added simplejson from wakatime package

This commit is contained in:
Alan Hamlett 2013-09-06 23:01:19 -07:00
parent 9091b85ee9
commit 65022709f6
34 changed files with 7014 additions and 0 deletions

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r"""JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) <http://json.org> is a subset of
JavaScript syntax (ECMA-262 3rd edition) used as a lightweight data
interchange format.
:mod:`simplejson` exposes an API familiar to users of the standard library
:mod:`marshal` and :mod:`pickle` modules. It is the externally maintained
version of the :mod:`json` library contained in Python 2.6, but maintains
compatibility with Python 2.4 and Python 2.5 and (currently) has
significant performance advantages, even without using the optional C
extension for speedups.
Encoding basic Python object hierarchies::
>>> import simplejson as json
>>> json.dumps(['foo', {'bar': ('baz', None, 1.0, 2)}])
'["foo", {"bar": ["baz", null, 1.0, 2]}]'
>>> print(json.dumps("\"foo\bar"))
"\"foo\bar"
>>> print(json.dumps(u'\u1234'))
"\u1234"
>>> print(json.dumps('\\'))
"\\"
>>> print(json.dumps({"c": 0, "b": 0, "a": 0}, sort_keys=True))
{"a": 0, "b": 0, "c": 0}
>>> from simplejson.compat import StringIO
>>> io = StringIO()
>>> json.dump(['streaming API'], io)
>>> io.getvalue()
'["streaming API"]'
Compact encoding::
>>> import simplejson as json
>>> obj = [1,2,3,{'4': 5, '6': 7}]
>>> json.dumps(obj, separators=(',',':'), sort_keys=True)
'[1,2,3,{"4":5,"6":7}]'
Pretty printing::
>>> import simplejson as json
>>> print(json.dumps({'4': 5, '6': 7}, sort_keys=True, indent=' '))
{
"4": 5,
"6": 7
}
Decoding JSON::
>>> import simplejson as json
>>> obj = [u'foo', {u'bar': [u'baz', None, 1.0, 2]}]
>>> json.loads('["foo", {"bar":["baz", null, 1.0, 2]}]') == obj
True
>>> json.loads('"\\"foo\\bar"') == u'"foo\x08ar'
True
>>> from simplejson.compat import StringIO
>>> io = StringIO('["streaming API"]')
>>> json.load(io)[0] == 'streaming API'
True
Specializing JSON object decoding::
>>> import simplejson as json
>>> def as_complex(dct):
... if '__complex__' in dct:
... return complex(dct['real'], dct['imag'])
... return dct
...
>>> json.loads('{"__complex__": true, "real": 1, "imag": 2}',
... object_hook=as_complex)
(1+2j)
>>> from decimal import Decimal
>>> json.loads('1.1', parse_float=Decimal) == Decimal('1.1')
True
Specializing JSON object encoding::
>>> import simplejson as json
>>> def encode_complex(obj):
... if isinstance(obj, complex):
... return [obj.real, obj.imag]
... raise TypeError(repr(o) + " is not JSON serializable")
...
>>> json.dumps(2 + 1j, default=encode_complex)
'[2.0, 1.0]'
>>> json.JSONEncoder(default=encode_complex).encode(2 + 1j)
'[2.0, 1.0]'
>>> ''.join(json.JSONEncoder(default=encode_complex).iterencode(2 + 1j))
'[2.0, 1.0]'
Using simplejson.tool from the shell to validate and pretty-print::
$ echo '{"json":"obj"}' | python -m simplejson.tool
{
"json": "obj"
}
$ echo '{ 1.2:3.4}' | python -m simplejson.tool
Expecting property name: line 1 column 3 (char 2)
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
__version__ = '3.3.0'
__all__ = [
'dump', 'dumps', 'load', 'loads',
'JSONDecoder', 'JSONDecodeError', 'JSONEncoder',
'OrderedDict', 'simple_first',
]
__author__ = 'Bob Ippolito <bob@redivi.com>'
from decimal import Decimal
from .scanner import JSONDecodeError
from .decoder import JSONDecoder
from .encoder import JSONEncoder, JSONEncoderForHTML
def _import_OrderedDict():
import collections
try:
return collections.OrderedDict
except AttributeError:
from . import ordered_dict
return ordered_dict.OrderedDict
OrderedDict = _import_OrderedDict()
def _import_c_make_encoder():
try:
from ._speedups import make_encoder
return make_encoder
except ImportError:
return None
_default_encoder = JSONEncoder(
skipkeys=False,
ensure_ascii=True,
check_circular=True,
allow_nan=True,
indent=None,
separators=None,
encoding='utf-8',
default=None,
use_decimal=True,
namedtuple_as_object=True,
tuple_as_array=True,
bigint_as_string=False,
item_sort_key=None,
for_json=False,
ignore_nan=False,
)
def dump(obj, fp, skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True, check_circular=True,
allow_nan=True, cls=None, indent=None, separators=None,
encoding='utf-8', default=None, use_decimal=True,
namedtuple_as_object=True, tuple_as_array=True,
bigint_as_string=False, sort_keys=False, item_sort_key=None,
for_json=False, ignore_nan=False, **kw):
"""Serialize ``obj`` as a JSON formatted stream to ``fp`` (a
``.write()``-supporting file-like object).
If *skipkeys* is true then ``dict`` keys that are not basic types
(``str``, ``unicode``, ``int``, ``long``, ``float``, ``bool``, ``None``)
will be skipped instead of raising a ``TypeError``.
If *ensure_ascii* is false, then the some chunks written to ``fp``
may be ``unicode`` instances, subject to normal Python ``str`` to
``unicode`` coercion rules. Unless ``fp.write()`` explicitly
understands ``unicode`` (as in ``codecs.getwriter()``) this is likely
to cause an error.
If *check_circular* is false, then the circular reference check
for container types will be skipped and a circular reference will
result in an ``OverflowError`` (or worse).
If *allow_nan* is false, then it will be a ``ValueError`` to
serialize out of range ``float`` values (``nan``, ``inf``, ``-inf``)
in strict compliance of the original JSON specification, instead of using
the JavaScript equivalents (``NaN``, ``Infinity``, ``-Infinity``). See
*ignore_nan* for ECMA-262 compliant behavior.
If *indent* is a string, then JSON array elements and object members
will be pretty-printed with a newline followed by that string repeated
for each level of nesting. ``None`` (the default) selects the most compact
representation without any newlines. For backwards compatibility with
versions of simplejson earlier than 2.1.0, an integer is also accepted
and is converted to a string with that many spaces.
If specified, *separators* should be an
``(item_separator, key_separator)`` tuple. The default is ``(', ', ': ')``
if *indent* is ``None`` and ``(',', ': ')`` otherwise. To get the most
compact JSON representation, you should specify ``(',', ':')`` to eliminate
whitespace.
*encoding* is the character encoding for str instances, default is UTF-8.
*default(obj)* is a function that should return a serializable version
of obj or raise ``TypeError``. The default simply raises ``TypeError``.
If *use_decimal* is true (default: ``True``) then decimal.Decimal
will be natively serialized to JSON with full precision.
If *namedtuple_as_object* is true (default: ``True``),
:class:`tuple` subclasses with ``_asdict()`` methods will be encoded
as JSON objects.
If *tuple_as_array* is true (default: ``True``),
:class:`tuple` (and subclasses) will be encoded as JSON arrays.
If *bigint_as_string* is true (default: ``False``), ints 2**53 and higher
or lower than -2**53 will be encoded as strings. This is to avoid the
rounding that happens in Javascript otherwise. Note that this is still a
lossy operation that will not round-trip correctly and should be used
sparingly.
If specified, *item_sort_key* is a callable used to sort the items in
each dictionary. This is useful if you want to sort items other than
in alphabetical order by key. This option takes precedence over
*sort_keys*.
If *sort_keys* is true (default: ``False``), the output of dictionaries
will be sorted by item.
If *for_json* is true (default: ``False``), objects with a ``for_json()``
method will use the return value of that method for encoding as JSON
instead of the object.
If *ignore_nan* is true (default: ``False``), then out of range
:class:`float` values (``nan``, ``inf``, ``-inf``) will be serialized as
``null`` in compliance with the ECMA-262 specification. If true, this will
override *allow_nan*.
To use a custom ``JSONEncoder`` subclass (e.g. one that overrides the
``.default()`` method to serialize additional types), specify it with
the ``cls`` kwarg. NOTE: You should use *default* or *for_json* instead
of subclassing whenever possible.
"""
# cached encoder
if (not skipkeys and ensure_ascii and
check_circular and allow_nan and
cls is None and indent is None and separators is None and
encoding == 'utf-8' and default is None and use_decimal
and namedtuple_as_object and tuple_as_array
and not bigint_as_string and not item_sort_key
and not for_json and not ignore_nan and not kw):
iterable = _default_encoder.iterencode(obj)
else:
if cls is None:
cls = JSONEncoder
iterable = cls(skipkeys=skipkeys, ensure_ascii=ensure_ascii,
check_circular=check_circular, allow_nan=allow_nan, indent=indent,
separators=separators, encoding=encoding,
default=default, use_decimal=use_decimal,
namedtuple_as_object=namedtuple_as_object,
tuple_as_array=tuple_as_array,
bigint_as_string=bigint_as_string,
sort_keys=sort_keys,
item_sort_key=item_sort_key,
for_json=for_json,
ignore_nan=ignore_nan,
**kw).iterencode(obj)
# could accelerate with writelines in some versions of Python, at
# a debuggability cost
for chunk in iterable:
fp.write(chunk)
def dumps(obj, skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True, check_circular=True,
allow_nan=True, cls=None, indent=None, separators=None,
encoding='utf-8', default=None, use_decimal=True,
namedtuple_as_object=True, tuple_as_array=True,
bigint_as_string=False, sort_keys=False, item_sort_key=None,
for_json=False, ignore_nan=False, **kw):
"""Serialize ``obj`` to a JSON formatted ``str``.
If ``skipkeys`` is false then ``dict`` keys that are not basic types
(``str``, ``unicode``, ``int``, ``long``, ``float``, ``bool``, ``None``)
will be skipped instead of raising a ``TypeError``.
If ``ensure_ascii`` is false, then the return value will be a
``unicode`` instance subject to normal Python ``str`` to ``unicode``
coercion rules instead of being escaped to an ASCII ``str``.
If ``check_circular`` is false, then the circular reference check
for container types will be skipped and a circular reference will
result in an ``OverflowError`` (or worse).
If ``allow_nan`` is false, then it will be a ``ValueError`` to
serialize out of range ``float`` values (``nan``, ``inf``, ``-inf``) in
strict compliance of the JSON specification, instead of using the
JavaScript equivalents (``NaN``, ``Infinity``, ``-Infinity``).
If ``indent`` is a string, then JSON array elements and object members
will be pretty-printed with a newline followed by that string repeated
for each level of nesting. ``None`` (the default) selects the most compact
representation without any newlines. For backwards compatibility with
versions of simplejson earlier than 2.1.0, an integer is also accepted
and is converted to a string with that many spaces.
If specified, ``separators`` should be an
``(item_separator, key_separator)`` tuple. The default is ``(', ', ': ')``
if *indent* is ``None`` and ``(',', ': ')`` otherwise. To get the most
compact JSON representation, you should specify ``(',', ':')`` to eliminate
whitespace.
``encoding`` is the character encoding for str instances, default is UTF-8.
``default(obj)`` is a function that should return a serializable version
of obj or raise TypeError. The default simply raises TypeError.
If *use_decimal* is true (default: ``True``) then decimal.Decimal
will be natively serialized to JSON with full precision.
If *namedtuple_as_object* is true (default: ``True``),
:class:`tuple` subclasses with ``_asdict()`` methods will be encoded
as JSON objects.
If *tuple_as_array* is true (default: ``True``),
:class:`tuple` (and subclasses) will be encoded as JSON arrays.
If *bigint_as_string* is true (not the default), ints 2**53 and higher
or lower than -2**53 will be encoded as strings. This is to avoid the
rounding that happens in Javascript otherwise.
If specified, *item_sort_key* is a callable used to sort the items in
each dictionary. This is useful if you want to sort items other than
in alphabetical order by key. This option takes precendence over
*sort_keys*.
If *sort_keys* is true (default: ``False``), the output of dictionaries
will be sorted by item.
If *for_json* is true (default: ``False``), objects with a ``for_json()``
method will use the return value of that method for encoding as JSON
instead of the object.
If *ignore_nan* is true (default: ``False``), then out of range
:class:`float` values (``nan``, ``inf``, ``-inf``) will be serialized as
``null`` in compliance with the ECMA-262 specification. If true, this will
override *allow_nan*.
To use a custom ``JSONEncoder`` subclass (e.g. one that overrides the
``.default()`` method to serialize additional types), specify it with
the ``cls`` kwarg. NOTE: You should use *default* instead of subclassing
whenever possible.
"""
# cached encoder
if (not skipkeys and ensure_ascii and
check_circular and allow_nan and
cls is None and indent is None and separators is None and
encoding == 'utf-8' and default is None and use_decimal
and namedtuple_as_object and tuple_as_array
and not bigint_as_string and not sort_keys
and not item_sort_key and not for_json
and not ignore_nan and not kw):
return _default_encoder.encode(obj)
if cls is None:
cls = JSONEncoder
return cls(
skipkeys=skipkeys, ensure_ascii=ensure_ascii,
check_circular=check_circular, allow_nan=allow_nan, indent=indent,
separators=separators, encoding=encoding, default=default,
use_decimal=use_decimal,
namedtuple_as_object=namedtuple_as_object,
tuple_as_array=tuple_as_array,
bigint_as_string=bigint_as_string,
sort_keys=sort_keys,
item_sort_key=item_sort_key,
for_json=for_json,
ignore_nan=ignore_nan,
**kw).encode(obj)
_default_decoder = JSONDecoder(encoding=None, object_hook=None,
object_pairs_hook=None)
def load(fp, encoding=None, cls=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None,
parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, object_pairs_hook=None,
use_decimal=False, namedtuple_as_object=True, tuple_as_array=True,
**kw):
"""Deserialize ``fp`` (a ``.read()``-supporting file-like object containing
a JSON document) to a Python object.
*encoding* determines the encoding used to interpret any
:class:`str` objects decoded by this instance (``'utf-8'`` by
default). It has no effect when decoding :class:`unicode` objects.
Note that currently only encodings that are a superset of ASCII work,
strings of other encodings should be passed in as :class:`unicode`.
*object_hook*, if specified, will be called with the result of every
JSON object decoded and its return value will be used in place of the
given :class:`dict`. This can be used to provide custom
deserializations (e.g. to support JSON-RPC class hinting).
*object_pairs_hook* is an optional function that will be called with
the result of any object literal decode with an ordered list of pairs.
The return value of *object_pairs_hook* will be used instead of the
:class:`dict`. This feature can be used to implement custom decoders
that rely on the order that the key and value pairs are decoded (for
example, :func:`collections.OrderedDict` will remember the order of
insertion). If *object_hook* is also defined, the *object_pairs_hook*
takes priority.
*parse_float*, if specified, will be called with the string of every
JSON float to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to
``float(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser
for JSON floats (e.g. :class:`decimal.Decimal`).
*parse_int*, if specified, will be called with the string of every
JSON int to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to
``int(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser
for JSON integers (e.g. :class:`float`).
*parse_constant*, if specified, will be called with one of the
following strings: ``'-Infinity'``, ``'Infinity'``, ``'NaN'``. This
can be used to raise an exception if invalid JSON numbers are
encountered.
If *use_decimal* is true (default: ``False``) then it implies
parse_float=decimal.Decimal for parity with ``dump``.
To use a custom ``JSONDecoder`` subclass, specify it with the ``cls``
kwarg. NOTE: You should use *object_hook* or *object_pairs_hook* instead
of subclassing whenever possible.
"""
return loads(fp.read(),
encoding=encoding, cls=cls, object_hook=object_hook,
parse_float=parse_float, parse_int=parse_int,
parse_constant=parse_constant, object_pairs_hook=object_pairs_hook,
use_decimal=use_decimal, **kw)
def loads(s, encoding=None, cls=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None,
parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, object_pairs_hook=None,
use_decimal=False, **kw):
"""Deserialize ``s`` (a ``str`` or ``unicode`` instance containing a JSON
document) to a Python object.
*encoding* determines the encoding used to interpret any
:class:`str` objects decoded by this instance (``'utf-8'`` by
default). It has no effect when decoding :class:`unicode` objects.
Note that currently only encodings that are a superset of ASCII work,
strings of other encodings should be passed in as :class:`unicode`.
*object_hook*, if specified, will be called with the result of every
JSON object decoded and its return value will be used in place of the
given :class:`dict`. This can be used to provide custom
deserializations (e.g. to support JSON-RPC class hinting).
*object_pairs_hook* is an optional function that will be called with
the result of any object literal decode with an ordered list of pairs.
The return value of *object_pairs_hook* will be used instead of the
:class:`dict`. This feature can be used to implement custom decoders
that rely on the order that the key and value pairs are decoded (for
example, :func:`collections.OrderedDict` will remember the order of
insertion). If *object_hook* is also defined, the *object_pairs_hook*
takes priority.
*parse_float*, if specified, will be called with the string of every
JSON float to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to
``float(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser
for JSON floats (e.g. :class:`decimal.Decimal`).
*parse_int*, if specified, will be called with the string of every
JSON int to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to
``int(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser
for JSON integers (e.g. :class:`float`).
*parse_constant*, if specified, will be called with one of the
following strings: ``'-Infinity'``, ``'Infinity'``, ``'NaN'``. This
can be used to raise an exception if invalid JSON numbers are
encountered.
If *use_decimal* is true (default: ``False``) then it implies
parse_float=decimal.Decimal for parity with ``dump``.
To use a custom ``JSONDecoder`` subclass, specify it with the ``cls``
kwarg. NOTE: You should use *object_hook* or *object_pairs_hook* instead
of subclassing whenever possible.
"""
if (cls is None and encoding is None and object_hook is None and
parse_int is None and parse_float is None and
parse_constant is None and object_pairs_hook is None
and not use_decimal and not kw):
return _default_decoder.decode(s)
if cls is None:
cls = JSONDecoder
if object_hook is not None:
kw['object_hook'] = object_hook
if object_pairs_hook is not None:
kw['object_pairs_hook'] = object_pairs_hook
if parse_float is not None:
kw['parse_float'] = parse_float
if parse_int is not None:
kw['parse_int'] = parse_int
if parse_constant is not None:
kw['parse_constant'] = parse_constant
if use_decimal:
if parse_float is not None:
raise TypeError("use_decimal=True implies parse_float=Decimal")
kw['parse_float'] = Decimal
return cls(encoding=encoding, **kw).decode(s)
def _toggle_speedups(enabled):
from . import decoder as dec
from . import encoder as enc
from . import scanner as scan
c_make_encoder = _import_c_make_encoder()
if enabled:
dec.scanstring = dec.c_scanstring or dec.py_scanstring
enc.c_make_encoder = c_make_encoder
enc.encode_basestring_ascii = (enc.c_encode_basestring_ascii or
enc.py_encode_basestring_ascii)
scan.make_scanner = scan.c_make_scanner or scan.py_make_scanner
else:
dec.scanstring = dec.py_scanstring
enc.c_make_encoder = None
enc.encode_basestring_ascii = enc.py_encode_basestring_ascii
scan.make_scanner = scan.py_make_scanner
dec.make_scanner = scan.make_scanner
global _default_decoder
_default_decoder = JSONDecoder(
encoding=None,
object_hook=None,
object_pairs_hook=None,
)
global _default_encoder
_default_encoder = JSONEncoder(
skipkeys=False,
ensure_ascii=True,
check_circular=True,
allow_nan=True,
indent=None,
separators=None,
encoding='utf-8',
default=None,
)
def simple_first(kv):
"""Helper function to pass to item_sort_key to sort simple
elements to the top, then container elements.
"""
return (isinstance(kv[1], (list, dict, tuple)), kv[0])

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"""Python 3 compatibility shims
"""
import sys
if sys.version_info[0] < 3:
PY3 = False
def b(s):
return s
def u(s):
return unicode(s, 'unicode_escape')
import cStringIO as StringIO
StringIO = BytesIO = StringIO.StringIO
text_type = unicode
binary_type = str
string_types = (basestring,)
integer_types = (int, long)
unichr = unichr
reload_module = reload
def fromhex(s):
return s.decode('hex')
else:
PY3 = True
from imp import reload as reload_module
import codecs
def b(s):
return codecs.latin_1_encode(s)[0]
def u(s):
return s
import io
StringIO = io.StringIO
BytesIO = io.BytesIO
text_type = str
binary_type = bytes
string_types = (str,)
integer_types = (int,)
def unichr(s):
return u(chr(s))
def fromhex(s):
return bytes.fromhex(s)
long_type = integer_types[-1]

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"""Implementation of JSONDecoder
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
import re
import sys
import struct
from .compat import fromhex, b, u, text_type, binary_type, PY3, unichr
from .scanner import make_scanner, JSONDecodeError
def _import_c_scanstring():
try:
from ._speedups import scanstring
return scanstring
except ImportError:
return None
c_scanstring = _import_c_scanstring()
# NOTE (3.1.0): JSONDecodeError may still be imported from this module for
# compatibility, but it was never in the __all__
__all__ = ['JSONDecoder']
FLAGS = re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL
def _floatconstants():
_BYTES = fromhex('7FF80000000000007FF0000000000000')
# The struct module in Python 2.4 would get frexp() out of range here
# when an endian is specified in the format string. Fixed in Python 2.5+
if sys.byteorder != 'big':
_BYTES = _BYTES[:8][::-1] + _BYTES[8:][::-1]
nan, inf = struct.unpack('dd', _BYTES)
return nan, inf, -inf
NaN, PosInf, NegInf = _floatconstants()
_CONSTANTS = {
'-Infinity': NegInf,
'Infinity': PosInf,
'NaN': NaN,
}
STRINGCHUNK = re.compile(r'(.*?)(["\\\x00-\x1f])', FLAGS)
BACKSLASH = {
'"': u('"'), '\\': u('\u005c'), '/': u('/'),
'b': u('\b'), 'f': u('\f'), 'n': u('\n'), 'r': u('\r'), 't': u('\t'),
}
DEFAULT_ENCODING = "utf-8"
def py_scanstring(s, end, encoding=None, strict=True,
_b=BACKSLASH, _m=STRINGCHUNK.match, _join=u('').join,
_PY3=PY3, _maxunicode=sys.maxunicode):
"""Scan the string s for a JSON string. End is the index of the
character in s after the quote that started the JSON string.
Unescapes all valid JSON string escape sequences and raises ValueError
on attempt to decode an invalid string. If strict is False then literal
control characters are allowed in the string.
Returns a tuple of the decoded string and the index of the character in s
after the end quote."""
if encoding is None:
encoding = DEFAULT_ENCODING
chunks = []
_append = chunks.append
begin = end - 1
while 1:
chunk = _m(s, end)
if chunk is None:
raise JSONDecodeError(
"Unterminated string starting at", s, begin)
end = chunk.end()
content, terminator = chunk.groups()
# Content is contains zero or more unescaped string characters
if content:
if not _PY3 and not isinstance(content, text_type):
content = text_type(content, encoding)
_append(content)
# Terminator is the end of string, a literal control character,
# or a backslash denoting that an escape sequence follows
if terminator == '"':
break
elif terminator != '\\':
if strict:
msg = "Invalid control character %r at"
raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end)
else:
_append(terminator)
continue
try:
esc = s[end]
except IndexError:
raise JSONDecodeError(
"Unterminated string starting at", s, begin)
# If not a unicode escape sequence, must be in the lookup table
if esc != 'u':
try:
char = _b[esc]
except KeyError:
msg = "Invalid \\X escape sequence %r"
raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end)
end += 1
else:
# Unicode escape sequence
msg = "Invalid \\uXXXX escape sequence"
esc = s[end + 1:end + 5]
escX = esc[1:2]
if len(esc) != 4 or escX == 'x' or escX == 'X':
raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end - 1)
try:
uni = int(esc, 16)
except ValueError:
raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end - 1)
end += 5
# Check for surrogate pair on UCS-4 systems
# Note that this will join high/low surrogate pairs
# but will also pass unpaired surrogates through
if (_maxunicode > 65535 and
uni & 0xfc00 == 0xd800 and
s[end:end + 2] == '\\u'):
esc2 = s[end + 2:end + 6]
escX = esc2[1:2]
if len(esc2) == 4 and not (escX == 'x' or escX == 'X'):
try:
uni2 = int(esc2, 16)
except ValueError:
raise JSONDecodeError(msg, s, end)
if uni2 & 0xfc00 == 0xdc00:
uni = 0x10000 + (((uni - 0xd800) << 10) |
(uni2 - 0xdc00))
end += 6
char = unichr(uni)
# Append the unescaped character
_append(char)
return _join(chunks), end
# Use speedup if available
scanstring = c_scanstring or py_scanstring
WHITESPACE = re.compile(r'[ \t\n\r]*', FLAGS)
WHITESPACE_STR = ' \t\n\r'
def JSONObject(state, encoding, strict, scan_once, object_hook,
object_pairs_hook, memo=None,
_w=WHITESPACE.match, _ws=WHITESPACE_STR):
(s, end) = state
# Backwards compatibility
if memo is None:
memo = {}
memo_get = memo.setdefault
pairs = []
# Use a slice to prevent IndexError from being raised, the following
# check will raise a more specific ValueError if the string is empty
nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
# Normally we expect nextchar == '"'
if nextchar != '"':
if nextchar in _ws:
end = _w(s, end).end()
nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
# Trivial empty object
if nextchar == '}':
if object_pairs_hook is not None:
result = object_pairs_hook(pairs)
return result, end + 1
pairs = {}
if object_hook is not None:
pairs = object_hook(pairs)
return pairs, end + 1
elif nextchar != '"':
raise JSONDecodeError(
"Expecting property name enclosed in double quotes",
s, end)
end += 1
while True:
key, end = scanstring(s, end, encoding, strict)
key = memo_get(key, key)
# To skip some function call overhead we optimize the fast paths where
# the JSON key separator is ": " or just ":".
if s[end:end + 1] != ':':
end = _w(s, end).end()
if s[end:end + 1] != ':':
raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting ':' delimiter", s, end)
end += 1
try:
if s[end] in _ws:
end += 1
if s[end] in _ws:
end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
except IndexError:
pass
value, end = scan_once(s, end)
pairs.append((key, value))
try:
nextchar = s[end]
if nextchar in _ws:
end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
nextchar = s[end]
except IndexError:
nextchar = ''
end += 1
if nextchar == '}':
break
elif nextchar != ',':
raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting ',' delimiter or '}'", s, end - 1)
try:
nextchar = s[end]
if nextchar in _ws:
end += 1
nextchar = s[end]
if nextchar in _ws:
end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
nextchar = s[end]
except IndexError:
nextchar = ''
end += 1
if nextchar != '"':
raise JSONDecodeError(
"Expecting property name enclosed in double quotes",
s, end - 1)
if object_pairs_hook is not None:
result = object_pairs_hook(pairs)
return result, end
pairs = dict(pairs)
if object_hook is not None:
pairs = object_hook(pairs)
return pairs, end
def JSONArray(state, scan_once, _w=WHITESPACE.match, _ws=WHITESPACE_STR):
(s, end) = state
values = []
nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
if nextchar in _ws:
end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
# Look-ahead for trivial empty array
if nextchar == ']':
return values, end + 1
elif nextchar == '':
raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting value or ']'", s, end)
_append = values.append
while True:
value, end = scan_once(s, end)
_append(value)
nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
if nextchar in _ws:
end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
end += 1
if nextchar == ']':
break
elif nextchar != ',':
raise JSONDecodeError("Expecting ',' delimiter or ']'", s, end - 1)
try:
if s[end] in _ws:
end += 1
if s[end] in _ws:
end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
except IndexError:
pass
return values, end
class JSONDecoder(object):
"""Simple JSON <http://json.org> decoder
Performs the following translations in decoding by default:
+---------------+-------------------+
| JSON | Python |
+===============+===================+
| object | dict |
+---------------+-------------------+
| array | list |
+---------------+-------------------+
| string | unicode |
+---------------+-------------------+
| number (int) | int, long |
+---------------+-------------------+
| number (real) | float |
+---------------+-------------------+
| true | True |
+---------------+-------------------+
| false | False |
+---------------+-------------------+
| null | None |
+---------------+-------------------+
It also understands ``NaN``, ``Infinity``, and ``-Infinity`` as
their corresponding ``float`` values, which is outside the JSON spec.
"""
def __init__(self, encoding=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None,
parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, strict=True,
object_pairs_hook=None):
"""
*encoding* determines the encoding used to interpret any
:class:`str` objects decoded by this instance (``'utf-8'`` by
default). It has no effect when decoding :class:`unicode` objects.
Note that currently only encodings that are a superset of ASCII work,
strings of other encodings should be passed in as :class:`unicode`.
*object_hook*, if specified, will be called with the result of every
JSON object decoded and its return value will be used in place of the
given :class:`dict`. This can be used to provide custom
deserializations (e.g. to support JSON-RPC class hinting).
*object_pairs_hook* is an optional function that will be called with
the result of any object literal decode with an ordered list of pairs.
The return value of *object_pairs_hook* will be used instead of the
:class:`dict`. This feature can be used to implement custom decoders
that rely on the order that the key and value pairs are decoded (for
example, :func:`collections.OrderedDict` will remember the order of
insertion). If *object_hook* is also defined, the *object_pairs_hook*
takes priority.
*parse_float*, if specified, will be called with the string of every
JSON float to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to
``float(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser
for JSON floats (e.g. :class:`decimal.Decimal`).
*parse_int*, if specified, will be called with the string of every
JSON int to be decoded. By default, this is equivalent to
``int(num_str)``. This can be used to use another datatype or parser
for JSON integers (e.g. :class:`float`).
*parse_constant*, if specified, will be called with one of the
following strings: ``'-Infinity'``, ``'Infinity'``, ``'NaN'``. This
can be used to raise an exception if invalid JSON numbers are
encountered.
*strict* controls the parser's behavior when it encounters an
invalid control character in a string. The default setting of
``True`` means that unescaped control characters are parse errors, if
``False`` then control characters will be allowed in strings.
"""
if encoding is None:
encoding = DEFAULT_ENCODING
self.encoding = encoding
self.object_hook = object_hook
self.object_pairs_hook = object_pairs_hook
self.parse_float = parse_float or float
self.parse_int = parse_int or int
self.parse_constant = parse_constant or _CONSTANTS.__getitem__
self.strict = strict
self.parse_object = JSONObject
self.parse_array = JSONArray
self.parse_string = scanstring
self.memo = {}
self.scan_once = make_scanner(self)
def decode(self, s, _w=WHITESPACE.match, _PY3=PY3):
"""Return the Python representation of ``s`` (a ``str`` or ``unicode``
instance containing a JSON document)
"""
if _PY3 and isinstance(s, binary_type):
s = s.decode(self.encoding)
obj, end = self.raw_decode(s)
end = _w(s, end).end()
if end != len(s):
raise JSONDecodeError("Extra data", s, end, len(s))
return obj
def raw_decode(self, s, idx=0, _w=WHITESPACE.match, _PY3=PY3):
"""Decode a JSON document from ``s`` (a ``str`` or ``unicode``
beginning with a JSON document) and return a 2-tuple of the Python
representation and the index in ``s`` where the document ended.
Optionally, ``idx`` can be used to specify an offset in ``s`` where
the JSON document begins.
This can be used to decode a JSON document from a string that may
have extraneous data at the end.
"""
if _PY3 and not isinstance(s, text_type):
raise TypeError("Input string must be text, not bytes")
return self.scan_once(s, idx=_w(s, idx).end())

View file

@ -0,0 +1,628 @@
"""Implementation of JSONEncoder
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
import re
from operator import itemgetter
from decimal import Decimal
from .compat import u, unichr, binary_type, string_types, integer_types, PY3
def _import_speedups():
try:
from . import _speedups
return _speedups.encode_basestring_ascii, _speedups.make_encoder
except ImportError:
return None, None
c_encode_basestring_ascii, c_make_encoder = _import_speedups()
from simplejson.decoder import PosInf
#ESCAPE = re.compile(ur'[\x00-\x1f\\"\b\f\n\r\t\u2028\u2029]')
# This is required because u() will mangle the string and ur'' isn't valid
# python3 syntax
ESCAPE = re.compile(u'[\\x00-\\x1f\\\\"\\b\\f\\n\\r\\t\u2028\u2029]')
ESCAPE_ASCII = re.compile(r'([\\"]|[^\ -~])')
HAS_UTF8 = re.compile(r'[\x80-\xff]')
ESCAPE_DCT = {
'\\': '\\\\',
'"': '\\"',
'\b': '\\b',
'\f': '\\f',
'\n': '\\n',
'\r': '\\r',
'\t': '\\t',
}
for i in range(0x20):
#ESCAPE_DCT.setdefault(chr(i), '\\u{0:04x}'.format(i))
ESCAPE_DCT.setdefault(chr(i), '\\u%04x' % (i,))
for i in [0x2028, 0x2029]:
ESCAPE_DCT.setdefault(unichr(i), '\\u%04x' % (i,))
FLOAT_REPR = repr
def encode_basestring(s, _PY3=PY3, _q=u('"')):
"""Return a JSON representation of a Python string
"""
if _PY3:
if isinstance(s, binary_type):
s = s.decode('utf-8')
else:
if isinstance(s, str) and HAS_UTF8.search(s) is not None:
s = s.decode('utf-8')
def replace(match):
return ESCAPE_DCT[match.group(0)]
return _q + ESCAPE.sub(replace, s) + _q
def py_encode_basestring_ascii(s, _PY3=PY3):
"""Return an ASCII-only JSON representation of a Python string
"""
if _PY3:
if isinstance(s, binary_type):
s = s.decode('utf-8')
else:
if isinstance(s, str) and HAS_UTF8.search(s) is not None:
s = s.decode('utf-8')
def replace(match):
s = match.group(0)
try:
return ESCAPE_DCT[s]
except KeyError:
n = ord(s)
if n < 0x10000:
#return '\\u{0:04x}'.format(n)
return '\\u%04x' % (n,)
else:
# surrogate pair
n -= 0x10000
s1 = 0xd800 | ((n >> 10) & 0x3ff)
s2 = 0xdc00 | (n & 0x3ff)
#return '\\u{0:04x}\\u{1:04x}'.format(s1, s2)
return '\\u%04x\\u%04x' % (s1, s2)
return '"' + str(ESCAPE_ASCII.sub(replace, s)) + '"'
encode_basestring_ascii = (
c_encode_basestring_ascii or py_encode_basestring_ascii)
class JSONEncoder(object):
"""Extensible JSON <http://json.org> encoder for Python data structures.
Supports the following objects and types by default:
+-------------------+---------------+
| Python | JSON |
+===================+===============+
| dict, namedtuple | object |
+-------------------+---------------+
| list, tuple | array |
+-------------------+---------------+
| str, unicode | string |
+-------------------+---------------+
| int, long, float | number |
+-------------------+---------------+
| True | true |
+-------------------+---------------+
| False | false |
+-------------------+---------------+
| None | null |
+-------------------+---------------+
To extend this to recognize other objects, subclass and implement a
``.default()`` method with another method that returns a serializable
object for ``o`` if possible, otherwise it should call the superclass
implementation (to raise ``TypeError``).
"""
item_separator = ', '
key_separator = ': '
def __init__(self, skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True,
check_circular=True, allow_nan=True, sort_keys=False,
indent=None, separators=None, encoding='utf-8', default=None,
use_decimal=True, namedtuple_as_object=True,
tuple_as_array=True, bigint_as_string=False,
item_sort_key=None, for_json=False, ignore_nan=False):
"""Constructor for JSONEncoder, with sensible defaults.
If skipkeys is false, then it is a TypeError to attempt
encoding of keys that are not str, int, long, float or None. If
skipkeys is True, such items are simply skipped.
If ensure_ascii is true, the output is guaranteed to be str
objects with all incoming unicode characters escaped. If
ensure_ascii is false, the output will be unicode object.
If check_circular is true, then lists, dicts, and custom encoded
objects will be checked for circular references during encoding to
prevent an infinite recursion (which would cause an OverflowError).
Otherwise, no such check takes place.
If allow_nan is true, then NaN, Infinity, and -Infinity will be
encoded as such. This behavior is not JSON specification compliant,
but is consistent with most JavaScript based encoders and decoders.
Otherwise, it will be a ValueError to encode such floats.
If sort_keys is true, then the output of dictionaries will be
sorted by key; this is useful for regression tests to ensure
that JSON serializations can be compared on a day-to-day basis.
If indent is a string, then JSON array elements and object members
will be pretty-printed with a newline followed by that string repeated
for each level of nesting. ``None`` (the default) selects the most compact
representation without any newlines. For backwards compatibility with
versions of simplejson earlier than 2.1.0, an integer is also accepted
and is converted to a string with that many spaces.
If specified, separators should be an (item_separator, key_separator)
tuple. The default is (', ', ': ') if *indent* is ``None`` and
(',', ': ') otherwise. To get the most compact JSON representation,
you should specify (',', ':') to eliminate whitespace.
If specified, default is a function that gets called for objects
that can't otherwise be serialized. It should return a JSON encodable
version of the object or raise a ``TypeError``.
If encoding is not None, then all input strings will be
transformed into unicode using that encoding prior to JSON-encoding.
The default is UTF-8.
If use_decimal is true (not the default), ``decimal.Decimal`` will
be supported directly by the encoder. For the inverse, decode JSON
with ``parse_float=decimal.Decimal``.
If namedtuple_as_object is true (the default), objects with
``_asdict()`` methods will be encoded as JSON objects.
If tuple_as_array is true (the default), tuple (and subclasses) will
be encoded as JSON arrays.
If bigint_as_string is true (not the default), ints 2**53 and higher
or lower than -2**53 will be encoded as strings. This is to avoid the
rounding that happens in Javascript otherwise.
If specified, item_sort_key is a callable used to sort the items in
each dictionary. This is useful if you want to sort items other than
in alphabetical order by key.
If for_json is true (not the default), objects with a ``for_json()``
method will use the return value of that method for encoding as JSON
instead of the object.
If *ignore_nan* is true (default: ``False``), then out of range
:class:`float` values (``nan``, ``inf``, ``-inf``) will be serialized
as ``null`` in compliance with the ECMA-262 specification. If true,
this will override *allow_nan*.
"""
self.skipkeys = skipkeys
self.ensure_ascii = ensure_ascii
self.check_circular = check_circular
self.allow_nan = allow_nan
self.sort_keys = sort_keys
self.use_decimal = use_decimal
self.namedtuple_as_object = namedtuple_as_object
self.tuple_as_array = tuple_as_array
self.bigint_as_string = bigint_as_string
self.item_sort_key = item_sort_key
self.for_json = for_json
self.ignore_nan = ignore_nan
if indent is not None and not isinstance(indent, string_types):
indent = indent * ' '
self.indent = indent
if separators is not None:
self.item_separator, self.key_separator = separators
elif indent is not None:
self.item_separator = ','
if default is not None:
self.default = default
self.encoding = encoding
def default(self, o):
"""Implement this method in a subclass such that it returns
a serializable object for ``o``, or calls the base implementation
(to raise a ``TypeError``).
For example, to support arbitrary iterators, you could
implement default like this::
def default(self, o):
try:
iterable = iter(o)
except TypeError:
pass
else:
return list(iterable)
return JSONEncoder.default(self, o)
"""
raise TypeError(repr(o) + " is not JSON serializable")
def encode(self, o):
"""Return a JSON string representation of a Python data structure.
>>> from simplejson import JSONEncoder
>>> JSONEncoder().encode({"foo": ["bar", "baz"]})
'{"foo": ["bar", "baz"]}'
"""
# This is for extremely simple cases and benchmarks.
if isinstance(o, binary_type):
_encoding = self.encoding
if (_encoding is not None and not (_encoding == 'utf-8')):
o = o.decode(_encoding)
if isinstance(o, string_types):
if self.ensure_ascii:
return encode_basestring_ascii(o)
else:
return encode_basestring(o)
# This doesn't pass the iterator directly to ''.join() because the
# exceptions aren't as detailed. The list call should be roughly
# equivalent to the PySequence_Fast that ''.join() would do.
chunks = self.iterencode(o, _one_shot=True)
if not isinstance(chunks, (list, tuple)):
chunks = list(chunks)
if self.ensure_ascii:
return ''.join(chunks)
else:
return u''.join(chunks)
def iterencode(self, o, _one_shot=False):
"""Encode the given object and yield each string
representation as available.
For example::
for chunk in JSONEncoder().iterencode(bigobject):
mysocket.write(chunk)
"""
if self.check_circular:
markers = {}
else:
markers = None
if self.ensure_ascii:
_encoder = encode_basestring_ascii
else:
_encoder = encode_basestring
if self.encoding != 'utf-8':
def _encoder(o, _orig_encoder=_encoder, _encoding=self.encoding):
if isinstance(o, binary_type):
o = o.decode(_encoding)
return _orig_encoder(o)
def floatstr(o, allow_nan=self.allow_nan, ignore_nan=self.ignore_nan,
_repr=FLOAT_REPR, _inf=PosInf, _neginf=-PosInf):
# Check for specials. Note that this type of test is processor
# and/or platform-specific, so do tests which don't depend on
# the internals.
if o != o:
text = 'NaN'
elif o == _inf:
text = 'Infinity'
elif o == _neginf:
text = '-Infinity'
else:
return _repr(o)
if ignore_nan:
text = 'null'
elif not allow_nan:
raise ValueError(
"Out of range float values are not JSON compliant: " +
repr(o))
return text
key_memo = {}
if (_one_shot and c_make_encoder is not None
and self.indent is None):
_iterencode = c_make_encoder(
markers, self.default, _encoder, self.indent,
self.key_separator, self.item_separator, self.sort_keys,
self.skipkeys, self.allow_nan, key_memo, self.use_decimal,
self.namedtuple_as_object, self.tuple_as_array,
self.bigint_as_string, self.item_sort_key,
self.encoding, self.for_json, self.ignore_nan,
Decimal)
else:
_iterencode = _make_iterencode(
markers, self.default, _encoder, self.indent, floatstr,
self.key_separator, self.item_separator, self.sort_keys,
self.skipkeys, _one_shot, self.use_decimal,
self.namedtuple_as_object, self.tuple_as_array,
self.bigint_as_string, self.item_sort_key,
self.encoding, self.for_json,
Decimal=Decimal)
try:
return _iterencode(o, 0)
finally:
key_memo.clear()
class JSONEncoderForHTML(JSONEncoder):
"""An encoder that produces JSON safe to embed in HTML.
To embed JSON content in, say, a script tag on a web page, the
characters &, < and > should be escaped. They cannot be escaped
with the usual entities (e.g. &amp;) because they are not expanded
within <script> tags.
"""
def encode(self, o):
# Override JSONEncoder.encode because it has hacks for
# performance that make things more complicated.
chunks = self.iterencode(o, True)
if self.ensure_ascii:
return ''.join(chunks)
else:
return u''.join(chunks)
def iterencode(self, o, _one_shot=False):
chunks = super(JSONEncoderForHTML, self).iterencode(o, _one_shot)
for chunk in chunks:
chunk = chunk.replace('&', '\\u0026')
chunk = chunk.replace('<', '\\u003c')
chunk = chunk.replace('>', '\\u003e')
yield chunk
def _make_iterencode(markers, _default, _encoder, _indent, _floatstr,
_key_separator, _item_separator, _sort_keys, _skipkeys, _one_shot,
_use_decimal, _namedtuple_as_object, _tuple_as_array,
_bigint_as_string, _item_sort_key, _encoding, _for_json,
## HACK: hand-optimized bytecode; turn globals into locals
_PY3=PY3,
ValueError=ValueError,
string_types=string_types,
Decimal=Decimal,
dict=dict,
float=float,
id=id,
integer_types=integer_types,
isinstance=isinstance,
list=list,
str=str,
tuple=tuple,
):
if _item_sort_key and not callable(_item_sort_key):
raise TypeError("item_sort_key must be None or callable")
elif _sort_keys and not _item_sort_key:
_item_sort_key = itemgetter(0)
def _iterencode_list(lst, _current_indent_level):
if not lst:
yield '[]'
return
if markers is not None:
markerid = id(lst)
if markerid in markers:
raise ValueError("Circular reference detected")
markers[markerid] = lst
buf = '['
if _indent is not None:
_current_indent_level += 1
newline_indent = '\n' + (_indent * _current_indent_level)
separator = _item_separator + newline_indent
buf += newline_indent
else:
newline_indent = None
separator = _item_separator
first = True
for value in lst:
if first:
first = False
else:
buf = separator
if (isinstance(value, string_types) or
(_PY3 and isinstance(value, binary_type))):
yield buf + _encoder(value)
elif value is None:
yield buf + 'null'
elif value is True:
yield buf + 'true'
elif value is False:
yield buf + 'false'
elif isinstance(value, integer_types):
yield ((buf + str(value))
if (not _bigint_as_string or
(-1 << 53) < value < (1 << 53))
else (buf + '"' + str(value) + '"'))
elif isinstance(value, float):
yield buf + _floatstr(value)
elif _use_decimal and isinstance(value, Decimal):
yield buf + str(value)
else:
yield buf
for_json = _for_json and getattr(value, 'for_json', None)
if for_json and callable(for_json):
chunks = _iterencode(for_json(), _current_indent_level)
elif isinstance(value, list):
chunks = _iterencode_list(value, _current_indent_level)
else:
_asdict = _namedtuple_as_object and getattr(value, '_asdict', None)
if _asdict and callable(_asdict):
chunks = _iterencode_dict(_asdict(),
_current_indent_level)
elif _tuple_as_array and isinstance(value, tuple):
chunks = _iterencode_list(value, _current_indent_level)
elif isinstance(value, dict):
chunks = _iterencode_dict(value, _current_indent_level)
else:
chunks = _iterencode(value, _current_indent_level)
for chunk in chunks:
yield chunk
if newline_indent is not None:
_current_indent_level -= 1
yield '\n' + (_indent * _current_indent_level)
yield ']'
if markers is not None:
del markers[markerid]
def _stringify_key(key):
if isinstance(key, string_types): # pragma: no cover
pass
elif isinstance(key, binary_type):
key = key.decode(_encoding)
elif isinstance(key, float):
key = _floatstr(key)
elif key is True:
key = 'true'
elif key is False:
key = 'false'
elif key is None:
key = 'null'
elif isinstance(key, integer_types):
key = str(key)
elif _use_decimal and isinstance(key, Decimal):
key = str(key)
elif _skipkeys:
key = None
else:
raise TypeError("key " + repr(key) + " is not a string")
return key
def _iterencode_dict(dct, _current_indent_level):
if not dct:
yield '{}'
return
if markers is not None:
markerid = id(dct)
if markerid in markers:
raise ValueError("Circular reference detected")
markers[markerid] = dct
yield '{'
if _indent is not None:
_current_indent_level += 1
newline_indent = '\n' + (_indent * _current_indent_level)
item_separator = _item_separator + newline_indent
yield newline_indent
else:
newline_indent = None
item_separator = _item_separator
first = True
if _PY3:
iteritems = dct.items()
else:
iteritems = dct.iteritems()
if _item_sort_key:
items = []
for k, v in dct.items():
if not isinstance(k, string_types):
k = _stringify_key(k)
if k is None:
continue
items.append((k, v))
items.sort(key=_item_sort_key)
else:
items = iteritems
for key, value in items:
if not (_item_sort_key or isinstance(key, string_types)):
key = _stringify_key(key)
if key is None:
# _skipkeys must be True
continue
if first:
first = False
else:
yield item_separator
yield _encoder(key)
yield _key_separator
if (isinstance(value, string_types) or
(_PY3 and isinstance(value, binary_type))):
yield _encoder(value)
elif value is None:
yield 'null'
elif value is True:
yield 'true'
elif value is False:
yield 'false'
elif isinstance(value, integer_types):
yield (str(value)
if (not _bigint_as_string or
(-1 << 53) < value < (1 << 53))
else ('"' + str(value) + '"'))
elif isinstance(value, float):
yield _floatstr(value)
elif _use_decimal and isinstance(value, Decimal):
yield str(value)
else:
for_json = _for_json and getattr(value, 'for_json', None)
if for_json and callable(for_json):
chunks = _iterencode(for_json(), _current_indent_level)
elif isinstance(value, list):
chunks = _iterencode_list(value, _current_indent_level)
else:
_asdict = _namedtuple_as_object and getattr(value, '_asdict', None)
if _asdict and callable(_asdict):
chunks = _iterencode_dict(_asdict(),
_current_indent_level)
elif _tuple_as_array and isinstance(value, tuple):
chunks = _iterencode_list(value, _current_indent_level)
elif isinstance(value, dict):
chunks = _iterencode_dict(value, _current_indent_level)
else:
chunks = _iterencode(value, _current_indent_level)
for chunk in chunks:
yield chunk
if newline_indent is not None:
_current_indent_level -= 1
yield '\n' + (_indent * _current_indent_level)
yield '}'
if markers is not None:
del markers[markerid]
def _iterencode(o, _current_indent_level):
if (isinstance(o, string_types) or
(_PY3 and isinstance(o, binary_type))):
yield _encoder(o)
elif o is None:
yield 'null'
elif o is True:
yield 'true'
elif o is False:
yield 'false'
elif isinstance(o, integer_types):
yield (str(o)
if (not _bigint_as_string or
(-1 << 53) < o < (1 << 53))
else ('"' + str(o) + '"'))
elif isinstance(o, float):
yield _floatstr(o)
else:
for_json = _for_json and getattr(o, 'for_json', None)
if for_json and callable(for_json):
for chunk in _iterencode(for_json(), _current_indent_level):
yield chunk
elif isinstance(o, list):
for chunk in _iterencode_list(o, _current_indent_level):
yield chunk
else:
_asdict = _namedtuple_as_object and getattr(o, '_asdict', None)
if _asdict and callable(_asdict):
for chunk in _iterencode_dict(_asdict(),
_current_indent_level):
yield chunk
elif (_tuple_as_array and isinstance(o, tuple)):
for chunk in _iterencode_list(o, _current_indent_level):
yield chunk
elif isinstance(o, dict):
for chunk in _iterencode_dict(o, _current_indent_level):
yield chunk
elif _use_decimal and isinstance(o, Decimal):
yield str(o)
else:
if markers is not None:
markerid = id(o)
if markerid in markers:
raise ValueError("Circular reference detected")
markers[markerid] = o
o = _default(o)
for chunk in _iterencode(o, _current_indent_level):
yield chunk
if markers is not None:
del markers[markerid]
return _iterencode

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"""Drop-in replacement for collections.OrderedDict by Raymond Hettinger
http://code.activestate.com/recipes/576693/
"""
from UserDict import DictMixin
# Modified from original to support Python 2.4, see
# http://code.google.com/p/simplejson/issues/detail?id=53
try:
all
except NameError:
def all(seq):
for elem in seq:
if not elem:
return False
return True
class OrderedDict(dict, DictMixin):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwds):
if len(args) > 1:
raise TypeError('expected at most 1 arguments, got %d' % len(args))
try:
self.__end
except AttributeError:
self.clear()
self.update(*args, **kwds)
def clear(self):
self.__end = end = []
end += [None, end, end] # sentinel node for doubly linked list
self.__map = {} # key --> [key, prev, next]
dict.clear(self)
def __setitem__(self, key, value):
if key not in self:
end = self.__end
curr = end[1]
curr[2] = end[1] = self.__map[key] = [key, curr, end]
dict.__setitem__(self, key, value)
def __delitem__(self, key):
dict.__delitem__(self, key)
key, prev, next = self.__map.pop(key)
prev[2] = next
next[1] = prev
def __iter__(self):
end = self.__end
curr = end[2]
while curr is not end:
yield curr[0]
curr = curr[2]
def __reversed__(self):
end = self.__end
curr = end[1]
while curr is not end:
yield curr[0]
curr = curr[1]
def popitem(self, last=True):
if not self:
raise KeyError('dictionary is empty')
# Modified from original to support Python 2.4, see
# http://code.google.com/p/simplejson/issues/detail?id=53
if last:
key = reversed(self).next()
else:
key = iter(self).next()
value = self.pop(key)
return key, value
def __reduce__(self):
items = [[k, self[k]] for k in self]
tmp = self.__map, self.__end
del self.__map, self.__end
inst_dict = vars(self).copy()
self.__map, self.__end = tmp
if inst_dict:
return (self.__class__, (items,), inst_dict)
return self.__class__, (items,)
def keys(self):
return list(self)
setdefault = DictMixin.setdefault
update = DictMixin.update
pop = DictMixin.pop
values = DictMixin.values
items = DictMixin.items
iterkeys = DictMixin.iterkeys
itervalues = DictMixin.itervalues
iteritems = DictMixin.iteritems
def __repr__(self):
if not self:
return '%s()' % (self.__class__.__name__,)
return '%s(%r)' % (self.__class__.__name__, self.items())
def copy(self):
return self.__class__(self)
@classmethod
def fromkeys(cls, iterable, value=None):
d = cls()
for key in iterable:
d[key] = value
return d
def __eq__(self, other):
if isinstance(other, OrderedDict):
return len(self)==len(other) and \
all(p==q for p, q in zip(self.items(), other.items()))
return dict.__eq__(self, other)
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other

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"""JSON token scanner
"""
import re
def _import_c_make_scanner():
try:
from simplejson._speedups import make_scanner
return make_scanner
except ImportError:
return None
c_make_scanner = _import_c_make_scanner()
__all__ = ['make_scanner', 'JSONDecodeError']
NUMBER_RE = re.compile(
r'(-?(?:0|[1-9]\d*))(\.\d+)?([eE][-+]?\d+)?',
(re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL))
class JSONDecodeError(ValueError):
"""Subclass of ValueError with the following additional properties:
msg: The unformatted error message
doc: The JSON document being parsed
pos: The start index of doc where parsing failed
end: The end index of doc where parsing failed (may be None)
lineno: The line corresponding to pos
colno: The column corresponding to pos
endlineno: The line corresponding to end (may be None)
endcolno: The column corresponding to end (may be None)
"""
# Note that this exception is used from _speedups
def __init__(self, msg, doc, pos, end=None):
ValueError.__init__(self, errmsg(msg, doc, pos, end=end))
self.msg = msg
self.doc = doc
self.pos = pos
self.end = end
self.lineno, self.colno = linecol(doc, pos)
if end is not None:
self.endlineno, self.endcolno = linecol(doc, end)
else:
self.endlineno, self.endcolno = None, None
def linecol(doc, pos):
lineno = doc.count('\n', 0, pos) + 1
if lineno == 1:
colno = pos + 1
else:
colno = pos - doc.rindex('\n', 0, pos)
return lineno, colno
def errmsg(msg, doc, pos, end=None):
lineno, colno = linecol(doc, pos)
msg = msg.replace('%r', repr(doc[pos:pos + 1]))
if end is None:
fmt = '%s: line %d column %d (char %d)'
return fmt % (msg, lineno, colno, pos)
endlineno, endcolno = linecol(doc, end)
fmt = '%s: line %d column %d - line %d column %d (char %d - %d)'
return fmt % (msg, lineno, colno, endlineno, endcolno, pos, end)
def py_make_scanner(context):
parse_object = context.parse_object
parse_array = context.parse_array
parse_string = context.parse_string
match_number = NUMBER_RE.match
encoding = context.encoding
strict = context.strict
parse_float = context.parse_float
parse_int = context.parse_int
parse_constant = context.parse_constant
object_hook = context.object_hook
object_pairs_hook = context.object_pairs_hook
memo = context.memo
def _scan_once(string, idx):
errmsg = 'Expecting value'
try:
nextchar = string[idx]
except IndexError:
raise JSONDecodeError(errmsg, string, idx)
if nextchar == '"':
return parse_string(string, idx + 1, encoding, strict)
elif nextchar == '{':
return parse_object((string, idx + 1), encoding, strict,
_scan_once, object_hook, object_pairs_hook, memo)
elif nextchar == '[':
return parse_array((string, idx + 1), _scan_once)
elif nextchar == 'n' and string[idx:idx + 4] == 'null':
return None, idx + 4
elif nextchar == 't' and string[idx:idx + 4] == 'true':
return True, idx + 4
elif nextchar == 'f' and string[idx:idx + 5] == 'false':
return False, idx + 5
m = match_number(string, idx)
if m is not None:
integer, frac, exp = m.groups()
if frac or exp:
res = parse_float(integer + (frac or '') + (exp or ''))
else:
res = parse_int(integer)
return res, m.end()
elif nextchar == 'N' and string[idx:idx + 3] == 'NaN':
return parse_constant('NaN'), idx + 3
elif nextchar == 'I' and string[idx:idx + 8] == 'Infinity':
return parse_constant('Infinity'), idx + 8
elif nextchar == '-' and string[idx:idx + 9] == '-Infinity':
return parse_constant('-Infinity'), idx + 9
else:
raise JSONDecodeError(errmsg, string, idx)
def scan_once(string, idx):
try:
return _scan_once(string, idx)
finally:
memo.clear()
return scan_once
make_scanner = c_make_scanner or py_make_scanner

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from __future__ import absolute_import
import unittest
import doctest
import sys
class OptionalExtensionTestSuite(unittest.TestSuite):
def run(self, result):
import simplejson
run = unittest.TestSuite.run
run(self, result)
if simplejson._import_c_make_encoder() is None:
TestMissingSpeedups().run(result)
else:
simplejson._toggle_speedups(False)
run(self, result)
simplejson._toggle_speedups(True)
return result
class TestMissingSpeedups(unittest.TestCase):
def runTest(self):
if hasattr(sys, 'pypy_translation_info'):
"PyPy doesn't need speedups! :)"
elif hasattr(self, 'skipTest'):
self.skipTest('_speedups.so is missing!')
def additional_tests(suite=None):
import simplejson
import simplejson.encoder
import simplejson.decoder
if suite is None:
suite = unittest.TestSuite()
for mod in (simplejson, simplejson.encoder, simplejson.decoder):
suite.addTest(doctest.DocTestSuite(mod))
suite.addTest(doctest.DocFileSuite('../../index.rst'))
return suite
def all_tests_suite():
suite = unittest.TestLoader().loadTestsFromNames([
'simplejson.tests.test_bigint_as_string',
'simplejson.tests.test_check_circular',
'simplejson.tests.test_decode',
'simplejson.tests.test_default',
'simplejson.tests.test_dump',
'simplejson.tests.test_encode_basestring_ascii',
'simplejson.tests.test_encode_for_html',
'simplejson.tests.test_errors',
'simplejson.tests.test_fail',
'simplejson.tests.test_float',
'simplejson.tests.test_indent',
'simplejson.tests.test_pass1',
'simplejson.tests.test_pass2',
'simplejson.tests.test_pass3',
'simplejson.tests.test_recursion',
'simplejson.tests.test_scanstring',
'simplejson.tests.test_separators',
'simplejson.tests.test_speedups',
'simplejson.tests.test_unicode',
'simplejson.tests.test_decimal',
'simplejson.tests.test_tuple',
'simplejson.tests.test_namedtuple',
'simplejson.tests.test_tool',
'simplejson.tests.test_for_json',
])
suite = additional_tests(suite)
return OptionalExtensionTestSuite([suite])
def main():
runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(verbosity=1 + sys.argv.count('-v'))
suite = all_tests_suite()
raise SystemExit(not runner.run(suite).wasSuccessful())
if __name__ == '__main__':
import os
import sys
sys.path.insert(0, os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)))))
main()

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from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
from simplejson.compat import long_type
class TestBigintAsString(TestCase):
# Python 2.5, at least the one that ships on Mac OS X, calculates
# 2 ** 53 as 0! It manages to calculate 1 << 53 correctly.
values = [(200, 200),
((1 << 53) - 1, 9007199254740991),
((1 << 53), '9007199254740992'),
((1 << 53) + 1, '9007199254740993'),
(-100, -100),
((-1 << 53), '-9007199254740992'),
((-1 << 53) - 1, '-9007199254740993'),
((-1 << 53) + 1, -9007199254740991)]
def test_ints(self):
for val, expect in self.values:
self.assertEqual(
val,
json.loads(json.dumps(val)))
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val, bigint_as_string=True)))
def test_lists(self):
for val, expect in self.values:
val = [val, val]
expect = [expect, expect]
self.assertEqual(
val,
json.loads(json.dumps(val)))
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val, bigint_as_string=True)))
def test_dicts(self):
for val, expect in self.values:
val = {'k': val}
expect = {'k': expect}
self.assertEqual(
val,
json.loads(json.dumps(val)))
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val, bigint_as_string=True)))
def test_dict_keys(self):
for val, _ in self.values:
expect = {str(val): 'value'}
val = {val: 'value'}
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val)))
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.loads(json.dumps(val, bigint_as_string=True)))

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from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
def default_iterable(obj):
return list(obj)
class TestCheckCircular(TestCase):
def test_circular_dict(self):
dct = {}
dct['a'] = dct
self.assertRaises(ValueError, json.dumps, dct)
def test_circular_list(self):
lst = []
lst.append(lst)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, json.dumps, lst)
def test_circular_composite(self):
dct2 = {}
dct2['a'] = []
dct2['a'].append(dct2)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, json.dumps, dct2)
def test_circular_default(self):
json.dumps([set()], default=default_iterable)
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dumps, [set()])
def test_circular_off_default(self):
json.dumps([set()], default=default_iterable, check_circular=False)
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dumps, [set()], check_circular=False)

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@ -0,0 +1,71 @@
import decimal
from decimal import Decimal
from unittest import TestCase
from simplejson.compat import StringIO, reload_module
import simplejson as json
class TestDecimal(TestCase):
NUMS = "1.0", "10.00", "1.1", "1234567890.1234567890", "500"
def dumps(self, obj, **kw):
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(obj, sio, **kw)
res = json.dumps(obj, **kw)
self.assertEqual(res, sio.getvalue())
return res
def loads(self, s, **kw):
sio = StringIO(s)
res = json.loads(s, **kw)
self.assertEqual(res, json.load(sio, **kw))
return res
def test_decimal_encode(self):
for d in map(Decimal, self.NUMS):
self.assertEqual(self.dumps(d, use_decimal=True), str(d))
def test_decimal_decode(self):
for s in self.NUMS:
self.assertEqual(self.loads(s, parse_float=Decimal), Decimal(s))
def test_stringify_key(self):
for d in map(Decimal, self.NUMS):
v = {d: d}
self.assertEqual(
self.loads(
self.dumps(v, use_decimal=True), parse_float=Decimal),
{str(d): d})
def test_decimal_roundtrip(self):
for d in map(Decimal, self.NUMS):
# The type might not be the same (int and Decimal) but they
# should still compare equal.
for v in [d, [d], {'': d}]:
self.assertEqual(
self.loads(
self.dumps(v, use_decimal=True), parse_float=Decimal),
v)
def test_decimal_defaults(self):
d = Decimal('1.1')
# use_decimal=True is the default
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dumps, d, use_decimal=False)
self.assertEqual('1.1', json.dumps(d))
self.assertEqual('1.1', json.dumps(d, use_decimal=True))
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dump, d, StringIO(),
use_decimal=False)
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(d, sio)
self.assertEqual('1.1', sio.getvalue())
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(d, sio, use_decimal=True)
self.assertEqual('1.1', sio.getvalue())
def test_decimal_reload(self):
# Simulate a subinterpreter that reloads the Python modules but not
# the C code https://github.com/simplejson/simplejson/issues/34
global Decimal
Decimal = reload_module(decimal).Decimal
import simplejson.encoder
simplejson.encoder.Decimal = Decimal
self.test_decimal_roundtrip()

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@ -0,0 +1,88 @@
from __future__ import absolute_import
import decimal
from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
from simplejson.compat import StringIO
from simplejson import OrderedDict
class TestDecode(TestCase):
if not hasattr(TestCase, 'assertIs'):
def assertIs(self, a, b):
self.assertTrue(a is b, '%r is %r' % (a, b))
def test_decimal(self):
rval = json.loads('1.1', parse_float=decimal.Decimal)
self.assertTrue(isinstance(rval, decimal.Decimal))
self.assertEqual(rval, decimal.Decimal('1.1'))
def test_float(self):
rval = json.loads('1', parse_int=float)
self.assertTrue(isinstance(rval, float))
self.assertEqual(rval, 1.0)
def test_decoder_optimizations(self):
# Several optimizations were made that skip over calls to
# the whitespace regex, so this test is designed to try and
# exercise the uncommon cases. The array cases are already covered.
rval = json.loads('{ "key" : "value" , "k":"v" }')
self.assertEqual(rval, {"key":"value", "k":"v"})
def test_empty_objects(self):
s = '{}'
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s), eval(s))
s = '[]'
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s), eval(s))
s = '""'
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s), eval(s))
def test_object_pairs_hook(self):
s = '{"xkd":1, "kcw":2, "art":3, "hxm":4, "qrt":5, "pad":6, "hoy":7}'
p = [("xkd", 1), ("kcw", 2), ("art", 3), ("hxm", 4),
("qrt", 5), ("pad", 6), ("hoy", 7)]
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s), eval(s))
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s, object_pairs_hook=lambda x: x), p)
self.assertEqual(json.load(StringIO(s),
object_pairs_hook=lambda x: x), p)
od = json.loads(s, object_pairs_hook=OrderedDict)
self.assertEqual(od, OrderedDict(p))
self.assertEqual(type(od), OrderedDict)
# the object_pairs_hook takes priority over the object_hook
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s,
object_pairs_hook=OrderedDict,
object_hook=lambda x: None),
OrderedDict(p))
def check_keys_reuse(self, source, loads):
rval = loads(source)
(a, b), (c, d) = sorted(rval[0]), sorted(rval[1])
self.assertIs(a, c)
self.assertIs(b, d)
def test_keys_reuse_str(self):
s = u'[{"a_key": 1, "b_\xe9": 2}, {"a_key": 3, "b_\xe9": 4}]'.encode('utf8')
self.check_keys_reuse(s, json.loads)
def test_keys_reuse_unicode(self):
s = u'[{"a_key": 1, "b_\xe9": 2}, {"a_key": 3, "b_\xe9": 4}]'
self.check_keys_reuse(s, json.loads)
def test_empty_strings(self):
self.assertEqual(json.loads('""'), "")
self.assertEqual(json.loads(u'""'), u"")
self.assertEqual(json.loads('[""]'), [""])
self.assertEqual(json.loads(u'[""]'), [u""])
def test_raw_decode(self):
cls = json.decoder.JSONDecoder
self.assertEqual(
({'a': {}}, 9),
cls().raw_decode("{\"a\": {}}"))
# http://code.google.com/p/simplejson/issues/detail?id=85
self.assertEqual(
({'a': {}}, 9),
cls(object_pairs_hook=dict).raw_decode("{\"a\": {}}"))
# https://github.com/simplejson/simplejson/pull/38
self.assertEqual(
({'a': {}}, 11),
cls().raw_decode(" \n{\"a\": {}}"))

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@ -0,0 +1,9 @@
from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
class TestDefault(TestCase):
def test_default(self):
self.assertEqual(
json.dumps(type, default=repr),
json.dumps(repr(type)))

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@ -0,0 +1,121 @@
from unittest import TestCase
from simplejson.compat import StringIO, long_type, b, binary_type, PY3
import simplejson as json
def as_text_type(s):
if PY3 and isinstance(s, binary_type):
return s.decode('ascii')
return s
class TestDump(TestCase):
def test_dump(self):
sio = StringIO()
json.dump({}, sio)
self.assertEqual(sio.getvalue(), '{}')
def test_constants(self):
for c in [None, True, False]:
self.assertTrue(json.loads(json.dumps(c)) is c)
self.assertTrue(json.loads(json.dumps([c]))[0] is c)
self.assertTrue(json.loads(json.dumps({'a': c}))['a'] is c)
def test_stringify_key(self):
items = [(b('bytes'), 'bytes'),
(1.0, '1.0'),
(10, '10'),
(True, 'true'),
(False, 'false'),
(None, 'null'),
(long_type(100), '100')]
for k, expect in items:
self.assertEqual(
json.loads(json.dumps({k: expect})),
{expect: expect})
self.assertEqual(
json.loads(json.dumps({k: expect}, sort_keys=True)),
{expect: expect})
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dumps, {json: 1})
for v in [{}, {'other': 1}, {b('derp'): 1, 'herp': 2}]:
for sort_keys in [False, True]:
v0 = dict(v)
v0[json] = 1
v1 = dict((as_text_type(key), val) for (key, val) in v.items())
self.assertEqual(
json.loads(json.dumps(v0, skipkeys=True, sort_keys=sort_keys)),
v1)
self.assertEqual(
json.loads(json.dumps({'': v0}, skipkeys=True, sort_keys=sort_keys)),
{'': v1})
self.assertEqual(
json.loads(json.dumps([v0], skipkeys=True, sort_keys=sort_keys)),
[v1])
def test_dumps(self):
self.assertEqual(json.dumps({}), '{}')
def test_encode_truefalse(self):
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(
{True: False, False: True}, sort_keys=True),
'{"false": true, "true": false}')
self.assertEqual(
json.dumps(
{2: 3.0,
4.0: long_type(5),
False: 1,
long_type(6): True,
"7": 0},
sort_keys=True),
'{"2": 3.0, "4.0": 5, "6": true, "7": 0, "false": 1}')
def test_ordered_dict(self):
# http://bugs.python.org/issue6105
items = [('one', 1), ('two', 2), ('three', 3), ('four', 4), ('five', 5)]
s = json.dumps(json.OrderedDict(items))
self.assertEqual(
s,
'{"one": 1, "two": 2, "three": 3, "four": 4, "five": 5}')
def test_indent_unknown_type_acceptance(self):
"""
A test against the regression mentioned at `github issue 29`_.
The indent parameter should accept any type which pretends to be
an instance of int or long when it comes to being multiplied by
strings, even if it is not actually an int or long, for
backwards compatibility.
.. _github issue 29:
http://github.com/simplejson/simplejson/issue/29
"""
class AwesomeInt(object):
"""An awesome reimplementation of integers"""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
if len(args) > 0:
# [construct from literals, objects, etc.]
# ...
# Finally, if args[0] is an integer, store it
if isinstance(args[0], int):
self._int = args[0]
# [various methods]
def __mul__(self, other):
# [various ways to multiply AwesomeInt objects]
# ... finally, if the right-hand operand is not awesome enough,
# try to do a normal integer multiplication
if hasattr(self, '_int'):
return self._int * other
else:
raise NotImplementedError("To do non-awesome things with"
" this object, please construct it from an integer!")
s = json.dumps([0, 1, 2], indent=AwesomeInt(3))
self.assertEqual(s, '[\n 0,\n 1,\n 2\n]')
def test_accumulator(self):
# the C API uses an accumulator that collects after 100,000 appends
lst = [0] * 100000
self.assertEqual(json.loads(json.dumps(lst)), lst)

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from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson.encoder
from simplejson.compat import b
CASES = [
(u'/\\"\ucafe\ubabe\uab98\ufcde\ubcda\uef4a\x08\x0c\n\r\t`1~!@#$%^&*()_+-=[]{}|;:\',./<>?', '"/\\\\\\"\\ucafe\\ubabe\\uab98\\ufcde\\ubcda\\uef4a\\b\\f\\n\\r\\t`1~!@#$%^&*()_+-=[]{}|;:\',./<>?"'),
(u'\u0123\u4567\u89ab\ucdef\uabcd\uef4a', '"\\u0123\\u4567\\u89ab\\ucdef\\uabcd\\uef4a"'),
(u'controls', '"controls"'),
(u'\x08\x0c\n\r\t', '"\\b\\f\\n\\r\\t"'),
(u'{"object with 1 member":["array with 1 element"]}', '"{\\"object with 1 member\\":[\\"array with 1 element\\"]}"'),
(u' s p a c e d ', '" s p a c e d "'),
(u'\U0001d120', '"\\ud834\\udd20"'),
(u'\u03b1\u03a9', '"\\u03b1\\u03a9"'),
(b('\xce\xb1\xce\xa9'), '"\\u03b1\\u03a9"'),
(u'\u03b1\u03a9', '"\\u03b1\\u03a9"'),
(b('\xce\xb1\xce\xa9'), '"\\u03b1\\u03a9"'),
(u'\u03b1\u03a9', '"\\u03b1\\u03a9"'),
(u'\u03b1\u03a9', '"\\u03b1\\u03a9"'),
(u"`1~!@#$%^&*()_+-={':[,]}|;.</>?", '"`1~!@#$%^&*()_+-={\':[,]}|;.</>?"'),
(u'\x08\x0c\n\r\t', '"\\b\\f\\n\\r\\t"'),
(u'\u0123\u4567\u89ab\ucdef\uabcd\uef4a', '"\\u0123\\u4567\\u89ab\\ucdef\\uabcd\\uef4a"'),
]
class TestEncodeBaseStringAscii(TestCase):
def test_py_encode_basestring_ascii(self):
self._test_encode_basestring_ascii(simplejson.encoder.py_encode_basestring_ascii)
def test_c_encode_basestring_ascii(self):
if not simplejson.encoder.c_encode_basestring_ascii:
return
self._test_encode_basestring_ascii(simplejson.encoder.c_encode_basestring_ascii)
def _test_encode_basestring_ascii(self, encode_basestring_ascii):
fname = encode_basestring_ascii.__name__
for input_string, expect in CASES:
result = encode_basestring_ascii(input_string)
#self.assertEqual(result, expect,
# '{0!r} != {1!r} for {2}({3!r})'.format(
# result, expect, fname, input_string))
self.assertEqual(result, expect,
'%r != %r for %s(%r)' % (result, expect, fname, input_string))
def test_sorted_dict(self):
items = [('one', 1), ('two', 2), ('three', 3), ('four', 4), ('five', 5)]
s = simplejson.dumps(dict(items), sort_keys=True)
self.assertEqual(s, '{"five": 5, "four": 4, "one": 1, "three": 3, "two": 2}')

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import unittest
import simplejson as json
class TestEncodeForHTML(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.decoder = json.JSONDecoder()
self.encoder = json.JSONEncoderForHTML()
def test_basic_encode(self):
self.assertEqual(r'"\u0026"', self.encoder.encode('&'))
self.assertEqual(r'"\u003c"', self.encoder.encode('<'))
self.assertEqual(r'"\u003e"', self.encoder.encode('>'))
def test_basic_roundtrip(self):
for char in '&<>':
self.assertEqual(
char, self.decoder.decode(
self.encoder.encode(char)))
def test_prevent_script_breakout(self):
bad_string = '</script><script>alert("gotcha")</script>'
self.assertEqual(
r'"\u003c/script\u003e\u003cscript\u003e'
r'alert(\"gotcha\")\u003c/script\u003e"',
self.encoder.encode(bad_string))
self.assertEqual(
bad_string, self.decoder.decode(
self.encoder.encode(bad_string)))

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import sys
from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
from simplejson.compat import u, b
class TestErrors(TestCase):
def test_string_keys_error(self):
data = [{'a': 'A', 'b': (2, 4), 'c': 3.0, ('d',): 'D tuple'}]
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dumps, data)
def test_decode_error(self):
err = None
try:
json.loads('{}\na\nb')
except json.JSONDecodeError:
err = sys.exc_info()[1]
else:
self.fail('Expected JSONDecodeError')
self.assertEqual(err.lineno, 2)
self.assertEqual(err.colno, 1)
self.assertEqual(err.endlineno, 3)
self.assertEqual(err.endcolno, 2)
def test_scan_error(self):
err = None
for t in (u, b):
try:
json.loads(t('{"asdf": "'))
except json.JSONDecodeError:
err = sys.exc_info()[1]
else:
self.fail('Expected JSONDecodeError')
self.assertEqual(err.lineno, 1)
self.assertEqual(err.colno, 10)

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import sys
from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
# 2007-10-05
JSONDOCS = [
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail1.json
'"A JSON payload should be an object or array, not a string."',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail2.json
'["Unclosed array"',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail3.json
'{unquoted_key: "keys must be quoted"}',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail4.json
'["extra comma",]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail5.json
'["double extra comma",,]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail6.json
'[ , "<-- missing value"]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail7.json
'["Comma after the close"],',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail8.json
'["Extra close"]]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail9.json
'{"Extra comma": true,}',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail10.json
'{"Extra value after close": true} "misplaced quoted value"',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail11.json
'{"Illegal expression": 1 + 2}',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail12.json
'{"Illegal invocation": alert()}',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail13.json
'{"Numbers cannot have leading zeroes": 013}',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail14.json
'{"Numbers cannot be hex": 0x14}',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail15.json
'["Illegal backslash escape: \\x15"]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail16.json
'[\\naked]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail17.json
'["Illegal backslash escape: \\017"]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail18.json
'[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[["Too deep"]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail19.json
'{"Missing colon" null}',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail20.json
'{"Double colon":: null}',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail21.json
'{"Comma instead of colon", null}',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail22.json
'["Colon instead of comma": false]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail23.json
'["Bad value", truth]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail24.json
"['single quote']",
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail25.json
'["\ttab\tcharacter\tin\tstring\t"]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail26.json
'["tab\\ character\\ in\\ string\\ "]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail27.json
'["line\nbreak"]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail28.json
'["line\\\nbreak"]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail29.json
'[0e]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail30.json
'[0e+]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail31.json
'[0e+-1]',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail32.json
'{"Comma instead if closing brace": true,',
# http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/fail33.json
'["mismatch"}',
# http://code.google.com/p/simplejson/issues/detail?id=3
u'["A\u001FZ control characters in string"]',
# misc based on coverage
'{',
'{]',
'{"foo": "bar"]',
'{"foo": "bar"',
'nul',
'nulx',
'-',
'-x',
'-e',
'-e0',
'-Infinite',
'-Inf',
'Infinit',
'Infinite',
'NaM',
'NuN',
'falsy',
'fal',
'trug',
'tru',
'1e',
'1ex',
'1e-',
'1e-x',
]
SKIPS = {
1: "why not have a string payload?",
18: "spec doesn't specify any nesting limitations",
}
class TestFail(TestCase):
def test_failures(self):
for idx, doc in enumerate(JSONDOCS):
idx = idx + 1
if idx in SKIPS:
json.loads(doc)
continue
try:
json.loads(doc)
except json.JSONDecodeError:
pass
else:
self.fail("Expected failure for fail%d.json: %r" % (idx, doc))
def test_array_decoder_issue46(self):
# http://code.google.com/p/simplejson/issues/detail?id=46
for doc in [u'[,]', '[,]']:
try:
json.loads(doc)
except json.JSONDecodeError:
e = sys.exc_info()[1]
self.assertEqual(e.pos, 1)
self.assertEqual(e.lineno, 1)
self.assertEqual(e.colno, 2)
except Exception:
e = sys.exc_info()[1]
self.fail("Unexpected exception raised %r %s" % (e, e))
else:
self.fail("Unexpected success parsing '[,]'")
def test_truncated_input(self):
test_cases = [
('', 'Expecting value', 0),
('[', "Expecting value or ']'", 1),
('[42', "Expecting ',' delimiter", 3),
('[42,', 'Expecting value', 4),
('["', 'Unterminated string starting at', 1),
('["spam', 'Unterminated string starting at', 1),
('["spam"', "Expecting ',' delimiter", 7),
('["spam",', 'Expecting value', 8),
('{', 'Expecting property name enclosed in double quotes', 1),
('{"', 'Unterminated string starting at', 1),
('{"spam', 'Unterminated string starting at', 1),
('{"spam"', "Expecting ':' delimiter", 7),
('{"spam":', 'Expecting value', 8),
('{"spam":42', "Expecting ',' delimiter", 10),
('{"spam":42,', 'Expecting property name enclosed in double quotes',
11),
('"', 'Unterminated string starting at', 0),
('"spam', 'Unterminated string starting at', 0),
('[,', "Expecting value", 1),
]
for data, msg, idx in test_cases:
try:
json.loads(data)
except json.JSONDecodeError:
e = sys.exc_info()[1]
self.assertEqual(
e.msg[:len(msg)],
msg,
"%r doesn't start with %r for %r" % (e.msg, msg, data))
self.assertEqual(
e.pos, idx,
"pos %r != %r for %r" % (e.pos, idx, data))
except Exception:
e = sys.exc_info()[1]
self.fail("Unexpected exception raised %r %s" % (e, e))
else:
self.fail("Unexpected success parsing '%r'" % (data,))

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import math
from unittest import TestCase
from simplejson.compat import long_type, text_type
import simplejson as json
from simplejson.decoder import NaN, PosInf, NegInf
class TestFloat(TestCase):
def test_degenerates_allow(self):
for inf in (PosInf, NegInf):
self.assertEqual(json.loads(json.dumps(inf)), inf)
# Python 2.5 doesn't have math.isnan
nan = json.loads(json.dumps(NaN))
self.assertTrue((0 + nan) != nan)
def test_degenerates_ignore(self):
for f in (PosInf, NegInf, NaN):
self.assertEqual(json.loads(json.dumps(f, ignore_nan=True)), None)
def test_degenerates_deny(self):
for f in (PosInf, NegInf, NaN):
self.assertRaises(ValueError, json.dumps, f, allow_nan=False)
def test_floats(self):
for num in [1617161771.7650001, math.pi, math.pi**100,
math.pi**-100, 3.1]:
self.assertEqual(float(json.dumps(num)), num)
self.assertEqual(json.loads(json.dumps(num)), num)
self.assertEqual(json.loads(text_type(json.dumps(num))), num)
def test_ints(self):
for num in [1, long_type(1), 1<<32, 1<<64]:
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(num), str(num))
self.assertEqual(int(json.dumps(num)), num)
self.assertEqual(json.loads(json.dumps(num)), num)
self.assertEqual(json.loads(text_type(json.dumps(num))), num)

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import unittest
import simplejson as json
class ForJson(object):
def for_json(self):
return {'for_json': 1}
class NestedForJson(object):
def for_json(self):
return {'nested': ForJson()}
class ForJsonList(object):
def for_json(self):
return ['list']
class DictForJson(dict):
def for_json(self):
return {'alpha': 1}
class ListForJson(list):
def for_json(self):
return ['list']
class TestForJson(unittest.TestCase):
def assertRoundTrip(self, obj, other, for_json=True):
if for_json is None:
# None will use the default
s = json.dumps(obj)
else:
s = json.dumps(obj, for_json=for_json)
self.assertEqual(
json.loads(s),
other)
def test_for_json_encodes_stand_alone_object(self):
self.assertRoundTrip(
ForJson(),
ForJson().for_json())
def test_for_json_encodes_object_nested_in_dict(self):
self.assertRoundTrip(
{'hooray': ForJson()},
{'hooray': ForJson().for_json()})
def test_for_json_encodes_object_nested_in_list_within_dict(self):
self.assertRoundTrip(
{'list': [0, ForJson(), 2, 3]},
{'list': [0, ForJson().for_json(), 2, 3]})
def test_for_json_encodes_object_nested_within_object(self):
self.assertRoundTrip(
NestedForJson(),
{'nested': {'for_json': 1}})
def test_for_json_encodes_list(self):
self.assertRoundTrip(
ForJsonList(),
ForJsonList().for_json())
def test_for_json_encodes_list_within_object(self):
self.assertRoundTrip(
{'nested': ForJsonList()},
{'nested': ForJsonList().for_json()})
def test_for_json_encodes_dict_subclass(self):
self.assertRoundTrip(
DictForJson(a=1),
DictForJson(a=1).for_json())
def test_for_json_encodes_list_subclass(self):
self.assertRoundTrip(
ListForJson(['l']),
ListForJson(['l']).for_json())
def test_for_json_ignored_if_not_true_with_dict_subclass(self):
for for_json in (None, False):
self.assertRoundTrip(
DictForJson(a=1),
{'a': 1},
for_json=for_json)
def test_for_json_ignored_if_not_true_with_list_subclass(self):
for for_json in (None, False):
self.assertRoundTrip(
ListForJson(['l']),
['l'],
for_json=for_json)
def test_raises_typeerror_if_for_json_not_true_with_object(self):
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dumps, ForJson())
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dumps, ForJson(), for_json=False)

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from unittest import TestCase
import textwrap
import simplejson as json
from simplejson.compat import StringIO
class TestIndent(TestCase):
def test_indent(self):
h = [['blorpie'], ['whoops'], [], 'd-shtaeou', 'd-nthiouh',
'i-vhbjkhnth',
{'nifty': 87}, {'field': 'yes', 'morefield': False} ]
expect = textwrap.dedent("""\
[
\t[
\t\t"blorpie"
\t],
\t[
\t\t"whoops"
\t],
\t[],
\t"d-shtaeou",
\t"d-nthiouh",
\t"i-vhbjkhnth",
\t{
\t\t"nifty": 87
\t},
\t{
\t\t"field": "yes",
\t\t"morefield": false
\t}
]""")
d1 = json.dumps(h)
d2 = json.dumps(h, indent='\t', sort_keys=True, separators=(',', ': '))
d3 = json.dumps(h, indent=' ', sort_keys=True, separators=(',', ': '))
d4 = json.dumps(h, indent=2, sort_keys=True, separators=(',', ': '))
h1 = json.loads(d1)
h2 = json.loads(d2)
h3 = json.loads(d3)
h4 = json.loads(d4)
self.assertEqual(h1, h)
self.assertEqual(h2, h)
self.assertEqual(h3, h)
self.assertEqual(h4, h)
self.assertEqual(d3, expect.replace('\t', ' '))
self.assertEqual(d4, expect.replace('\t', ' '))
# NOTE: Python 2.4 textwrap.dedent converts tabs to spaces,
# so the following is expected to fail. Python 2.4 is not a
# supported platform in simplejson 2.1.0+.
self.assertEqual(d2, expect)
def test_indent0(self):
h = {3: 1}
def check(indent, expected):
d1 = json.dumps(h, indent=indent)
self.assertEqual(d1, expected)
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(h, sio, indent=indent)
self.assertEqual(sio.getvalue(), expected)
# indent=0 should emit newlines
check(0, '{\n"3": 1\n}')
# indent=None is more compact
check(None, '{"3": 1}')
def test_separators(self):
lst = [1,2,3,4]
expect = '[\n1,\n2,\n3,\n4\n]'
expect_spaces = '[\n1, \n2, \n3, \n4\n]'
# Ensure that separators still works
self.assertEqual(
expect_spaces,
json.dumps(lst, indent=0, separators=(', ', ': ')))
# Force the new defaults
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.dumps(lst, indent=0, separators=(',', ': ')))
# Added in 2.1.4
self.assertEqual(
expect,
json.dumps(lst, indent=0))

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from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
from operator import itemgetter
class TestItemSortKey(TestCase):
def test_simple_first(self):
a = {'a': 1, 'c': 5, 'jack': 'jill', 'pick': 'axe', 'array': [1, 5, 6, 9], 'tuple': (83, 12, 3), 'crate': 'dog', 'zeak': 'oh'}
self.assertEqual(
'{"a": 1, "c": 5, "crate": "dog", "jack": "jill", "pick": "axe", "zeak": "oh", "array": [1, 5, 6, 9], "tuple": [83, 12, 3]}',
json.dumps(a, item_sort_key=json.simple_first))
def test_case(self):
a = {'a': 1, 'c': 5, 'Jack': 'jill', 'pick': 'axe', 'Array': [1, 5, 6, 9], 'tuple': (83, 12, 3), 'crate': 'dog', 'zeak': 'oh'}
self.assertEqual(
'{"Array": [1, 5, 6, 9], "Jack": "jill", "a": 1, "c": 5, "crate": "dog", "pick": "axe", "tuple": [83, 12, 3], "zeak": "oh"}',
json.dumps(a, item_sort_key=itemgetter(0)))
self.assertEqual(
'{"a": 1, "Array": [1, 5, 6, 9], "c": 5, "crate": "dog", "Jack": "jill", "pick": "axe", "tuple": [83, 12, 3], "zeak": "oh"}',
json.dumps(a, item_sort_key=lambda kv: kv[0].lower()))

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from __future__ import absolute_import
import unittest
import simplejson as json
from simplejson.compat import StringIO
try:
from collections import namedtuple
except ImportError:
class Value(tuple):
def __new__(cls, *args):
return tuple.__new__(cls, args)
def _asdict(self):
return {'value': self[0]}
class Point(tuple):
def __new__(cls, *args):
return tuple.__new__(cls, args)
def _asdict(self):
return {'x': self[0], 'y': self[1]}
else:
Value = namedtuple('Value', ['value'])
Point = namedtuple('Point', ['x', 'y'])
class DuckValue(object):
def __init__(self, *args):
self.value = Value(*args)
def _asdict(self):
return self.value._asdict()
class DuckPoint(object):
def __init__(self, *args):
self.point = Point(*args)
def _asdict(self):
return self.point._asdict()
class DeadDuck(object):
_asdict = None
class DeadDict(dict):
_asdict = None
CONSTRUCTORS = [
lambda v: v,
lambda v: [v],
lambda v: [{'key': v}],
]
class TestNamedTuple(unittest.TestCase):
def test_namedtuple_dumps(self):
for v in [Value(1), Point(1, 2), DuckValue(1), DuckPoint(1, 2)]:
d = v._asdict()
self.assertEqual(d, json.loads(json.dumps(v)))
self.assertEqual(
d,
json.loads(json.dumps(v, namedtuple_as_object=True)))
self.assertEqual(d, json.loads(json.dumps(v, tuple_as_array=False)))
self.assertEqual(
d,
json.loads(json.dumps(v, namedtuple_as_object=True,
tuple_as_array=False)))
def test_namedtuple_dumps_false(self):
for v in [Value(1), Point(1, 2)]:
l = list(v)
self.assertEqual(
l,
json.loads(json.dumps(v, namedtuple_as_object=False)))
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dumps, v,
tuple_as_array=False, namedtuple_as_object=False)
def test_namedtuple_dump(self):
for v in [Value(1), Point(1, 2), DuckValue(1), DuckPoint(1, 2)]:
d = v._asdict()
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(v, sio)
self.assertEqual(d, json.loads(sio.getvalue()))
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(v, sio, namedtuple_as_object=True)
self.assertEqual(
d,
json.loads(sio.getvalue()))
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(v, sio, tuple_as_array=False)
self.assertEqual(d, json.loads(sio.getvalue()))
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(v, sio, namedtuple_as_object=True,
tuple_as_array=False)
self.assertEqual(
d,
json.loads(sio.getvalue()))
def test_namedtuple_dump_false(self):
for v in [Value(1), Point(1, 2)]:
l = list(v)
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(v, sio, namedtuple_as_object=False)
self.assertEqual(
l,
json.loads(sio.getvalue()))
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dump, v, StringIO(),
tuple_as_array=False, namedtuple_as_object=False)
def test_asdict_not_callable_dump(self):
for f in CONSTRUCTORS:
self.assertRaises(TypeError,
json.dump, f(DeadDuck()), StringIO(), namedtuple_as_object=True)
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(f(DeadDict()), sio, namedtuple_as_object=True)
self.assertEqual(
json.dumps(f({})),
sio.getvalue())
def test_asdict_not_callable_dumps(self):
for f in CONSTRUCTORS:
self.assertRaises(TypeError,
json.dumps, f(DeadDuck()), namedtuple_as_object=True)
self.assertEqual(
json.dumps(f({})),
json.dumps(f(DeadDict()), namedtuple_as_object=True))

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from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
# from http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/pass1.json
JSON = r'''
[
"JSON Test Pattern pass1",
{"object with 1 member":["array with 1 element"]},
{},
[],
-42,
true,
false,
null,
{
"integer": 1234567890,
"real": -9876.543210,
"e": 0.123456789e-12,
"E": 1.234567890E+34,
"": 23456789012E66,
"zero": 0,
"one": 1,
"space": " ",
"quote": "\"",
"backslash": "\\",
"controls": "\b\f\n\r\t",
"slash": "/ & \/",
"alpha": "abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwyz",
"ALPHA": "ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWYZ",
"digit": "0123456789",
"special": "`1~!@#$%^&*()_+-={':[,]}|;.</>?",
"hex": "\u0123\u4567\u89AB\uCDEF\uabcd\uef4A",
"true": true,
"false": false,
"null": null,
"array":[ ],
"object":{ },
"address": "50 St. James Street",
"url": "http://www.JSON.org/",
"comment": "// /* <!-- --",
"# -- --> */": " ",
" s p a c e d " :[1,2 , 3
,
4 , 5 , 6 ,7 ],"compact": [1,2,3,4,5,6,7],
"jsontext": "{\"object with 1 member\":[\"array with 1 element\"]}",
"quotes": "&#34; \u0022 %22 0x22 034 &#x22;",
"\/\\\"\uCAFE\uBABE\uAB98\uFCDE\ubcda\uef4A\b\f\n\r\t`1~!@#$%^&*()_+-=[]{}|;:',./<>?"
: "A key can be any string"
},
0.5 ,98.6
,
99.44
,
1066,
1e1,
0.1e1,
1e-1,
1e00,2e+00,2e-00
,"rosebud"]
'''
class TestPass1(TestCase):
def test_parse(self):
# test in/out equivalence and parsing
res = json.loads(JSON)
out = json.dumps(res)
self.assertEqual(res, json.loads(out))

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from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
# from http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/pass2.json
JSON = r'''
[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[["Not too deep"]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]
'''
class TestPass2(TestCase):
def test_parse(self):
# test in/out equivalence and parsing
res = json.loads(JSON)
out = json.dumps(res)
self.assertEqual(res, json.loads(out))

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from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
# from http://json.org/JSON_checker/test/pass3.json
JSON = r'''
{
"JSON Test Pattern pass3": {
"The outermost value": "must be an object or array.",
"In this test": "It is an object."
}
}
'''
class TestPass3(TestCase):
def test_parse(self):
# test in/out equivalence and parsing
res = json.loads(JSON)
out = json.dumps(res)
self.assertEqual(res, json.loads(out))

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from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
class JSONTestObject:
pass
class RecursiveJSONEncoder(json.JSONEncoder):
recurse = False
def default(self, o):
if o is JSONTestObject:
if self.recurse:
return [JSONTestObject]
else:
return 'JSONTestObject'
return json.JSONEncoder.default(o)
class TestRecursion(TestCase):
def test_listrecursion(self):
x = []
x.append(x)
try:
json.dumps(x)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
self.fail("didn't raise ValueError on list recursion")
x = []
y = [x]
x.append(y)
try:
json.dumps(x)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
self.fail("didn't raise ValueError on alternating list recursion")
y = []
x = [y, y]
# ensure that the marker is cleared
json.dumps(x)
def test_dictrecursion(self):
x = {}
x["test"] = x
try:
json.dumps(x)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
self.fail("didn't raise ValueError on dict recursion")
x = {}
y = {"a": x, "b": x}
# ensure that the marker is cleared
json.dumps(y)
def test_defaultrecursion(self):
enc = RecursiveJSONEncoder()
self.assertEqual(enc.encode(JSONTestObject), '"JSONTestObject"')
enc.recurse = True
try:
enc.encode(JSONTestObject)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
self.fail("didn't raise ValueError on default recursion")

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import sys
from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
import simplejson.decoder
from simplejson.compat import b, PY3
class TestScanString(TestCase):
# The bytes type is intentionally not used in most of these tests
# under Python 3 because the decoder immediately coerces to str before
# calling scanstring. In Python 2 we are testing the code paths
# for both unicode and str.
#
# The reason this is done is because Python 3 would require
# entirely different code paths for parsing bytes and str.
#
def test_py_scanstring(self):
self._test_scanstring(simplejson.decoder.py_scanstring)
def test_c_scanstring(self):
if not simplejson.decoder.c_scanstring:
return
self._test_scanstring(simplejson.decoder.c_scanstring)
def _test_scanstring(self, scanstring):
if sys.maxunicode == 65535:
self.assertEqual(
scanstring(u'"z\U0001d120x"', 1, None, True),
(u'z\U0001d120x', 6))
else:
self.assertEqual(
scanstring(u'"z\U0001d120x"', 1, None, True),
(u'z\U0001d120x', 5))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('"\\u007b"', 1, None, True),
(u'{', 8))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('"A JSON payload should be an object or array, not a string."', 1, None, True),
(u'A JSON payload should be an object or array, not a string.', 60))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('["Unclosed array"', 2, None, True),
(u'Unclosed array', 17))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('["extra comma",]', 2, None, True),
(u'extra comma', 14))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('["double extra comma",,]', 2, None, True),
(u'double extra comma', 21))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('["Comma after the close"],', 2, None, True),
(u'Comma after the close', 24))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('["Extra close"]]', 2, None, True),
(u'Extra close', 14))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('{"Extra comma": true,}', 2, None, True),
(u'Extra comma', 14))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('{"Extra value after close": true} "misplaced quoted value"', 2, None, True),
(u'Extra value after close', 26))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('{"Illegal expression": 1 + 2}', 2, None, True),
(u'Illegal expression', 21))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('{"Illegal invocation": alert()}', 2, None, True),
(u'Illegal invocation', 21))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('{"Numbers cannot have leading zeroes": 013}', 2, None, True),
(u'Numbers cannot have leading zeroes', 37))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('{"Numbers cannot be hex": 0x14}', 2, None, True),
(u'Numbers cannot be hex', 24))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[[["Too deep"]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]]', 21, None, True),
(u'Too deep', 30))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('{"Missing colon" null}', 2, None, True),
(u'Missing colon', 16))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('{"Double colon":: null}', 2, None, True),
(u'Double colon', 15))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('{"Comma instead of colon", null}', 2, None, True),
(u'Comma instead of colon', 25))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('["Colon instead of comma": false]', 2, None, True),
(u'Colon instead of comma', 25))
self.assertEqual(
scanstring('["Bad value", truth]', 2, None, True),
(u'Bad value', 12))
for c in map(chr, range(0x00, 0x1f)):
self.assertEqual(
scanstring(c + '"', 0, None, False),
(c, 2))
self.assertRaises(
ValueError,
scanstring, c + '"', 0, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, scanstring, '', 0, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, scanstring, 'a', 0, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, scanstring, '\\', 0, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, scanstring, '\\u', 0, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, scanstring, '\\u0', 0, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, scanstring, '\\u01', 0, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, scanstring, '\\u012', 0, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, scanstring, '\\u0123', 0, None, True)
if sys.maxunicode > 65535:
self.assertRaises(ValueError,
scanstring, '\\ud834\\u"', 0, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError,
scanstring, '\\ud834\\x0123"', 0, None, True)
def test_issue3623(self):
self.assertRaises(ValueError, json.decoder.scanstring, "xxx", 1,
"xxx")
self.assertRaises(UnicodeDecodeError,
json.encoder.encode_basestring_ascii, b("xx\xff"))
def test_overflow(self):
# Python 2.5 does not have maxsize, Python 3 does not have maxint
maxsize = getattr(sys, 'maxsize', getattr(sys, 'maxint', None))
assert maxsize is not None
self.assertRaises(OverflowError, json.decoder.scanstring, "xxx",
maxsize + 1)
def test_surrogates(self):
scanstring = json.decoder.scanstring
def assertScan(given, expect, test_utf8=True):
givens = [given]
if not PY3 and test_utf8:
givens.append(given.encode('utf8'))
for given in givens:
(res, count) = scanstring(given, 1, None, True)
self.assertEqual(len(given), count)
self.assertEqual(res, expect)
assertScan(
u'"z\\ud834\\u0079x"',
u'z\ud834yx')
assertScan(
u'"z\\ud834\\udd20x"',
u'z\U0001d120x')
assertScan(
u'"z\\ud834\\ud834\\udd20x"',
u'z\ud834\U0001d120x')
assertScan(
u'"z\\ud834x"',
u'z\ud834x')
assertScan(
u'"z\\udd20x"',
u'z\udd20x')
assertScan(
u'"z\ud834x"',
u'z\ud834x')
# It may look strange to join strings together, but Python is drunk.
# https://gist.github.com/etrepum/5538443
assertScan(
u'"z\\ud834\udd20x12345"',
u''.join([u'z\ud834', u'\udd20x12345']))
assertScan(
u'"z\ud834\\udd20x"',
u''.join([u'z\ud834', u'\udd20x']))
# these have different behavior given UTF8 input, because the surrogate
# pair may be joined (in maxunicode > 65535 builds)
assertScan(
u''.join([u'"z\ud834', u'\udd20x"']),
u''.join([u'z\ud834', u'\udd20x']),
test_utf8=False)
self.assertRaises(ValueError,
scanstring, u'"z\\ud83x"', 1, None, True)
self.assertRaises(ValueError,
scanstring, u'"z\\ud834\\udd2x"', 1, None, True)

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import textwrap
from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
class TestSeparators(TestCase):
def test_separators(self):
h = [['blorpie'], ['whoops'], [], 'd-shtaeou', 'd-nthiouh', 'i-vhbjkhnth',
{'nifty': 87}, {'field': 'yes', 'morefield': False} ]
expect = textwrap.dedent("""\
[
[
"blorpie"
] ,
[
"whoops"
] ,
[] ,
"d-shtaeou" ,
"d-nthiouh" ,
"i-vhbjkhnth" ,
{
"nifty" : 87
} ,
{
"field" : "yes" ,
"morefield" : false
}
]""")
d1 = json.dumps(h)
d2 = json.dumps(h, indent=' ', sort_keys=True, separators=(' ,', ' : '))
h1 = json.loads(d1)
h2 = json.loads(d2)
self.assertEqual(h1, h)
self.assertEqual(h2, h)
self.assertEqual(d2, expect)

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from unittest import TestCase
from simplejson import encoder, scanner
def has_speedups():
return encoder.c_make_encoder is not None
class TestDecode(TestCase):
def test_make_scanner(self):
if not has_speedups():
return
self.assertRaises(AttributeError, scanner.c_make_scanner, 1)
def test_make_encoder(self):
if not has_speedups():
return
self.assertRaises(TypeError, encoder.c_make_encoder,
None,
"\xCD\x7D\x3D\x4E\x12\x4C\xF9\x79\xD7\x52\xBA\x82\xF2\x27\x4A\x7D\xA0\xCA\x75",
None)

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from __future__ import with_statement
import os
import sys
import textwrap
import unittest
import subprocess
import tempfile
try:
# Python 3.x
from test.support import strip_python_stderr
except ImportError:
# Python 2.6+
try:
from test.test_support import strip_python_stderr
except ImportError:
# Python 2.5
import re
def strip_python_stderr(stderr):
return re.sub(
r"\[\d+ refs\]\r?\n?$".encode(),
"".encode(),
stderr).strip()
class TestTool(unittest.TestCase):
data = """
[["blorpie"],[ "whoops" ] , [
],\t"d-shtaeou",\r"d-nthiouh",
"i-vhbjkhnth", {"nifty":87}, {"morefield" :\tfalse,"field"
:"yes"} ]
"""
expect = textwrap.dedent("""\
[
[
"blorpie"
],
[
"whoops"
],
[],
"d-shtaeou",
"d-nthiouh",
"i-vhbjkhnth",
{
"nifty": 87
},
{
"field": "yes",
"morefield": false
}
]
""")
def runTool(self, args=None, data=None):
argv = [sys.executable, '-m', 'simplejson.tool']
if args:
argv.extend(args)
proc = subprocess.Popen(argv,
stdin=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
out, err = proc.communicate(data)
self.assertEqual(strip_python_stderr(err), ''.encode())
self.assertEqual(proc.returncode, 0)
return out
def test_stdin_stdout(self):
self.assertEqual(
self.runTool(data=self.data.encode()),
self.expect.encode())
def test_infile_stdout(self):
with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile() as infile:
infile.write(self.data.encode())
infile.flush()
self.assertEqual(
self.runTool(args=[infile.name]),
self.expect.encode())
def test_infile_outfile(self):
with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile() as infile:
infile.write(self.data.encode())
infile.flush()
# outfile will get overwritten by tool, so the delete
# may not work on some platforms. Do it manually.
outfile = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile()
try:
self.assertEqual(
self.runTool(args=[infile.name, outfile.name]),
''.encode())
with open(outfile.name, 'rb') as f:
self.assertEqual(f.read(), self.expect.encode())
finally:
outfile.close()
if os.path.exists(outfile.name):
os.unlink(outfile.name)

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import unittest
from simplejson.compat import StringIO
import simplejson as json
class TestTuples(unittest.TestCase):
def test_tuple_array_dumps(self):
t = (1, 2, 3)
expect = json.dumps(list(t))
# Default is True
self.assertEqual(expect, json.dumps(t))
self.assertEqual(expect, json.dumps(t, tuple_as_array=True))
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dumps, t, tuple_as_array=False)
# Ensure that the "default" does not get called
self.assertEqual(expect, json.dumps(t, default=repr))
self.assertEqual(expect, json.dumps(t, tuple_as_array=True,
default=repr))
# Ensure that the "default" gets called
self.assertEqual(
json.dumps(repr(t)),
json.dumps(t, tuple_as_array=False, default=repr))
def test_tuple_array_dump(self):
t = (1, 2, 3)
expect = json.dumps(list(t))
# Default is True
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(t, sio)
self.assertEqual(expect, sio.getvalue())
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(t, sio, tuple_as_array=True)
self.assertEqual(expect, sio.getvalue())
self.assertRaises(TypeError, json.dump, t, StringIO(),
tuple_as_array=False)
# Ensure that the "default" does not get called
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(t, sio, default=repr)
self.assertEqual(expect, sio.getvalue())
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(t, sio, tuple_as_array=True, default=repr)
self.assertEqual(expect, sio.getvalue())
# Ensure that the "default" gets called
sio = StringIO()
json.dump(t, sio, tuple_as_array=False, default=repr)
self.assertEqual(
json.dumps(repr(t)),
sio.getvalue())
class TestNamedTuple(unittest.TestCase):
def test_namedtuple_dump(self):
pass

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import sys
from unittest import TestCase
import simplejson as json
from simplejson.compat import unichr, text_type, b, u
class TestUnicode(TestCase):
def test_encoding1(self):
encoder = json.JSONEncoder(encoding='utf-8')
u = u'\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA}\N{GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMEGA}'
s = u.encode('utf-8')
ju = encoder.encode(u)
js = encoder.encode(s)
self.assertEqual(ju, js)
def test_encoding2(self):
u = u'\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA}\N{GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMEGA}'
s = u.encode('utf-8')
ju = json.dumps(u, encoding='utf-8')
js = json.dumps(s, encoding='utf-8')
self.assertEqual(ju, js)
def test_encoding3(self):
u = u'\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA}\N{GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMEGA}'
j = json.dumps(u)
self.assertEqual(j, '"\\u03b1\\u03a9"')
def test_encoding4(self):
u = u'\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA}\N{GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMEGA}'
j = json.dumps([u])
self.assertEqual(j, '["\\u03b1\\u03a9"]')
def test_encoding5(self):
u = u'\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA}\N{GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMEGA}'
j = json.dumps(u, ensure_ascii=False)
self.assertEqual(j, u'"' + u + u'"')
def test_encoding6(self):
u = u'\N{GREEK SMALL LETTER ALPHA}\N{GREEK CAPITAL LETTER OMEGA}'
j = json.dumps([u], ensure_ascii=False)
self.assertEqual(j, u'["' + u + u'"]')
def test_big_unicode_encode(self):
u = u'\U0001d120'
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(u), '"\\ud834\\udd20"')
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(u, ensure_ascii=False), u'"\U0001d120"')
def test_big_unicode_decode(self):
u = u'z\U0001d120x'
self.assertEqual(json.loads('"' + u + '"'), u)
self.assertEqual(json.loads('"z\\ud834\\udd20x"'), u)
def test_unicode_decode(self):
for i in range(0, 0xd7ff):
u = unichr(i)
#s = '"\\u{0:04x}"'.format(i)
s = '"\\u%04x"' % (i,)
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s), u)
def test_object_pairs_hook_with_unicode(self):
s = u'{"xkd":1, "kcw":2, "art":3, "hxm":4, "qrt":5, "pad":6, "hoy":7}'
p = [(u"xkd", 1), (u"kcw", 2), (u"art", 3), (u"hxm", 4),
(u"qrt", 5), (u"pad", 6), (u"hoy", 7)]
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s), eval(s))
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s, object_pairs_hook=lambda x: x), p)
od = json.loads(s, object_pairs_hook=json.OrderedDict)
self.assertEqual(od, json.OrderedDict(p))
self.assertEqual(type(od), json.OrderedDict)
# the object_pairs_hook takes priority over the object_hook
self.assertEqual(json.loads(s,
object_pairs_hook=json.OrderedDict,
object_hook=lambda x: None),
json.OrderedDict(p))
def test_default_encoding(self):
self.assertEqual(json.loads(u'{"a": "\xe9"}'.encode('utf-8')),
{'a': u'\xe9'})
def test_unicode_preservation(self):
self.assertEqual(type(json.loads(u'""')), text_type)
self.assertEqual(type(json.loads(u'"a"')), text_type)
self.assertEqual(type(json.loads(u'["a"]')[0]), text_type)
def test_ensure_ascii_false_returns_unicode(self):
# http://code.google.com/p/simplejson/issues/detail?id=48
self.assertEqual(type(json.dumps([], ensure_ascii=False)), text_type)
self.assertEqual(type(json.dumps(0, ensure_ascii=False)), text_type)
self.assertEqual(type(json.dumps({}, ensure_ascii=False)), text_type)
self.assertEqual(type(json.dumps("", ensure_ascii=False)), text_type)
def test_ensure_ascii_false_bytestring_encoding(self):
# http://code.google.com/p/simplejson/issues/detail?id=48
doc1 = {u'quux': b('Arr\xc3\xaat sur images')}
doc2 = {u'quux': u('Arr\xeat sur images')}
doc_ascii = '{"quux": "Arr\\u00eat sur images"}'
doc_unicode = u'{"quux": "Arr\xeat sur images"}'
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(doc1), doc_ascii)
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(doc2), doc_ascii)
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(doc1, ensure_ascii=False), doc_unicode)
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(doc2, ensure_ascii=False), doc_unicode)
def test_ensure_ascii_linebreak_encoding(self):
# http://timelessrepo.com/json-isnt-a-javascript-subset
s1 = u'\u2029\u2028'
s2 = s1.encode('utf8')
expect = '"\\u2029\\u2028"'
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(s1), expect)
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(s2), expect)
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(s1, ensure_ascii=False), expect)
self.assertEqual(json.dumps(s2, ensure_ascii=False), expect)
def test_invalid_escape_sequences(self):
# incomplete escape sequence
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\u')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\u1')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\u12')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\u123')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\u1234')
# invalid escape sequence
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\u123x"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\u12x4"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\u1x34"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\ux234"')
if sys.maxunicode > 65535:
# invalid escape sequence for low surrogate
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\ud800\\u"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\ud800\\u0"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\ud800\\u00"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\ud800\\u000"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\ud800\\u000x"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\ud800\\u00x0"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\ud800\\u0x00"')
self.assertRaises(json.JSONDecodeError, json.loads, '"\\ud800\\ux000"')
def test_ensure_ascii_still_works(self):
# in the ascii range, ensure that everything is the same
for c in map(unichr, range(0, 127)):
self.assertEqual(
json.dumps(c, ensure_ascii=False),
json.dumps(c))
snowman = u'\N{SNOWMAN}'
self.assertEqual(
json.dumps(c, ensure_ascii=False),
'"' + c + '"')

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r"""Command-line tool to validate and pretty-print JSON
Usage::
$ echo '{"json":"obj"}' | python -m simplejson.tool
{
"json": "obj"
}
$ echo '{ 1.2:3.4}' | python -m simplejson.tool
Expecting property name: line 1 column 2 (char 2)
"""
from __future__ import with_statement
import sys
import simplejson as json
def main():
if len(sys.argv) == 1:
infile = sys.stdin
outfile = sys.stdout
elif len(sys.argv) == 2:
infile = open(sys.argv[1], 'r')
outfile = sys.stdout
elif len(sys.argv) == 3:
infile = open(sys.argv[1], 'r')
outfile = open(sys.argv[2], 'w')
else:
raise SystemExit(sys.argv[0] + " [infile [outfile]]")
with infile:
try:
obj = json.load(infile,
object_pairs_hook=json.OrderedDict,
use_decimal=True)
except ValueError:
raise SystemExit(sys.exc_info()[1])
with outfile:
json.dump(obj, outfile, sort_keys=True, indent=' ', use_decimal=True)
outfile.write('\n')
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()