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nlohmannjson/include/nlohmann/detail/value_t.hpp
2020-05-07 09:43:41 +02:00

84 lines
3.1 KiB
C++

#pragma once
#include <array> // array
#include <cstddef> // size_t
#include <cstdint> // uint8_t
#include <string> // string
#include <nlohmann/detail/boolean_operators.hpp>
namespace nlohmann
{
namespace detail
{
///////////////////////////
// JSON type enumeration //
///////////////////////////
/*!
@brief the JSON type enumeration
This enumeration collects the different JSON types. It is internally used to
distinguish the stored values, and the functions @ref basic_json::is_null(),
@ref basic_json::is_object(), @ref basic_json::is_array(),
@ref basic_json::is_string(), @ref basic_json::is_boolean(),
@ref basic_json::is_number() (with @ref basic_json::is_number_integer(),
@ref basic_json::is_number_unsigned(), and @ref basic_json::is_number_float()),
@ref basic_json::is_discarded(), @ref basic_json::is_primitive(), and
@ref basic_json::is_structured() rely on it.
@note There are three enumeration entries (number_integer, number_unsigned, and
number_float), because the library distinguishes these three types for numbers:
@ref basic_json::number_unsigned_t is used for unsigned integers,
@ref basic_json::number_integer_t is used for signed integers, and
@ref basic_json::number_float_t is used for floating-point numbers or to
approximate integers which do not fit in the limits of their respective type.
@sa @ref basic_json::basic_json(const value_t value_type) -- create a JSON
value with the default value for a given type
@since version 1.0.0
*/
enum class value_t : std::uint8_t
{
null, ///< null value
object, ///< object (unordered set of name/value pairs)
array, ///< array (ordered collection of values)
string, ///< string value
boolean, ///< boolean value
number_integer, ///< number value (signed integer)
number_unsigned, ///< number value (unsigned integer)
number_float, ///< number value (floating-point)
binary, ///< binary array (ordered collection of bytes)
discarded ///< discarded by the parser callback function
};
/*!
@brief comparison operator for JSON types
Returns an ordering that is similar to Python:
- order: null < boolean < number < object < array < string < binary
- furthermore, each type is not smaller than itself
- discarded values are not comparable
- binary is represented as a b"" string in python and directly comparable to a
string; however, making a binary array directly comparable with a string would
be surprising behavior in a JSON file.
@since version 1.0.0
*/
inline bool operator<(const value_t lhs, const value_t rhs) noexcept
{
static constexpr std::array<std::uint8_t, 9> order = {{
0 /* null */, 3 /* object */, 4 /* array */, 5 /* string */,
1 /* boolean */, 2 /* integer */, 2 /* unsigned */, 2 /* float */,
6 /* binary */
}
};
const auto l_index = static_cast<std::size_t>(lhs);
const auto r_index = static_cast<std::size_t>(rhs);
return l_index < order.size() and r_index < order.size() and order[l_index] < order[r_index];
}
} // namespace detail
} // namespace nlohmann