The Binding Traits facilities are used to "bind" existing Type Traits together to create Type Traits for new types or with new features.
They thereby offer rather convenient ways of automatically creating Traits functions for many common use cases.
The class template binding::array
can be used to easily create Traits for types that are to be represented by Arrays.
It takes arbitrary many template arguments that are usually created by invoking the macro TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT
with a member object pointer, i.e. a pointer to a member object of the type for which the Traits are to be created.
For example consider the following hypothetical my_traits
specialisation for std::pair
, similar to the Traits defined in tao/json/contrib/pair_traits.hpp
.
#include <utility>
#include <tao/json.hpp>
template< typename T >
struct my_traits;
template< typename U, typename V >
struct my_traits< std::pair< U, V > >
: public tao::json::binding::array< TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT( &std::pair< U, V >::first ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT( &std::pair< U, V >::second ) >
{
};
Note that variadic macros are used to correctly pass the member pointer even though the type std::pair< U, V >
contains a comma.
The assign()
and produce()
functions of these Traits for std::pair
will always create Arrays with two elements, and conversely the to()
and consume()
functions will expect Arrays with two elements.
Handling of the two member objects first
and second
is delegated to the Traits' specialisations for their respective types.
The order in the serialisation will always correspond to the order of the template parameter to binding::array
(which need not coincide with the order in the class
or struct
).
It is also possible to add constant elements that are purely defined in the Traits.
These constants are currently limited to boolean values, signed and unsigned integers, and strings.
When generating an encoding, the constants behave "as if" there was a binding to a variable of the corresponding type with the predefined value.
When parsing an encoding, the constants verify that the value read from the input is equal to their predefined value.
Constants are added to an Array binding with the macros TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT_BOOL()
, TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT_SIGNED()
, TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT_UNSIGNED()
and TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT_STRING()
.
template< typename U, typename V >
struct my_traits< std::pair< U, V > >
: public tao::json::binding::array< TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT( &std::pair< U, V >::first ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT( &std::pair< U, V >::second ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT_UNSIGNED( 42 ), >
TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT_STRING( "hallo" ) >
{
};
const auto p = std::pair( 1, 2 );
const tao::json::basic_value< my_traits > v = p;
// v is [ 1, 2, 42, "hallo" ]
When a derived class' Array-based binding is supposed to extend the base class' binding it is possible to indicate the base class to an Array binding in order to not repeat the bindings for the inherited member objects.
For example consider the following class that extends a pair to a triple (instead of using a std::tuple
).
template< typename U, typename V, typename W >
struct triple
: std::pair< U, V >
{
W third;
};
The corresponding specialisation of the hypothetical my_traits
can then be implemented as follows.
template< typename U, typename V, typename W >
struct my_traits< triple< U, V, W > >
: public tao::json::binding::array< tao::json::binding::inherits< my_traits< std::pair< U, V > > >,
TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT( &triple< U, V, W >::third ) >
{
};
Note that while the example shows what is probably the most common use case with the binding::inherits
as first template argumen to binding::array
, it can be used anywhere, i.e. before, in the middle of, or after any occurrences of TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT
.
TODO: element
with getter, and element2
with getter and setter.
The class template binding::object
can be used to easily create Traits for types that are to be represented by Objects.
Compared to the Array binding explained above the Object binding has the advantages of being more expressive and flexible, and the disadvantage of being less efficient, both in terms of time and space.
Here is an alternative implementation of Type Traits for std::pair
, this time using binding::object
, wherefore the std::pair
will encode from and to Objects with two members, one called first
and one called second
.
template< typename U, typename V >
struct my_traits< std::pair< U, V > >
: public tao::json::binding::object< TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED( "first", &std::pair< U, V >::first ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED( "second", &std::pair< U, V >::second ) >
{
};
Unlike with binding::array
, it is possible to make individual members optional by using the macro TAO_JSON_BIND_OPTIONAL
instead of TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED
.
This works particularly well when the bound member is a std::optional< T >
, but it can also be used when the previous or default-constructed value of the member is acceptable in the absence of said member from the input.
The following alternative forms of the binding macros use the default key instead of a string supplied to the macro.
TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED1( &type::member1 );
TAO_JSON_BIND_OPTIONAL1( &type::member2 );
Of course the macros with key as first argument can also be used for members whose type defines a default key. This is even necessary to prevent collisions when there are two occurrences of the same member type.
Constants works for Objects just like for Arrays, though of course a string with the key needs to be supplied in addition to the constant value.
Constants are added to an Object binding with the macros TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED_BOOL()
, TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED_SIGNED()
, TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED_UNSIGNED()
and TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED_STRING()
.
There are again variants with optional
in place of required
that are always encoded, but are not flagged as error when missing.
template< typename U, typename V >
struct my_traits< std::pair< U, V > >
: public tao::json::binding::object< TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED( "first", &std::pair< U, V >::first ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED( "second", &std::pair< U, V >::second ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED_SIGNED( "foo", -5 ) >
{
};
Inheritance works for Objects just like for Arrays, though "mixing and matching" is not supported: Array bindings can "inherit" a base class' Array bindings, and Object bindings can "inherit" a base class' Object bindings.
By default, the Object traits' to()
and consume()
functions will throw an exception when they encounter an unknown Object key while converting a Value, or parsing some input, respectively.
This can be changed by using tao::json::binding::basic_object
instead of tao::json::binding::object
, and passing tao::json::binding::for_unknown_key::skip
as template parameter in the appropriate place (instead of tao::json::binding::for_unknown_key::fail
).
With this change, unknown keys will be ignored.
By default, the Object traits' assign()
and produce()
functions will encode all variables that it knows about, including those that might be considered "nothing".
This can be changed by again using tao::json::binding::basic_object
instead of tao::json::binding::object
, and passing tao::json::binding::for_nothing_value::suppress
as template parameter in the appropriate place (instead of tao::json::binding::for_nothing_value::ENCODE
).
To determine whether something is to be considered "nothing", the Traits' optional is_nothing()
function is used.
template<>
class my_traits< some_type >
{
template< template< typename... > class Traits >
static bool is_nothing( const some_type& c ) noexcept
{
return whether c is to be considered "nothing";
}
};
If the Traits specialisation for the bound member variable does not implement an is_nothing()
function then the assumption is that there is something (to encode).
The class template binding::factory
combines Traits for a set of derived classes to form Traits for a common base class.
The assign()
and produce()
methods use RTTI to determine the dynamic type of the pointee and delegate to the appropriate derived class' Traits.
The as()
and consume()
methods expect an encoding as Object with a single member whose key must correspond to one of the types registered with the factory.
Factory Traits must be used as specialisations for a pointer class like std::shared_ptr
or std::unique_ptr
.
struct base
{
base( const base& ) = delete;
void operator=( const base& ) = delete;
virtual void foo() = 0; // Need one virtual function for RTTI, and for a base class to really make sense.
protected:
base() = default;
~base() = default; // Has to be public and virtual when using std::unique_ptr instead of std::shared_ptr.
};
struct fobble
: public base
{
// Constructors etc.
private:
void foo() override
{
}
};
struct fraggle
: public base
{
// Constructors etc.
private:
void foo() override
{
}
};
Assuming that there are appropriate specialisations of my_traits
for the classes fobble
and fraggle
, i.e. that they implement all functions that are required by the application, and assuming suitable Traits for std::shared_ptr
, the actual Factory Traits are implemented as follows.
Note that when using the Traits for std::shared_ptr
and std::unique_ptr
from tao/json/contrib/shared_ptr_traits.hpp
and tao/json/contrib/unique_ptr_traits.hpp
, possibly via tao/json/contrib/traits.hpp
, then the Traits for a derived class need not implement an as()
or to()
function when said derived class has a constructor that can create an instance from a Value.
template<>
struct my_traits< std::shared_ptr< base > >
: public tao::json::binding::factory< TAO_JSON_FACTORY_BIND( "fobble", fobble ),
TAO_JSON_FACTORY_BIND( "fraggle", fraggle ) >
{
};
For types with a default key, the macro TAO_JSON_FACTORY_BIND1
can be used instead of TAO_JSON_FACTORY_BIND
.
Like for Object bindings, it removes the key as argument and uses the default key instead.
The class template binding::versions
can be used when there are multiple encodings for the same type.
A typical use case is when an old legacy encoding needs to be supported for compatibility, while a new preferred encoding already exists.
With binding::versions
, arbitrary many different traits can be supported simultaneously with the following behaviour:
- For
as()
andconsume()
, all given Traits are tried, in order, until one succeeds (i.e. doesn't throw an exception). - All other Traits functions are taken from the first Traits supplied to
binding::versions
.
Here is another Traits specialisation for std::pair
, this time it combines both the Array-based and the Object-based version.
Since the Object-based Traits are given first, the encodings created by assign()
and produce()
will be Objects.
In the other direction both Arrays and Objects will be accepted (with Objects being attempted first).
template< typename U, typename V >
using pair_array_traits = tao::json::binding::array< TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT( &std::pair< U, V >::first ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_ELEMENT( &std::pair< U, V >::second ) >;
template< typename U, typename V >
using pair_object_traits = tao::json::binding::object< TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED( "first", &std::pair< U, V >::first ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED( "second", &std::pair< U, V >::second ) >;
template< typename U, typename V >
struct my_traits< std::pair< U, V > >
: public tao::json::binding::versions< pair_object_traits,
pair_array_traits >
{
};
Note that binding::versions
is a context in which using constants in Arrays or Objects can be useful in order to distinguish between different encodings without changing the definition of the type being represented.
struct person
{
std::string name;
std::string number;
};
template<>
struct old_person_traits
: public tao::json::binding::object< TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED( "name", &person::name ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_OPTIONAL( "number", &person::number ) >
{
};
template<>
struct new_person_traits
: public tao::json::binding::object< TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED_UNSIGNED( "version", 2 ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED( "name", &person::name ),
TAO_JSON_BIND_REQUIRED( "number", &person::number ) >
{
};
template<>
struct my_traits< person >
: public tao::json::binding::versions< new_person_traits,
old_person_traits >
{
};
Note that binding::versions
uses the traits' to()
method to fill-in an existing or default-constructed object, and that it does not clear or reset the target object between attempts!
Copyright (c) 2018-2023 Dr. Colin Hirsch and Daniel Frey