Added comments in examples

This commit is contained in:
Benoit Blanchon
2016-02-01 13:31:07 +01:00
parent 77b7124cf1
commit ce63e9c3c3
2 changed files with 50 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@ -13,12 +13,36 @@ void setup() {
// wait serial port initialization
}
// Memory pool for JSON object tree.
//
// Inside the brackets, 200 is the size of the pool in bytes.
// If the JSON object is more complex, you need to increase that value.
StaticJsonBuffer<200> jsonBuffer;
// StaticJsonBuffer allocates memory on the stack, it can be
// replaced by DynamicJsonBuffer which allocates in the heap.
// It's simpler but less efficient.
//
// DynamicJsonBuffer jsonBuffer;
// Create the root 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.
JsonObject& root = jsonBuffer.createObject();
// Add values in the object
//
// Most of the time, you can rely on the implicit casts.
// In other case, you can do root.set<long>("time", 1351824120);
root["sensor"] = "gps";
root["time"] = 1351824120;
// Add a nested array.
//
// It's also possible to create the array separately and add it to the
// JsonObject but it's less efficient.
JsonArray& data = root.createNestedArray("data");
data.add(double_with_n_digits(48.756080, 6));
data.add(double_with_n_digits(2.302038, 6));

View File

@ -13,23 +13,49 @@ void setup() {
// wait serial port initialization
}
// Memory pool for JSON object tree.
//
// Inside the brackets, 200 is the size of the pool in bytes,
// If the JSON object is more complex, you need to increase that value.
StaticJsonBuffer<200> jsonBuffer;
// StaticJsonBuffer allocates memory on the stack, it can be
// replaced by DynamicJsonBuffer which allocates in the heap.
// It's simpler but less efficient.
//
// DynamicJsonBuffer jsonBuffer;
// 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.
char json[] =
"{\"sensor\":\"gps\",\"time\":1351824120,\"data\":[48.756080,2.302038]}";
// Root 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.
JsonObject& root = jsonBuffer.parseObject(json);
// Test if parsing succeeds.
if (!root.success()) {
Serial.println("parseObject() failed");
return;
}
// 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];
// Print values.
Serial.println(sensor);
Serial.println(time);
Serial.println(latitude, 6);