 3.9.0.