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* Add key_compare member to ordered_map * Replace == with key_compare in ordered_map * Expose the actual comparison function used by object_t nlohmann::ordered_map uses a different comparison function than the one provided via template parameter. * Introduce a type trait to detect if object_t has a key_compare member. * Rename object_comparator_t to default_object_comparator_t. * Add object_comparator_t to be conditionally defined as object_t::key_compare, if available, or default_object_comparator_t otherwise. * Update the documentation accordingly. Co-authored-by: Niels Lohmann <niels.lohmann@gmail.com> * Add type traits to check if a type is usable as object key Add type trait to check: * if a type is a specialization of a template. * if a type is a json_pointer. * if a type is a basic_json::{const_,}iterator. * if two types are comparable using a given comparison functor. * if a type is comparable to basic_json::object_t::key_type. * if a type has a member type is_transparent. * if a type is usable as object key. * if a type has an erase() function accepting a given KeyType. Co-authored-by: Niels Lohmann <niels.lohmann@gmail.com> * Rework basic_json element access to accept more key types Rework basic_json element access member functions and operators to accept any type that meets the requirements defined by type trait detail::is_usable_as_key_type. Member functions and operators: * at() * operator[] * value() * erase() * find() * count() * contains() Update documentation to reflect these changes. Add unit tests to excercise the new functions using std::string_view. Co-authored-by: Niels Lohmann <niels.lohmann@gmail.com> Co-authored-by: Niels Lohmann <niels.lohmann@gmail.com>
6.5 KiB
6.5 KiB
nlohmann::basic_json::at
// (1)
reference at(size_type idx);
const_reference at(size_type idx) const;
// (2)
reference at(const typename object_t::key_type& key);
const_reference at(const typename object_t::key_type& key) const;
// (3)
template<typename KeyType>
reference at(KeyType&& key);
template<typename KeyType>
const_reference at(KeyType&& key) const;
// (4)
reference at(const json_pointer& ptr);
const_reference at(const json_pointer& ptr) const;
- Returns a reference to the array element at specified location
idx
, with bounds checking. - Returns a reference to the object element with specified key
key
, with bounds checking. - See 2. This overload is only available if
KeyType
is comparable with#!cpp typename object_t::key_type
and#!cpp typename object_comparator_t::is_transparent
denotes a type. - Returns a reference to the element at specified JSON pointer
ptr
, with bounds checking.
Template parameters
KeyType
- A type for an object key other than
json_pointer
that is comparable withstring_t
usingobject_comparator_t
. This can also be a string view (C++17).
Parameters
idx
(in)- index of the element to access
key
(in)- object key of the elements to access
ptr
(in)- JSON pointer to the desired element
Return value
- reference to the element at index
idx
- reference to the element at key
key
- reference to the element at key
key
- reference to the element pointed to by
ptr
Exception safety
Strong exception safety: if an exception occurs, the original value stays intact.
Exceptions
- The function can throw the following exceptions:
- Throws
type_error.304
if the JSON value is not an array; in this case, callingat
with an index makes no sense. See example below. - Throws
out_of_range.401
if the indexidx
is out of range of the array; that is,idx >= size()
. See example below.
- Throws
- The function can throw the following exceptions:
- Throws
type_error.304
if the JSON value is not an object; in this case, callingat
with a key makes no sense. See example below. - Throws
out_of_range.403
if the keykey
is not stored in the object; that is,find(key) == end()
. See example below.
- Throws
- See 2.
- The function can throw the following exceptions:
- Throws
parse_error.106
if an array index in the passed JSON pointerptr
begins with '0'. See example below. - Throws
parse_error.109
if an array index in the passed JSON pointerptr
is not a number. See example below. - Throws
out_of_range.401
if an array index in the passed JSON pointerptr
is out of range. See example below. - Throws
out_of_range.402
if the array index '-' is used in the passed JSON pointerptr
. Asat
provides checked access (and no elements are implicitly inserted), the index '-' is always invalid. See example below. - Throws
out_of_range.403
if the JSON pointer describes a key of an object which cannot be found. See example below. - Throws
out_of_range.404
if the JSON pointerptr
can not be resolved. See example below.
- Throws
Complexity
- Constant.
- Logarithmic in the size of the container.
- Logarithmic in the size of the container.
- Logarithmic in the size of the container.
Examples
??? example "Example: (1) access specified array element with bounds checking"
The example below shows how array elements can be read and written using `at()`. It also demonstrates the different
exceptions that can be thrown.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/at__size_type.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/at__size_type.output"
```
??? example "Example: (1) access specified array element with bounds checking"
The example below shows how array elements can be read using `at()`. It also demonstrates the different exceptions
that can be thrown.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/at__size_type_const.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/at__size_type_const.output"
```
??? example "Example: (2) access specified object element with bounds checking"
The example below shows how object elements can be read and written using `at()`. It also demonstrates the different
exceptions that can be thrown.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/at__object_t_key_type.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/at__object_t_key_type.output"
```
??? example "Example (2) access specified object element with bounds checking"
The example below shows how object elements can be read using `at()`. It also demonstrates the different exceptions
that can be thrown.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/at__object_t_key_type_const.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/at__object_t_key_type_const.output"
```
??? example "Example (4) access specified element via JSON Pointer"
The example below shows how object elements can be read and written using `at()`. It also demonstrates the different
exceptions that can be thrown.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/at_json_pointer.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/at_json_pointer.output"
```
??? example "Example (4) access specified element via JSON Pointer"
The example below shows how object elements can be read using `at()`. It also demonstrates the different exceptions
that can be thrown.
```cpp
--8<-- "examples/at_json_pointer_const.cpp"
```
Output:
```json
--8<-- "examples/at_json_pointer_const.output"
```
See also
- see
operator[]
for unchecked access by reference - see
value
for access with default value
Version history
- Added in version 1.0.0.
- Added in version 1.0.0.
- Added in version 3.11.0.
- Added in version 2.0.0.