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Merge branch 'master' of https://github.com/json-c/json-c

tags/json-c-0.10-20120530
Eric Haszlakiewicz 13 years ago
parent
commit
7502b377b7
1 changed files with 62 additions and 11 deletions
  1. +62
    -11
      json_object.h

+ 62
- 11
json_object.h View File

@@ -63,13 +63,18 @@ typedef enum json_type {
/* reference counting functions */

/**
* Increment the reference count of json_object
* Increment the reference count of json_object, thereby grabbing shared
* ownership of obj.
*
* @param obj the json_object instance
*/
extern struct json_object* json_object_get(struct json_object *obj);

/**
* Decrement the reference count of json_object and free if it reaches zero
* Decrement the reference count of json_object and free if it reaches zero.
* You must have ownership of obj prior to doing this or you will cause an
* imbalance in the reference count.
*
* @param obj the json_object instance
*/
extern void json_object_put(struct json_object *obj);
@@ -115,7 +120,14 @@ extern const char* json_object_to_json_string(struct json_object *obj);

/* object type methods */

/** Create a new empty object
/** Create a new empty object with a reference count of 1. The caller of
* this object initially has sole ownership. Remember, when using
* json_object_object_add or json_object_array_put_idx, ownership will
* transfer to the object/array. Call json_object_get if you want to maintain
* shared ownership or also add this object as a child of multiple objects or
* arrays. Any ownerships you acquired but did not transfer must be released
* through json_object_put.
*
* @returns a json_object of type json_type_object
*/
extern struct json_object* json_object_new_object(void);
@@ -130,7 +142,13 @@ extern struct lh_table* json_object_get_object(struct json_object *obj);
*
* The reference count will *not* be incremented. This is to make adding
* fields to objects in code more compact. If you want to retain a reference
* to an added object you must wrap the passed object with json_object_get
* to an added object, independent of the lifetime of obj, you must wrap the
* passed object with json_object_get.
*
* Upon calling this, the ownership of val transfers to obj. Thus you must
* make sure that you do in fact have ownership over this object. For instance,
* json_object_new_object will give you ownership until you transfer it,
* whereas json_object_object_get does not.
*
* @param obj the json_object instance
* @param key the object field name (a private copy will be duplicated)
@@ -140,6 +158,17 @@ extern void json_object_object_add(struct json_object* obj, const char *key,
struct json_object *val);

/** Get the json_object associate with a given object field
*
* *No* reference counts will be changed. There is no need to manually adjust
* reference counts through the json_object_put/json_object_get methods unless
* you need to have the child (value) reference maintain a different lifetime
* than the owning parent (obj). Ownership of the returned value is retained
* by obj (do not do json_object_put unless you have done a json_object_get).
* If you delete the value from obj (json_object_object_del) and wish to access
* the returned reference afterwards, make sure you have first gotten shared
* ownership through json_object_get (& don't forget to do a json_object_put
* or transfer ownership to prevent a memory leak).
*
* @param obj the json_object instance
* @param key the object field name
* @returns the json_object associated with the given field name
@@ -149,7 +178,9 @@ extern struct json_object* json_object_object_get(struct json_object* obj,

/** Delete the given json_object field
*
* The reference count will be decremented for the deleted object
* The reference count will be decremented for the deleted object. If there
* are no more owners of the value represented by this key, then the value is
* freed. Otherwise, the reference to the value will remain in memory.
*
* @param obj the json_object instance
* @param key the object field name
@@ -159,7 +190,8 @@ extern void json_object_object_del(struct json_object* obj, const char *key);
/** Iterate through all keys and values of an object
* @param obj the json_object instance
* @param key the local name for the char* key variable defined in the body
* @param val the local name for the json_object* object variable defined in the body
* @param val the local name for the json_object* object variable defined in
* the body
*/
#if defined(__GNUC__) && !defined(__STRICT_ANSI__)

@@ -293,7 +325,8 @@ extern struct json_object* json_object_new_int64(int64_t i);
*
* The type is coerced to a int if the passed object is not a int.
* double objects will return their integer conversion. Strings will be
* parsed as an integer. If no conversion exists then 0 is returned.
* parsed as an integer. If no conversion exists then 0 is returned
* and errno is set to EINVAL. null is equivalent to 0 (no error values set)
*
* Note that integers are stored internally as 64-bit values.
* If the value of too big or too small to fit into 32-bit, INT32_MAX or
@@ -310,6 +343,10 @@ extern int32_t json_object_get_int(struct json_object *obj);
* double objects will return their int64 conversion. Strings will be
* parsed as an int64. If no conversion exists then 0 is returned.
*
* NOTE: Set errno to 0 directly before a call to this function to determine
* whether or not conversion was successful (it does not clear the value for
* you).
*
* @param obj the json_object instance
* @returns an int64
*/
@@ -324,14 +361,28 @@ extern int64_t json_object_get_int64(struct json_object *obj);
*/
extern struct json_object* json_object_new_double(double d);

/** Get the double value of a json_object
/** Get the double floating point value of a json_object
*
* The type is coerced to a double if the passed object is not a double.
* integer objects will return their dboule conversion. Strings will be
* parsed as a double. If no conversion exists then 0.0 is returned.
* integer objects will return their double conversion. Strings will be
* parsed as a double. If no conversion exists then 0.0 is returned and
* errno is set to EINVAL. null is equivalent to 0 (no error values set)
*
* If the value is too big to fit in a double, then the value is set to
* the closest infinity with errno set to ERANGE. If strings cannot be
* converted to their double value, then EINVAL is set & NaN is returned.
*
* Arrays of length 0 are interpreted as 0 (with no error flags set).
* Arrays of length 1 are effectively cast to the equivalent object and
* converted using the above rules. All other arrays set the error to
* EINVAL & return NaN.
*
* NOTE: Set errno to 0 directly before a call to this function to
* determine whether or not conversion was successful (it does not clear
* the value for you).
*
* @param obj the json_object instance
* @returns an double
* @returns a double floating point number
*/
extern double json_object_get_double(struct json_object *obj);



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