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2.0 KiB
2.0 KiB
basic_json::dump
string_t dump(const int indent = -1,
const char indent_char = ' ',
const bool ensure_ascii = false,
const error_handler_t error_handler = error_handler_t::strict) const;
Serialization function for JSON values. The function tries to mimic Python's json.dumps()
function, and currently
supports its indent
and ensure_ascii
parameters.
Parameters
indent
(in)- If
indent
is nonnegative, then array elements and object members will be pretty-printed with that indent level. An indent level of0
will only insert newlines.-1
(the default) selects the most compact representation. indent_char
(in)- The character to use for indentation if
indent
is greater than0
. The default is ensure_ascii
(in)- If
ensure_ascii
is true, all non-ASCII characters in the output are escaped with\uXXXX
sequences, and the result consists of ASCII characters only. error_handler
(in)- how to react on decoding errors; there are three possible values (see
error_handler_t
:strict
(throws and exception in case a decoding error occurs; default),replace
(replace invalid UTF-8 sequences with U+FFFD), andignore
(ignore invalid UTF-8 sequences during serialization; all bytes are copied to the output unchanged).
Return value
string containing the serialization of the JSON value
Exception safety
Strong guarantee: if an exception is thrown, there are no changes to any JSON value.
Complexity
Linear.
Notes
Binary values are serialized as object containing two keys:
- "bytes": an array of bytes as integers
- "subtype": the subtype as integer or
#!json null
if the binary has no subtype
Example
??? example
The following example shows the effect of different `indent`, `indent_char`, and `ensure_ascii` parameters to the
result of the serialization.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/dump.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/dump.output"
```