Get JSON values quickly - JSON parser for Go
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Josh Baker cd422a3e10 Removed Multi. Added Parse and result.Get funcs
The Multi field was too bulky. fixes #4
Added a Parse(json) function that will do a simple parse of json.
Added a result.Get(path) function that returns a child result.
Added Bool(), Int(), and Float() to result type. fixes #5
2016-08-22 06:05:51 -07:00
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README.md

GJSON
Build Status GoDoc

get a json value quickly

GJSON is a Go package the provides a very fast and simple way to get a value from a json document. The reason for this library it to give efficient json indexing for the BuntDB project.

Getting Started

Installing

To start using GJSON, install Go and run go get:

$ go get -u github.com/tidwall/gjson

This will retrieve the library.

Get a value

Get searches json for the specified path. A path is in dot syntax, such as "name.last" or "age". This function expects that the json is well-formed and validates. Invalid json will not panic, but it may return back unexpected results. When the value is found it's returned immediately.

package main

import "github.com/tidwall/gjson"

const json = `{"name":{"first":"Janet","last":"Prichard"},"age":47}`

func main() {
	value := gjson.Get(json, "name.last")
	println(value.String())
}

This will print:

Prichard

Path Syntax

A path is a series of keys separated by a dot. A key may contain special wildcard characters '*' and '?'. To access an array value use the index as the key. To get the number of elements in an array or to access a child path, use the '#' character. The dot and wildcard characters can be escaped with ''.

{
  "name": {"first": "Tom", "last": "Anderson"},
  "age":37,
  "children": ["Sara","Alex","Jack"],
  "fav.movie": "Deer Hunter",
  "friends": [
	{"first": "James", "last": "Murphy"},
	{"first": "Roger", "last": "Craig"}
  ]
}

"name.last"          >> "Anderson"
"age"                >> 37
"children.#"         >> 3
"children.1"         >> "Alex"
"child*.2"           >> "Jack"
"c?ildren.0"         >> "Sara"
"fav\.movie"         >> "Deer Hunter"
"friends.#.first"    >> [ "James", "Roger" ]
"friends.1.last"     >> "Craig"

Result Type

GJSON supports the json types string, number, bool, and null. Arrays and Objects are returned as their raw json types.

The Result type holds one of these:

bool, for JSON booleans
float64, for JSON numbers
string, for JSON string literals
nil, for JSON null

To directly access the value:

result.Type    // can be String, Number, True, False, Null, or JSON
result.Str     // holds the string
result.Num     // holds the float64 number
result.Raw     // holds the raw json
result.Multi   // holds nested array values

There are a variety of handy functions that work on a result:

result.Value() interface{}
result.Int() int64
result.Float() float64
result.String() string
result.Bool() bool
result.Array() []gjson.Result
result.Map() map[string]gjson.Result
result.Get(path string) Result

The result.Value() function returns an interface{} which requires type assertion and is one of the following Go types:

boolean >> bool
number  >> float64
string  >> string
null    >> nil
array   >> []interface{}
object  >> map[string]interface{}

Get nested array values

Suppose you want all the last names from the following json:

{
  "programmers": [
    {
      "firstName": "Janet", 
      "lastName": "McLaughlin", 
    }, {
      "firstName": "Elliotte", 
      "lastName": "Hunter", 
    }, {
      "firstName": "Jason", 
      "lastName": "Harold", 
    }
  ]
}`

You would use the path "programmers.#.lastName" like such:

result := gjson.Get(json, "programmers.#.lastName")
for _,name := range result.Array() {
	println(name.String())
}

Simple Parse and Get

There's a Parse(json) function that will do a simple parse, and result.Get(path) that will search a result.

For example, all of these will return the same result:

Parse(json).Get("name").Get("last")
Get("name").Get("last")
Get("name.last")

Check for the existence of a value

Sometimes you may want to see if the value actually existed in the json document.

value := gjson.Get(json, "name.last")
if !value.Exists() {
	println("no last name")
} else {
	println(value.String())
}

// Or as one step
if gjson.Get(json, "name.last").Exists(){
	println("has a last name")
}

Performance

Benchmarks of GJSON alongside encoding/json, ffjson, EasyJSON, and jsonparser

BenchmarkGJSONGet-8              	 3000000	       373 ns/op	       0 B/op	       0 allocs/op
BenchmarkJSONUnmarshalMap-8      	  600000	      8884 ns/op	    3048 B/op	      69 allocs/op
BenchmarkJSONUnmarshalStruct-8   	  600000	      9045 ns/op	    1832 B/op	      69 allocs/op
BenchmarkJSONDecoder-8           	  300000	     14134 ns/op	    4224 B/op	     184 allocs/op
BenchmarkFFJSONLexer-8           	 1500000	      3182 ns/op	     896 B/op	       8 allocs/op
BenchmarkEasyJSONLexer-8         	 3000000	       932 ns/op	     613 B/op	       6 allocs/op
BenchmarkJSONParserGet-8         	 3000000	       444 ns/op	      21 B/op	       0 allocs/op

JSON document used:

{
  "widget": {
    "debug": "on",
    "window": {
      "title": "Sample Konfabulator Widget",
      "name": "main_window",
      "width": 500,
      "height": 500
    },
    "image": { 
      "src": "Images/Sun.png",
      "hOffset": 250,
      "vOffset": 250,
      "alignment": "center"
    },
    "text": {
      "data": "Click Here",
      "size": 36,
      "style": "bold",
      "vOffset": 100,
      "alignment": "center",
      "onMouseUp": "sun1.opacity = (sun1.opacity / 100) * 90;"
    }
  }
}    

Each operation was rotated though one of the following search paths:

widget.window.name
widget.image.hOffset
widget.text.onMouseUp

These benchmarks were run on a MacBook Pro 15" 2.8 GHz Intel Core i7 using Go 1.7.

Contact

Josh Baker @tidwall

License

GJSON source code is available under the MIT License.