json.path

Module for [Path] class

Types 3

[json.path.Path] is a simple class implementing the JSONPath syntax for extracting data out of a JSON tree.

While the semantics of the JSONPath expressions are heavily borrowed by the XPath specification for XML, the syntax follows the ECMAScript origins of JSON.

Once a [json.path.Path] instance has been created, it has to compile a JSONPath expression using [json.path.Path.compile] before being able to match it to a JSON tree; the same [json.path.Path] instance can be used to match multiple JSON trees. It it also possible to compile a new JSONPath expression using the same [json.path.Path] instance; the previous expression will be discarded only if the compilation of the new expression is successful.

The simple convenience function [json.path.Path.query] can be used for one-off matching.

Syntax of the JSONPath expressions

A JSONPath expression is composed by path indices and operators. Each path index can either be a member name or an element index inside a JSON tree. A JSONPath expression must start with the `$` operator; each path index is separated using either the dot notation or the bracket notation, e.g.:

// dot notation
$.store.book[0].title

// bracket notation
$['store']['book'][0]['title']

The available operators are:

  • The `$` character represents the root node of the JSON tree, and

matches the entire document.

  • Child nodes can either be matched using `.` or `[]`. For instance,

both $.store.book and $['store']['book'] match the contents of the book member of the store object.

  • Child nodes can be reached without specifying the whole tree structure

through the recursive descent operator, or `..`. For instance, $..author matches all author member in every object.

  • Child nodes can grouped through the wildcard operator, or `*`. For

instance, $.store.book[*].author matches all author members of any object element contained in the book array of the store object.

  • Element nodes can be accessed using their index (starting from zero)

in the subscript operator `[]`. For instance, $.store.book[0] matches the first element of the book array of the store object.

  • Subsets of element nodes can be accessed using the set notation

operator [i,j,...]. For instance, $.store.book[0,2] matches the elements 0 and 2 (the first and third) of the book array of the store object.

  • Slices of element nodes can be accessed using the slice notation

operation [start:end:step]. If start is omitted, the starting index of the slice is implied to be zero; if end is omitted, the ending index of the slice is implied to be the length of the array; if step is omitted, the step of the slice is implied to be 1. For instance, $.store.book[:2] matches the first two elements of the book array of the store object.

More information about JSONPath is available on Stefan Gössner's

JSONPath website.

Example of JSONPath matches

The following example shows some of the results of using [json.path.Path] on a JSON tree. We use the following JSON description of a bookstore:

{ "store": {
   "book": [
     { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees",
       "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": "8.95"  },
     { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh",
       "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": "12.99" },
     { "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville",
       "title": "Moby Dick", "isbn": "0-553-21311-3",
       "price": "8.99" },
     { "category": "fiction", "author": "J. R. R. Tolkien",
       "title": "The Lord of the Rings", "isbn": "0-395-19395-8",
       "price": "22.99" }
   ],
   "bicycle": { "color": "red", "price": "19.95" }
 }
}

We can parse the JSON using [json.parser.Parser]:

JsonParser *parser = json_parser_new ();
json_parser_load_from_data (parser, json_data, -1, NULL);

If we run the following code:

JsonNode *result;
JsonPath *path = json_path_new ();
json_path_compile (path, "$.store..author", NULL);
result = json_path_match (path, json_parser_get_root (parser));

The result node will contain an array with all values of the author member of the objects in the JSON tree. If we use a [json.generator.Generator] to convert the result node to a string and print it:

JsonGenerator *generator = json_generator_new ();
json_generator_set_root (generator, result);
char *str = json_generator_to_data (generator, NULL);
g_print ("Results: %s\n", str);

The output will be:

["Nigel Rees","Evelyn Waugh","Herman Melville","J. R. R. Tolkien"]

Methods
GType _gType() @property
Path self()Returns `this`, for use in `with` statements.
PathGidBuilder builder()Get builder for [json.path.Path] Returns: New builder object
json.node.Node query(string expression, json.node.Node root)Queries a JSON tree using a JSONPath expression.
bool compile(string expression)Validates and decomposes the given expression.
json.node.Node match(json.node.Node root)Matches the JSON tree pointed by `root` using the expression compiled into the [json.path.Path].
Constructors
this(void * ptr, Flag!"Take" take)
this()Creates a new [json.path.Path] instance.

Fluent builder for [json.path.Path]

Methods