Moved ancillary files to extras/ (fixes #1011)

This commit is contained in:
Benoit Blanchon
2019-09-03 15:11:05 +02:00
parent ed18e77655
commit b47ac27ac6
226 changed files with 19 additions and 54 deletions

View File

@ -0,0 +1,60 @@
// ArduinoJson - arduinojson.org
// Copyright Benoit Blanchon 2014-2019
// MIT License
//
// This example shows how to generate a JSON document with ArduinoJson.
#include <iostream>
#include "ArduinoJson.h"
int main() {
// Allocate the JSON document
//
// Inside the brackets, 200 is the RAM allocated to this document.
// Don't forget to change this value to match your requirement.
// Use arduinojson.org/v6/assistant to compute the capacity.
StaticJsonDocument<200> doc;
// StaticJsonObject allocates memory on the stack, it can be
// replaced by DynamicJsonDocument which allocates in the heap.
//
// DynamicJsonDocument doc(200);
// StaticJsonObject allocates memory on the stack, it can be
// replaced by DynamicJsonDocument which allocates in the heap.
//
// DynamicJsonDocument doc(200);
// Add values in the document
//
doc["sensor"] = "gps";
doc["time"] = 1351824120;
// Add an array.
//
JsonArray data = doc.createNestedArray("data");
data.add(48.756080);
data.add(2.302038);
// Generate the minified JSON and send it to STDOUT
//
serializeJson(doc, std::cout);
// The above line prints:
// {"sensor":"gps","time":1351824120,"data":[48.756080,2.302038]}
// Start a new line
std::cout << std::endl;
// Generate the prettified JSON and send it to STDOUT
//
serializeJsonPretty(doc, std::cout);
// The above line prints:
// {
// "sensor": "gps",
// "time": 1351824120,
// "data": [
// 48.756080,
// 2.302038
// ]
// }
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,59 @@
// ArduinoJson - arduinojson.org
// Copyright Benoit Blanchon 2014-2019
// MIT License
//
// This example shows how to deserialize a JSON document with ArduinoJson.
#include <iostream>
#include "ArduinoJson.h"
int main() {
// Allocate the JSON document
//
// 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/v6/assistant to compute the capacity.
StaticJsonDocument<300> doc;
// StaticJsonDocument<N> allocates memory on the stack, it can be
// replaced by DynamicJsonDocument which allocates in the heap.
//
// DynamicJsonDocument doc(200);
// JSON input string.
//
// 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]}";
// Deserialize the JSON document
DeserializationError error = deserializeJson(doc, json);
// Test if parsing succeeds.
if (error) {
std::cerr << "deserializeJson() failed: " << error.c_str() << std::endl;
return 1;
}
// Fetch values.
//
// Most of the time, you can rely on the implicit casts.
// 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.
std::cout << sensor << std::endl;
std::cout << time << std::endl;
std::cout << latitude << std::endl;
std::cout << longitude << std::endl;
return 0;
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,68 @@
// ArduinoJson - arduinojson.org
// Copyright Benoit Blanchon 2014-2019
// MIT License
//
// This example shows how to generate a JSON document with ArduinoJson.
#include <iostream>
#include "ArduinoJson.h"
int main() {
// Allocate the JSON document
//
// Inside the brackets, 300 is the size 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.
StaticJsonDocument<300> doc;
// StaticJsonObject allocates memory on the stack, it can be
// replaced by DynamicJsonObject which allocates in the heap.
//
// DynamicJsonObject doc(200);
// MessagePack 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.
uint8_t input[] = {131, 166, 115, 101, 110, 115, 111, 114, 163, 103, 112, 115,
164, 116, 105, 109, 101, 206, 80, 147, 50, 248, 164, 100,
97, 116, 97, 146, 203, 64, 72, 96, 199, 58, 188, 148,
112, 203, 64, 2, 106, 146, 230, 33, 49, 169};
// This MessagePack document contains:
// {
// "sensor": "gps",
// "time": 1351824120,
// "data": [48.75608, 2.302038]
// }
// doc of the object tree.
//
// It's a reference to the JsonObject, the actual bytes are inside the
// JsonBuffer with all the other nodes of the object tree.
// Memory is freed when jsonBuffer goes out of scope.
DeserializationError error = deserializeMsgPack(doc, input);
// Test if parsing succeeds.
if (error) {
std::cerr << "deserializeMsgPack() failed: " << error.c_str() << std::endl;
return 1;
}
// Fetch values.
//
// Most of the time, you can rely on the implicit casts.
// 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.
std::cout << sensor << std::endl;
std::cout << time << std::endl;
std::cout << latitude << std::endl;
std::cout << longitude << std::endl;
return 0;
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -eu
ARDUINOJSON_H="$1"
read_string() {
jq --slurp --raw-input '.' "$1"
}
compile() {
FILE_PATH="$(dirname $0)/$1.cpp"
cat >parameters.json <<END
{
"code":$(read_string "$FILE_PATH"),
"codes": [{"file":"ArduinoJson.h","code":$(read_string "$ARDUINOJSON_H")}],
"options": "warning",
"compiler": "gcc-4.9.3",
"save": true
}
END
URL=$(curl -sS -H "Content-type: application/json" -d @parameters.json https://wandbox.org/api/compile.json | jq --raw-output .url)
rm parameters.json
echo " $1: $URL"
}
compile "JsonGeneratorExample"
compile "JsonParserExample"
compile "MsgPackParserExample"