JsonVariant automatically promotes to JsonObject or JsonArray on write

This commit is contained in:
Benoit Blanchon
2019-01-29 14:09:09 +01:00
parent 5aea1363cc
commit 6f55d1e58f
53 changed files with 1197 additions and 541 deletions

View File

@ -13,9 +13,9 @@ void setup() {
// Allocate the JSON document
//
// Inside the brackets, 200 is the size of the memory pool in bytes.
// Inside the brackets, 200 is the capacity of the memory pool in bytes.
// Don't forget to change this value to match your JSON document.
// Use arduinojson.org/assistant to compute the capacity.
// Use arduinojson.org/v6/assistant to compute the capacity.
StaticJsonDocument<200> doc;
// StaticJsonDocument<N> allocates memory on the stack, it can be
@ -25,9 +25,12 @@ void setup() {
// JSON input string.
//
// It's better to use a char[] as shown here.
// If you use a const char* or a String, ArduinoJson will
// have to make a copy of the input in the JsonBuffer.
// Using a char[], as shown here, enables the "zero-copy" mode. This mode uses
// the minimal amount of memory because the JsonDocument stores pointers to
// the input buffer.
// If you use another type of input, ArduinoJson must copy the strings from
// the input to the JsonDocument, so you need to increase the capacity of the
// JsonDocument.
char json[] =
"{\"sensor\":\"gps\",\"time\":1351824120,\"data\":[48.756080,2.302038]}";
@ -41,17 +44,14 @@ void setup() {
return;
}
// Get the root object in the document
JsonObject root = doc.as<JsonObject>();
// Fetch values.
//
// Most of the time, you can rely on the implicit casts.
// In other case, you can do root["time"].as<long>();
const char* sensor = root["sensor"];
long time = root["time"];
double latitude = root["data"][0];
double longitude = root["data"][1];
// In other case, you can do doc["time"].as<long>();
const char* sensor = doc["sensor"];
long time = doc["time"];
double latitude = doc["data"][0];
double longitude = doc["data"][1];
// Print values.
Serial.println(sensor);