.circleci | ||
tests | ||
toml | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
appveyor.yml | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
toml.hpp |
toml11
toml11 is a C++11 header-only toml parser/encoder depending only on C++ standard library.
compatible to the latest version of TOML v0.5.0 after version 2.0.0.
It passes the language agnostic test suite for TOML parsers by BurntSushi. Not only the test suite itself, a TOML reader/encoder also runs on CircleCI. You can see the error messages about invalid files and serialization results of valid files at CircleCI.
Example
#include <toml11/toml.hpp>
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
const auto data = toml::parse("example.toml");
// title = "an example toml file"
std::string title = toml::find<std::string>(data, "title");
std::cout << "the title is " << title << std::endl;
// nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
std::vector<int> nums = toml::find<std::vector<int>>(data, "nums");
std::cout << "the length of `nums` is" << nums.size() << std::endl;
return 0;
}
Table of Contents
- Integration
- Decoding a toml file
- Finding a toml value
- Casting a toml value
- Checking value type
- More about conversion
- Getting with a fallback
- Expecting conversion
- Visiting a toml::value
- Constructing a toml::value
- Preserving Comments
- Customizing containers
- TOML literal
- Conversion between toml value and arbitrary types
- Invalid UTF-8 Codepoints
- Formatting user-defined error messages
- Getting comments related to a value
- Serializing TOML data
- Underlying types
- Breaking Changes from v2
- Running Tests
- Contributors
- Licensing Terms
Integration
Just include the file after adding it to the include path.
#include <toml11/toml.hpp> // that's all! now you can use it.
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
const auto data = toml::parse("example.toml");
const auto title = toml::find<std::string>(data, "title");
std::cout << "the title is " << title << std::endl;
return 0;
}
The convenient way is to add this repository as a git-submodule.
Decoding a toml file
To parse a toml file, the only thing you have to do is
to pass a filename to the toml::parse
function.
const std::string fname("sample.toml");
const toml::table data = toml::parse(fname);
If it encounters an error while opening a file, it will throw std::runtime_error
.
You can also pass a std::istream
to the toml::parse
function.
To show a filename in an error message, it is recommended to pass the filename
with the stream.
std::ifstream ifs("sample.toml", std::ios_base::binary);
assert(ifs.good());
const auto data = toml::parse(ifs, /*optional*/ "sample.toml");
Note: When you are on Windows, open a file in binary mode. If a file is opened in text-mode, CRLF ("\r\n") will automatically be converted to LF ("\n") and this causes inconsistency between file size and the contents that would be read. This causes weird error.
In the case of syntax error
If there is a syntax error in a toml file, toml::parse
will throw
toml::syntax_error
that inherits std::exception
.
toml11 has clean and informative error messages inspired by Rust and it looks like the following.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'toml::syntax_error'
what(): [error] toml::parse_table: invalid line format # error description
--> example.toml # file name
3 | a = 42 = true # line num and content
| ^------ expected newline, but got '='. # error reason
If you (mistakenly) duplicate tables and got an error, it is helpful to see where they are. toml11 shows both at the same time like the following.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'toml::syntax_error'
what(): [error] toml::insert_value: table ("table") already exists.
--> duplicate-table.toml
1 | [table]
| ~~~~~~~ table already exists here
...
3 | [table]
| ~~~~~~~ table defined twice
Since the error message generation is generally a difficult task, the current status is not ideal. If you encounter a weird error message, please let us know and contribute to improve the quality!
Invalid UTF-8 codepoints
It throws syntax_error
if a value of an escape sequence
representing unicode character is not a valid UTF-8 codepoint.
what(): [error] toml::read_utf8_codepoint: input codepoint is too large.
--> utf8.toml
1 | exceeds_unicode = "\U0011FFFF example"
| ^--------- should be in [0x00..0x10FFFF]
Finding a toml value from a table
After parsing successfully, you can obtain the values from the result of
toml::parse
using toml::find
function.
# sample.toml
answer = 42
pi = 3.14
numbers = [1,2,3]
time = 1979-05-27T07:32:00Z
[tab]
key = "value"
const auto data = toml::parse("sample.toml");
const auto answer = toml::find<std::int64_t >(data, "answer");
const auto pi = toml::find<double >(data, "pi");
const auto numbers = toml::find<std::vector<int>>(data, "numbers");
const auto timepoint = toml::find<std::chrono::system_clock::time_point>(data, "time");
const auto tab = toml::find<toml::table>(data, "tab");
const auto key = toml::find<std::string>(tab, "key");
If the value does not exist, toml::find
throws an error with the location of
the table.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'std::out_of_range'
what(): [error] key "answer" not found
--> example.toml
6 | [tab]
| ~~~~~ in this table
When you pass an exact TOML type that does not require type conversion,
toml::get
returns a reference without copying the value.
const auto data = toml::parse("sample.toml");
const auto& answer = toml::find<toml::integer>(data, "answer");
If the specified type requires conversion, you can't take a reference to the value. See also underlying types.
By default, toml::find
returns a toml::value
.
const toml::value& answer = toml::find(data, "answer");
NOTE: For some technical reason, automatic conversion between integer
and
floating
is not supported. If you want to get a floating value even if a value
has integer value, you need to convert it manually after obtaining a value.
There are several ways to find a value buried in a deep recursion of tables.
First, you can call toml::find
as many as you need.
// # expecting the following example.toml
// answer.to.the.ultimate.question = 42
// # is equivalent to {"answer": {"to":{"the":{"ultimate:{"question":42}}}}}
const toml::table data = toml::parse("example.toml");
const int a = toml::find<int>(toml::find(toml::find(toml::find(toml::find(
data, "answer"), "to"), "the"), "ultimate"), "question");
But it is a bother. Alternatively, you can pass several keys to toml::find
to
find the value.
const toml::value data = toml::parse("example.toml");
const int a = toml::find<int>(data, "answer", "to", "the", "ultimate", "question");
In the case of type error
If the specified type differs from the actual value contained, it throws
toml::type_error
that inherits std::exception
.
Similar to the case of syntax error, toml11 also displays clean error messages.
The error message when you choose int
to get string
value would be like this.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'toml::type_error'
what(): [error] toml::value bad_cast to integer
--> example.toml
3 | title = "TOML Example"
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the actual type is string
NOTE: In order to show this kind of error message, all the toml values have
a pointer to represent its range in a file. The entire contents of a file is
shared by toml::value
s and remains on the heap memory. It is recommended to
destruct all the toml::value
classes after configuring your application
if you have a large TOML file compared to the memory resource.
Dotted keys
TOML v0.5.0 has a new feature named "dotted keys". You can chain keys to represent the structure of the data.
physical.color = "orange"
physical.shape = "round"
This is equivalent to the following.
[physical]
color = "orange"
shape = "round"
You can get both of the above tables with the same c++ code.
const auto physical = toml::find<toml::table>(data, "physical");
const auto color = toml::find<std::string>(physical, "color");
The following code does not work for the above toml file.
const auto color = toml::find<std::string>(data, "physical.color");
The above code works with the following toml file.
"physical.color" = "orange"
# equivalent to {"physical.color": "orange"},
# NOT {"physical": {"color": "orange"}}.
Casting a toml value
toml::get
toml::parse
returns toml::value
. toml::value
is a union type that can
contain one of the following types.
toml::boolean
(bool
)toml::integer
(std::int64_t
)toml::floating
(double
)toml::string
(a type convertible to std::string)toml::local_date
toml::local_time
toml::local_datetime
toml::offset_datetime
toml::array
(by default,std::vector<toml::value>
)- It depends. See customizing containers for detail.
toml::table
(by default,std::unordered_map<toml::key, toml::value>
)- It depends. See customizing containers for detail.
To get a value inside, you can use toml::get<T>()
. The usage is the same as
toml::find<T>
(actually, toml::find
internally uses toml::get
).
const toml::value data = toml::parse("sample.toml");
const toml::value answer_ = toml::get<toml::table >(data).at("answer")
const std::int64_t answer = toml::get<std::int64_t>(answer_);
When you pass an exact TOML type that does not require type conversion,
toml::get
returns a reference through which you can modify the content.
toml::integer& answer = toml::get<toml::integer>(answer_);
answer = 6 * 9; // write to data.answer. now `answer_` contains 54.
If the specified type requires conversion, you can't take a reference to the value. See also underlying types.
It also throws a toml::type_error
if the type differs.
as_xxx
You can also use a member function to cast a value.
const std::int64_t answer = data.as_table().at("answer").as_integer();
It also throws a toml::type_error
if the type differs. If you are sure that
the value v
contains a value of the specified type, you can suppress checking
by passing std::nothrow
.
const auto& answer = data.as_table().at("answer");
if(answer.is_integer() && answer.as_integer(std::nothrow) == 42)
{
std::cout << "value is 42" << std::endl;
}
If std::nothrow
is passed, the functions are marked as noexcept.
The full list of the functions is below.
namespace toml {
class value {
// ...
const boolean& as_boolean() const&;
const integer& as_integer() const&;
const floating& as_floating() const&;
const string& as_string() const&;
const offset_datetime& as_offset_datetime() const&;
const local_datetime& as_local_datetime() const&;
const local_date& as_local_date() const&;
const local_time& as_local_time() const&;
const array& as_array() const&;
const table& as_table() const&;
// --------------------------------------------------------
// non-const version
boolean& as_boolean() &;
// ditto...
// --------------------------------------------------------
// rvalue version
boolean&& as_boolean() &&;
// ditto...
// --------------------------------------------------------
// noexcept versions ...
const boolean& as_boolean(const std::nothrow_t&) const& noexcept;
boolean& as_boolean(const std::nothrow_t&) & noexcept;
boolean&& as_boolean(const std::nothrow_t&) && noexcept;
// ditto...
};
} // toml
Checking value type
You can check the type of a value by is_xxx
function.
const toml::value v = /* ... */;
if(v.is_integer())
{
std::cout << "value is an integer" << std::endl;
}
The complete list of the functions is below.
namespace toml {
class value {
// ...
bool is_boolean() const noexcept;
bool is_integer() const noexcept;
bool is_floating() const noexcept;
bool is_string() const noexcept;
bool is_offset_datetime() const noexcept;
bool is_local_datetime() const noexcept;
bool is_local_date() const noexcept;
bool is_local_time() const noexcept;
bool is_array() const noexcept;
bool is_table() const noexcept;
bool is_uninitialized() const noexcept;
// ...
};
} // toml
Also, you can get enum class value_t
from toml::value::type()
.
switch(data.at("something").type())
{
case toml::value_t::integer: /*do some stuff*/ ; break;
case toml::value_t::floating: /*do some stuff*/ ; break;
case toml::value_t::string : /*do some stuff*/ ; break;
default : throw std::runtime_error(
"unexpected type : " + toml::stringize(data.at("something").type()));
}
The complete list of the enum
s can be found in the section
underlying types.
The enum
s can be used as a parameter of toml::value::is
function like the following.
toml::value v = /* ... */;
if(v.is(toml::value_t::boolean)) // ...
NOTE: BREAKING CHANGES from v2.y.z: (is|as)_float
has been removed.
Use (is|as)_floating
instead.
See Breaking Changes from v2 for the complete list
of breaking changes.
More about conversion
Since toml::find
internally uses toml::get
, all the following examples work
with both toml::get
and toml::find
.
Converting an array
You can get any kind of container
class from a toml::array
except for map
-like classes.
// # sample.toml
// numbers = [1,2,3]
const auto numbers = toml::find(data, "numbers");
const auto vc = toml::get<std::vector<int> >(numbers);
const auto ls = toml::get<std::list<int> >(numbers);
const auto dq = toml::get<std::deque<int> >(numbers);
const auto ar = toml::get<std::array<int, 3>>(numbers);
// if the size of data.at("numbers") is larger than that of std::array,
// it will throw toml::type_error because std::array is not resizable.
Surprisingly, you can convert toml::array
into std::pair
and std::tuple
.
// numbers = [1,2,3]
const auto tp = toml::get<std::tuple<short, int, unsigned int>>(numbers);
This functionality is helpful when you have a toml file like the following.
array_of_arrays = [[1, 2, 3], ["foo", "bar", "baz"]] # toml allows this
What is the corresponding C++ type?
Obviously, it is a std::pair
of std::vector
s.
const auto array_of_arrays = toml::find(data, "array_of_arrays");
const auto aofa = toml::get<
std::pair<std::vector<int>, std::vector<std::string>>
>(array_of_arrays);
If you don't know the type of the elements, you can use toml::array
,
which is a std::vector
of toml::value
, instead.
const auto a_of_a = toml::get<toml::array>(array_of_arrays);
const auto first = toml::get<std::vector<int>>(a_of_a.at(0));
You can change the implementation of toml::array
with std::deque
or some
other array-like container. See Customizing containers
for detail.
Converting a table
When all the values of the table have the same type, toml11 allows you to
convert a toml::table
to a map
that contains the convertible type.
[tab]
key1 = "foo" # all the values are
key2 = "bar" # toml String
const auto data = toml::parse("sample.toml");
const auto tab = toml::find<std::map<std::string, std::string>>(data, "tab");
std::cout << tab["key1"] << std::endl; // foo
std::cout << tab["key2"] << std::endl; // bar
But since toml::table
is just an alias of std::unordered_map<toml::key, toml::value>
,
normally you don't need to convert it because it has all the functionalities that
std::unordered_map
has (e.g. operator[]
, count
, and find
). In most cases
toml::table
is sufficient.
toml::table tab = toml::get<toml::table>(data);
if(data.count("title") != 0)
{
data["title"] = std::string("TOML example");
}
You can change the implementation of toml::table
with std::map
or some
other map-like container. See Customizing containers
for detail.
Getting an array of tables
An array of tables is just an array of tables. You can get it in completely the same way as the other arrays and tables.
# sample.toml
array_of_inline_tables = [{key = "value1"}, {key = "value2"}, {key = "value3"}]
[[array_of_tables]]
key = "value4"
[[array_of_tables]]
key = "value5"
[[array_of_tables]]
key = "value6"
const auto data = toml::parse("sample.toml");
const auto aot1 = toml::find<std::vector<toml::table>>(data, "array_of_inline_tables");
const auto aot2 = toml::find<std::vector<toml::table>>(data, "array_of_tables");
Cost of conversion
Although conversion through toml::(get|find)
is convenient, it has additional
copy-cost because it copies data contained in toml::value
to the
user-specified type. Of course in some cases this overhead is not ignorable.
// the following code constructs a std::vector.
// it requires heap allocation for vector and element conversion.
const auto array = toml::find<std::vector<int>>(data, "foo");
By passing the exact types, toml::get
returns reference that has no overhead.
const auto& tab = toml::find<toml::table>(data, "tab");
const auto& numbers = toml::find<toml::array>(data, "numbers");
Also, as_xxx
are zero-overhead because they always return a reference.
const auto& tab = toml::find(data, "tab" ).as_table();
const auto& numbers = toml::find(data, "numbers").as_array();
In this case you need to call toml::get
each time you access to
the element of toml::array
because toml::array
is an array of toml::value
.
const auto& num0 = toml::get<toml::integer>(numbers.at(0));
const auto& num1 = toml::get<toml::integer>(numbers.at(1));
const auto& num2 = toml::get<toml::integer>(numbers.at(2));
Converting datetime and its variants
TOML v0.5.0 has 4 different datetime objects, local_date
, local_time
,
local_datetime
, and offset_datetime
.
Since local_date
, local_datetime
, and offset_datetime
represent a time
point, you can convert them to std::chrono::system_clock::time_point
.
Contrary, local_time
does not represents a time point because they lack a
date information, but it can be converted to std::chrono::duration
that
represents a duration from the beginning of the day, 00:00:00.000
.
date = 2018-12-23
time = 12:30:00
l_dt = 2018-12-23T12:30:00
o_dt = 2018-12-23T12:30:00+09:30
const auto data = toml::parse("sample.toml");
const auto date = toml::get<std::chrono::system_clock::time_point>(data.at("date"));
const auto l_dt = toml::get<std::chrono::system_clock::time_point>(data.at("l_dt"));
const auto o_dt = toml::get<std::chrono::system_clock::time_point>(data.at("o_dt"));
const auto time = toml::get<std::chrono::minutes>(data.at("time")); // 12 * 60 + 30 min
toml11 defines its own datetime classes. You can see the definitions in toml/datetime.hpp.
Getting with a fallback
toml::find_or
returns a default value if the value is not found or has a
different type.
const auto data = toml::parse("example.toml");
const auto num = toml::find_or(data, "num", 42);
Also, toml::get_or
returns a default value if toml::get<T>
failed.
toml::value v("foo"); // v contains String
const int value = toml::get_or(v, 42); // conversion fails. it returns 42.
These functions automatically deduce what type you want to get from the default value you passed.
To get a reference through this function, take care about the default value.
toml::value v("foo"); // v contains String
toml::integer& i = toml::get_or(v, 42); // does not work because binding `42`
// to `integer&` is invalid
toml::integer opt = 42;
toml::integer& i = toml::get_or(v, opt); // this works.
Expecting conversion
By using toml::expect
, you will get your expected value or an error message
without throwing toml::type_error
.
const auto value = toml::expect<std::string>(data.at("title"));
if(value.is_ok()) {
std::cout << value.unwrap() << std::endl;
} else {
std::cout << value.unwrap_err() << std::endl;
}
Also, you can pass a function object to modify the expected value.
const auto value = toml::expect<int>(data.at("number"))
.map(// function that receives expected type (here, int)
[](const int number) -> double {
return number * 1.5 + 1.0;
}).unwrap_or(/*default value =*/ 3.14);
Visiting toml::value
toml11 provides toml::visit
to apply a function to toml::value
in the
same way as std::variant
.
const toml::value v(3.14);
toml::visit([](const auto& val) -> void {
std::cout << val << std::endl;
}, v);
The function object that would be passed to toml::visit
must be able to
recieve all the possible TOML types. Also, the result types should be the same
each other.
Constructing a toml::value
TODO
Preserving comments
After toml11 v3, you can choose whether comments are preserved or not.
const auto data1 = toml::parse<toml::discard_comments >("example.toml");
const auto data2 = toml::parse<toml::preserve_comments>("example.toml");
Comments related to a value can be obtained by toml::value::comments()
.
The return value has the same interface as std::vector<std::string>
.
const auto& com = v.comments();
for(const auto& c : com)
{
std::cout << c << std::endl;
}
Comments just before and just after (within the same line) a value are kept in a value.
# this is a comment for v1.
v1 = "foo"
v2 = "bar" # this is a comment for v2.
# Note that this comment is NOT a comment for v2.
# this comment is not related to any value
# because there are empty lines between v3.
# this comment will be ignored even if you set `preserve_comments`.
# this is a comment for v3
# this is also a comment for v3.
v3 = "baz" # ditto.
Each comment line becomes one element of a std::vector
.
Hash signs will be removed, but spaces after hash sign will not be removed.
v1.comments().at(0) == " this is a comment for v1."s;
v2.comments().at(1) == " this is a comment for v1."s;
v3.comments().at(0) == " this is a comment for v3."s;
v3.comments().at(1) == " this is also a comment for v3."s;
v3.comments().at(2) == " ditto."s;
Note that a comment just after an opening brace of an array will not be a comment for the array.
# this is a comment for a.
a = [ # this is not a comment for a. this will be ignored.
1, 2, 3,
# this is a comment for `42`.
42, # this is also a comment for `42`.
5
] # this is a comment for a.
You can also append comments. The interfaces are the same as std::vector<std::string>
.
v.comments().push_back(" add new comment.");
When toml::discard_comments
is chosen, value::comments()
will always be kept
empty. All the modification on comments would be ignored.
The comments will also be serialized. If comments exist, those comments will be added just before the values.
Customizing containers
Actually, toml::basic_value
has 3 template arguments.
template<typename Comment, // discard/preserve_comment
template<typename ...> class Table = std::unordered_map,
template<typename ...> class Array = std::vector>
class basic_value;
This enables you to change the containers used inside. E.g. you can use
std::map
to contain a table object instead of std::unordered_map
.
And also can use std::deque
as a array object instead of std::vector
.
You can set these parameters while calling toml::parse
function.
const auto data = toml::parse<
toml::preserve_comments, std::map, std::deque
>("example.toml");
TOML literal
toml11 supports "..."_toml
literal.
It accept both a bare value and a file content.
using namespace toml::literals::toml_literals;
// `_toml` can convert a bare value without key
const toml::value v = u8"0xDEADBEEF"_toml;
// v is an Integer value containing 0xDEADBEEF.
// raw string literal (`R"(...)"` is useful for this purpose)
const toml::value t = u8R"(
title = "this is TOML literal"
[table]
key = "value"
)"_toml;
// the literal will be parsed and the result will be contained in t
The literal function is defined in the same way as the standard library literals
such as std::literals::string_literals::operator""s
.
namespace toml
{
inline namespace literals
{
inline namespace toml_literals
{
toml::value operator"" _toml(const char* str, std::size_t len);
} // toml_literals
} // literals
} // toml
Access to the operator can be gained with using namespace toml::literals;
,
using namespace toml::toml_literals
, and using namespace toml::literals::toml_literals
.
Note that a key that is composed only of digits is allowed in TOML.
And, unlike the file parser, toml-literal allows a bare value without a key.
Thus it is difficult to distinguish arrays having integers and definitions of
tables that are named as digits.
Currently, literal [1]
becomes a table named "1".
To ensure a literal to be considered as an array with one element, you need to
add a comma after the first element (like [1,]
).
"[1,2,3]"_toml; // This is an array
"[table]"_toml; // This is a table that has an empty table named "table" inside.
"[[1,2,3]]"_toml; // This is an array of arrays
"[[table]]"_toml; // This is a table that has an array of tables inside.
"[[1]]"_toml; // This literal is ambiguous.
// Currently, it becomes a table that has array of table "1".
"1 = [{}]"_toml; // This is a table that has an array of table named 1.
"[[1,]]"_toml; // This is an array of arrays.
"[[1],]"_toml; // ditto.
NOTE: _toml
literal returns a toml::value
that does not have comments.
Conversion between toml value and arbitrary types
You can also use toml::get
and other related functions with the types you defined
after you implement some stuff.
namespace ext
{
struct foo
{
int a;
double b;
std::string c;
};
} // ext
const auto data = toml::parse("example.toml");
const foo f = toml::get<ext::foo>(data.at("foo"));
There are 2 ways to use toml::get
with the types that you defined.
The first one is to implement from_toml(const toml::value&)
member function.
namespace ext
{
struct foo
{
int a;
double b;
std::string c;
void from_toml(const toml::value& v)
{
this->a = toml::find<int >(v, "a");
this->b = toml::find<double >(v, "b");
this->c = toml::find<std::string>(v, "c");
return;
}
};
} // ext
In this way, because toml::get
first constructs foo
without arguments,
the type should be default-constructible.
The second is to implement specialization of toml::from
for your type.
namespace ext
{
struct foo
{
int a;
double b;
std::string c;
};
} // ext
namespace toml
{
template<>
struct from<ext::foo>
{
ext::foo from_toml(const toml::value& v)
{
ext::foo f;
f.a = toml::find<int >(v, "a");
f.b = toml::find<double >(v, "b");
f.c = toml::find<std::string>(v, "c");
return f;
}
};
} // toml
In this way, since the conversion function is defined outside of the class,
you can add conversion between toml::value
and classes defined in another library.
Note that you cannot implement both of the functions because the overload
resolution of toml::get
will be ambiguous.
The opposite direction is also supported in a similar way. You can directly
pass your type to toml::value
's constructor by introducing into_toml
or
toml::into<T>
.
namespace ext
{
struct foo
{
int a;
double b;
std::string c;
toml::table into_toml() const // you need to mark it const.
{
return toml::table{{"a", this->a}, {"b", this->b}, {"c", this->c}};
}
};
} // ext
ext::foo f{42, 3.14, "foobar"};
toml::value v(f);
The definition of toml::into<T>
is similar to toml::from<T>
.
namespace ext
{
struct foo
{
int a;
double b;
std::string c;
};
} // ext
namespace toml
{
template<>
struct into<ext::foo>
{
toml::table into_toml(const ext::foo& f)
{
return toml::table{{"a", f.a}, {"b", f.b}, {"c", f.c}};
}
};
} // toml
ext::foo f{42, 3.14, "foobar"};
toml::value v(f);
Any type that can be converted to toml::value
, e.g. toml::table
, toml::array
,
is okay to return from into_toml
.
Formatting user-defined error messages
When you encounter an error after you read the toml value, you may want to show the error with the value.
toml11 provides you a function that formats user-defined error message with related values. With a code like the following,
const auto value = toml::find<int>(data, "num");
if(value < 0)
{
std::cerr << toml::format_error("[error] value should be positive",
data.at("num"), "positive number required")
<< std::endl;
}
you will get an error message like this.
[error] value should be positive
--> example.toml
3 | num = -42
| ~~~ positive number required
When you pass two values to toml::format_error
,
const auto min = toml::find<int>(range, "min");
const auto max = toml::find<int>(range, "max");
if(max < min)
{
std::cerr << toml::format_error("[error] max should be larger than min",
data.at("min"), "minimum number here",
data.at("max"), "maximum number here");
<< std::endl;
}
you will get an error message like this.
[error] max should be larger than min
--> example.toml
3 | min = 54
| ~~ minimum number here
...
4 | max = 42
| ~~ maximum number here
Obtaining location information
You can also format error messages in your own way by using source_location
.
struct source_location
{
std::uint_least32_t line() const noexcept;
std::uint_least32_t column() const noexcept;
std::uint_least32_t region() const noexcept;
std::string const& file_name() const noexcept;
std::string const& line_str() const noexcept;
};
// +-- line() +--- length of the region (here, region() == 9)
// v .---+---.
// 12 | value = "foo bar" <- line_str() returns the line itself.
// ^-------- column() points here
You can get this by
const toml::value v = /*...*/;
const toml::source_location loc = v.location();
Serializing TOML data
toml11 enables you to serialize data into toml format.
const auto data = toml::table{{"foo", 42}, {"bar", "baz"}};
std::cout << data << std::endl;
// bar = "baz"
// foo = 42
toml11 automatically makes a small table and small array inline.
You can specify the width to make them inline by std::setw
for streams.
const auto data = toml::table{
{"qux", toml::table{{"foo", 42}, {"bar", "baz"}}},
{"quux", toml::array{"small", "array", "of", "strings"}},
{"foobar", toml::array{"this", "array", "of", "strings", "is", "too", "long",
"to", "print", "into", "single", "line", "isn't", "it?"}},
};
// the threshold becomes 80.
std::cout << std::setw(80) << data << std::endl;
// foobar = [
// "this","array","of","strings","is","too","long","to","print","into",
// "single","line","isn't","it?",
// ]
// quux = ["small","array","of","strings"]
// qux = {bar="baz",foo=42}
// the width is 0. nothing become inline.
std::cout << std::setw(0) << data << std::endl;
// foobar = [
// "this",
// ... (snip)
// "it?",
// ]
// quux = [
// "small",
// "array",
// "of",
// "strings",
// ]
// [qux]
// bar = "baz"
// foo = 42
It is recommended to set width before printing data. Some I/O functions changes
width to 0, and it makes all the stuff (including toml::array
) multiline.
The resulting files becomes too long.
To control the precision of floating point numbers, you need to pass
std::setprecision
to stream.
const auto data = toml::table{
{"pi", 3.141592653589793},
{"e", 2.718281828459045}
};
std::cout << std::setprecision(17) << data << std::endl;
// e = 2.7182818284590451
// pi = 3.1415926535897931
std::cout << std::setprecision( 7) << data << std::endl;
// e = 2.718282
// pi = 3.141593
There is another way to format toml values, toml::format()
.
It returns std::string
that represents a value.
const toml::value v{{"a", 42}};
const std::string fmt = toml::format(v);
// a = 42
Note that since toml::format
formats a value, the resulting string may lack
the key value.
const toml::value v{3.14};
const std::string fmt = toml::format(v);
// 3.14
To control the width and precision, toml::format
receives optional second and
third arguments to set them. By default, the witdh is 80 and the precision is
std::numeric_limits<double>::max_digit10
.
const auto serial = toml::format(data, /*width = */ 0, /*prec = */ 17);
When you pass a comment-preserving-value, the comment will also be serialized. An array or a table containing a value that has a comment would not be inlined.
Underlying types
The toml types (can be used as toml::*
in this library) and corresponding enum
names are listed in the table below.
TOML type | underlying c++ type | enum class |
---|---|---|
Boolean | bool |
toml::value_t::boolean |
Integer | std::int64_t |
toml::value_t::integer |
Float | double |
toml::value_t::floating |
String | toml::string |
toml::value_t::string |
LocalDate | toml::local_date |
toml::value_t::local_date |
LocalTime | toml::local_time |
toml::value_t::local_time |
LocalDatetime | toml::local_datetime |
toml::value_t::local_datetime |
OffsetDatetime | toml::offset_datetime |
toml::value_t::offset_datetime |
Array | array-like<toml::value> |
toml::value_t::array |
Table | map-like<toml::key, toml::value> |
toml::value_t::table |
array-like
and map-like
are the STL containers that works like a std::vector
and
std::unordered_map
, respectively. By default, std::vector
and std::unordered_map
are used. See Customizing containers for detail.
toml::string
is effectively the same as std::string
but has an additional
flag that represents a kind of a string, string_t::basic
and string_t::literal
.
Although std::string
is not an exact toml type, still you can get a reference
that points to internal std::string
by using toml::get<std::string>()
for convenience.
Datetime
variants are struct
that are defined in this library.
Because std::chrono::system_clock::time_point
is a time point,
not capable of representing a Local Time independent from a specific day.
It is recommended to get datetime
s as std::chrono
classes through toml::get
.
Breaking Changes from v2
Although toml11 is relatively new library (it's three years old now), it had some confusing and inconvenient user-interfaces because of historical reasons.
Between v2 and v3, those interfaces are rearranged.
toml::parse
now returns atoml::value
, nottoml::table
.toml::value
is now an alias oftoml::basic_value<discard_comment, std::vector, std::unordered_map>
.- See Customizing containers for detail.
- The elements of
toml::value_t
are renamed assnake_case
.- See Underlying types for detail.
- Supports for the CamelCaseNames are dropped.
- See Underlying types for detail.
(is|as)_float
has been removed to make the function names consistent with others. Sincefloat
is a keyword, toml11 named a float type astoml::floating
. Also avalue_t
corresponds totoml::floating
is namedvalue_t::floating
. So(is|as)_floating
is introduced andis_float
has been removed.- See Casting a toml::value and Checking value type for detail.
toml::find
fortoml::table
has been dropped. Usetoml::value
version instead.- See Finding a toml::value for detail.
- Interface around comments.
- See Preserving Comments for detail.
- An old
from_toml
has been removed
Such a big change will not happen in the coming years.
Running Tests
To run test codes, you need to clone toml-lang/toml repository under build/
directory
because some of the test codes read a file in the repository.
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ git clone https://github.com/toml-lang/toml.git
$ cmake ..
$ make
$ make test
To run the language agnostic test suite, you need to compile
tests/check_toml_test.cpp
and pass it to the tester.
Contributors
I appreciate the help of the contributors who introduced the great feature to this library.
- Guillaume Fraux (@Luthaf)
- Windows support and CI on Appvayor
- Intel Compiler support
- Quentin Khan (@xaxousis)
- Found & Fixed a bug around ODR
- Improved error messages for invaild keys to show the location where the parser fails
- Petr Beneš (@wbenny)
- Fixed warnings on MSVC
- Ivan Shynkarenka (@chronoxor)
- Fixed Visual Studio 2019 warnings
- @khoitd1997
- Fixed warnings while type conversion
Licensing terms
This product is licensed under the terms of the MIT License.
- Copyright (c) 2017-2019 Toru Niina
All rights reserved.