0b4eca301c
also: - added value::value_type - removed format_flags::always_print_as_inline - significantly improved documentation |
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.circleci | ||
docs | ||
examples | ||
extern | ||
include/toml++ | ||
python | ||
tests | ||
vs | ||
.editorconfig | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.gitmodules | ||
LICENSE | ||
LICENSE-utf8-decoder | ||
meson.build | ||
README.md | ||
toml.hpp |
toml++ (tomlplusplus)
toml++
is a header-only toml parser and serializer for C++17, C++20 and whatever comes after.
Example
Given a TOML file configuration.toml
containing the following:
[library]
name = "toml++"
version = "0.1.0"
authors = ["Mark Gillard <mark@notarealwebsite.com>"]
[dependencies]
cpp = 17
Reading it in C++ is easy with toml++
:
auto config = toml::parse_file( "configuration.toml" );
// get key-value pairs
std::string_view library_name = config["library"]["name"].as_string()->get();
std::string_view library_version = config["library"]["version"].as_string()->get();
std::string_view library_author = config["library"]["authors"][0].as_string()->get();
int64_t depends_on_cpp_version = config["dependencies"]["cpp"].as_integer()->get();
// modify the data
config.insert_or_assign("alternatives", toml::array{
"cpptoml",
"toml11",
"Boost.TOML"
});
// iterate & visit over the data
for (auto [k, v] : config)
{
v.visit([](auto& node) noexcept
{
std::cout << node << std:endl;
if constexpr (toml::is_string<decltype(node)>)
do_something_with_string_values(node);
});
}
// re-serialize as TOML
std::cout << config << std::endl;
// re-serialize as JSON
std::cout << toml::json_formatter{ config } << std::endl;
You'll find some more code examples in the examples
directory, and plenty more as part of the API documentation.
Adding toml++ to your project
toml++
comes in two flavours: Regular and Single-header.
Regular mode
- Add
tomlplusplus/include
to your include paths #include <toml++/toml.h>
Single-header mode
- Drop
toml.hpp
wherever you like in your source tree - There is no step two
The API is the same regardless of how you consume the library.
Configuration
A number of configurable options are exposed in the form of preprocessor #defines
. Most likely you
won't need to mess with these at all, butif you do, set them before including toml++.
Option | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
TOML_ASSERT(expr) |
function macro | assert(expr) (or undefined) |
Sets the assert function used by the library. |
TOML_CHAR_8_STRINGS |
boolean | 0 |
Uses C++20 char8_t-based strings as the toml string data type. |
TOML_CONFIG_HEADER |
string literal | undefined | Includes the given header file before the rest of the library. |
TOML_LARGE_FILES |
boolean | 0 |
Uses 32-bit integers for line and column indices (instead of 16-bit). |
TOML_SMALL_FLOAT_TYPE |
type name | undefined | If your codebase has an additional 'small' float type (e.g. half-precision), this tells toml++ about it. |
TOML_SMALL_INT_TYPE |
type name | undefined | If your codebase has an additional 'small' integer type (e.g. 24-bits), this tells toml++ about it. |
TOML_UNDEF_MACROS |
boolean | 1 |
#undefs the library's internal macros at the end of the header. |
TOML_UNRELEASED_FEATURES |
boolean | 1 |
Enables support for unreleased TOML language features not yet part of a numbered version. |
TOML Language Support
At any given time toml++
aims to implement whatever the numbered version of TOML is, with the
addition of unreleased features from the TOML master and some sane cherry-picks from the
TOML issues list where the discussion strongly indicates inclusion in a near-future release.
The library advertises the most recent numbered language version it fully supports via the preprocessor
defines TOML_LANG_MAJOR
, TOML_LANG_MINOR
and TOML_LANG_REVISION
.
🔸Unreleased TOML features:
- #356: Allow leading zeros in the exponent part of a float
- #516: Allow newlines and trailing commas in inline tables
- #562: Allow hex floatingpoint values
- #567: Clarify that control characters are not permitted in comments
- #571: Allow raw tabs inside strings
- #622: Add short escaping alias
\s
for space (\u0020
) - #644: Support
+
in key names - #665: Make arrays heterogeneous
- #671: Local time of day format should support
09:30
as opposed to09:30:00
- #687: Relax bare key restrictions to allow additional unicode characters
These can be disabled (and thus strict TOML v0.5.0 compliance enforced) by specifying
TOML_UNRELEASED_FEATURES = 0
(see Configuration).
🔹TOML v0.5.0 and earlier:
- All features supported.
Contributing
Contributions are welcome, either by reporting issues or submitting pull requests. If you wish to submit a PR, please be aware that:
- The single-header file
toml.hpp
is generated by a script; make your changes in the files ininclude
, not intoml.hpp
. - Your changes should compile warning-free on at least one of gcc 8.3.0, clang 8.0, and MSVC 19.2X (Visual Studio 2019). All three is a bonus.
- You should regenerate the single-header file as part of your PR (a CI check will fail if you don't).
Regenerating toml.hpp
- Make your changes as necessary
- If you've added a new header file that isn't going to be transitively included by one of the
others, add an include directive to
include/toml++/toml.h
- Run
python/generate_single_header.py
Building and testing
Testing is done using Catch2, included in the respository as a submodule under extern/Catch2
.
The first time you want to begin testing you'll need to ensure submodules have been fetched:
git submodule update --init --recursive extern/Catch2
Windows
Install Visual Studio 2019 and Test Adapter for Catch2, then open vs/toml++.sln
and build the
projects in the tests
solution folder. Visual Studio's Test Explorer should pick these up and
allow you to run the tests directly.
If test discovery fails you can usually fix it by clicking enabling
Auto Detect runsettings Files
(settings gear icon > Configure Run Settings
).
Linux
Install meson and ninja if necessary, then test with both gcc and clang:
CXX=g++ meson build-gcc
CXX=clang++ meson build-clang
cd build-gcc && ninja && ninja test
cd ../build-clang && ninja && ninja test
License and Attribution
toml++
is licensed under the terms of the MIT license - see LICENSE.
UTF-8 decoding is performed using a state machine based on Bjoern Hoehrmann's 'Flexible and Economical UTF-8 Decoder', which is also subject to the terms of the MIT license - see LICENSE-utf8-decoder.