use warnings FATAL => 'all';
use base qw(Exporter);
-our $VERSION = '1.003003';
+our $VERSION = '1.004000';
$VERSION = eval $VERSION;
sub _choose_json_module {
BEGIN {
our $JSON_Class = _choose_json_module();
$JSON_Class->import(qw(encode_json decode_json));
+ no strict 'refs';
+ *$_ = $JSON_Class->can($_)
+ for qw(true false);
}
our @EXPORT = qw(encode_json decode_json JSON);
my $json_output = encode_json($data_structure);
- my $json = JSON->new;
+ my $json = JSON()->new;
my $json_with_args = JSON::MaybeXS->new(utf8 => 1); # or { utf8 => 1 }
C<:all>. NOTE: This is to support legacy code that makes extensive
use of C<to_json> and C<from_json> which you are not yet in a position to
refactor. DO NOT use this import tag in new code, in order to avoid
-the crawling horrors of getting UTF8 support subtly wrong. See the
+the crawling horrors of getting UTF-8 support subtly wrong. See the
documentation for L<JSON> for further details.
=head2 encode_json
The C<JSON> constant returns the selected implementation module's name for
use as a class name - so:
- my $json_obj = JSON->new; # returns a Cpanel::JSON::XS or JSON::PP object
+ my $json_obj = JSON()->new; # returns a Cpanel::JSON::XS or JSON::PP object
and that object can then be used normally:
my $data_structure = $json_obj->decode($json_text); # etc.
+The use of parentheses here is optional, and only used as a hint to the reader
+that this use of C<JSON> is a I<subroutine> call, I<not> a class name.
+
=head2 is_bool
$is_boolean = is_bool($scalar)
a class method like the other interfaces; it must be called as a function, with
no invocant. It supports the representation used in all JSON backends.
+Available since version 1.002004.
+
=head1 CONSTRUCTOR
=head2 new
which works equivalently to the above (and in the usual tradition will accept
a hashref instead of a hash, should you so desire).
+The resulting object is blessed into the underlying backend, which offers (at
+least) the methods C<encode> and C<decode>.
+
=head1 BOOLEANS
To include JSON-aware booleans (C<true>, C<false>) in your data, just do:
use JSON::MaybeXS;
- my $true = JSON->true;
- my $false = JSON->false;
+ my $true = JSON()->true;
+ my $false = JSON()->false;
+
+The booleans are also available as subs or methods on JSON::MaybeXS.
+
+ use JSON::MaybeXS ();
+ my $true = JSON::MaybeXS::true;
+ my $true = JSON::MaybeXS->true;
+ my $false = JSON::MaybeXS::false;
+ my $false = JSON::MaybeXS->false;
+
+=head1 CONVERTING FROM JSON::Any
+
+L<JSON::Any> used to be the favoured compatibility layer above the various
+JSON backends, but over time has grown a lot of extra code to deal with legacy
+backends (e.g. L<JSON::Syck>) that are no longer needed. This is a rough guide of translating such code:
+
+Change code from:
+
+ use JSON::Any;
+ my $json = JSON::Any->new->objToJson($data); # or to_json($data), or Dump($data)
+
+to:
+
+ use JSON::MaybeXS;
+ my $json = encode_json($data);
+
+
+Change code from:
+
+ use JSON::Any;
+ my $data = JSON::Any->new->jsonToObj($json); # or from_json($json), or Load($json)
+
+to:
+
+ use JSON::MaybeXS;
+ my $json = decode_json($data);
+
+=head1 CAVEATS
+
+The C<new()> method in this module is technically a factory, not a
+constructor, because the objects it returns will I<NOT> be blessed into the
+C<JSON::MaybeXS> class.
+
+If you are using an object returned by this module as a Moo(se) attribute,
+this type constraint code:
+
+ is 'json' => ( isa => 'JSON::MaybeXS' );
+
+will I<NOT> do what you expect. Instead, either rely on the C<JSON> class
+constant described above, as so:
+
+ is 'json' => ( isa => JSON::MaybeXS::JSON() );
+
+Alternatively, you can use duck typing:
+
+ use Moose::Util::TypeConstraints 'duck_type';
+ is 'json' => ( isa => Object , duck_type([qw/ encode decode /]));
+
+=head1 INSTALLATION
+
+At installation time, F<Makefile.PL> will attempt to determine if you have a
+working compiler available, and therefore whether you are able to run XS code.
+If so, L<Cpanel::JSON::XS> will be added to the prerequisite list, unless
+L<JSON::XS> is already installed at a high enough version. L<JSON::XS> may
+also be upgraded to fix any incompatibility issues.
+
+Because running XS code is not mandatory and L<JSON::PP> (which is in perl
+core) is used as a fallback backend, this module is safe to be used in a suite
+of code that is fatpacked or installed into a restricted-resource environment.
+
+You can also prevent any XS dependencies from being installed by setting
+C<PUREPERL_ONLY=1> in F<Makefile.PL> options (or in the C<PERL_MM_OPT>
+environment variable), or using the C<--pp> or C<--pureperl> flags with the
+L<cpanminus client|cpanm>.
=head1 AUTHOR