Scripting: JSON – Arma Reforger

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m (Text replacement - "</syntaxhighlight>" to "</enforce>")
m (Fix)
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{
{
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>


A property is defined with its name on the left of the colon, and its value on the right. '''Properties and strings''' are defined by '''double-quotes''' {{hl|"}}.<br>
A property is defined with its name on the left of the colon, and its value on the right. '''Properties and strings''' are defined by '''double-quotes''' {{hl|"}}.<br>
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"property": 42
"property": 42
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>
<syntaxhighlight lang="json">
<syntaxhighlight lang="json">
{
{
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"property2": "fourty-two"
"property2": "fourty-two"
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>


Spacing does not matter outside of the quotes.
Spacing does not matter outside of the quotes.
Line 42: Line 42:
"property2": 42
"property2": 42
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>
is identical to
is identical to
<syntaxhighlight lang="json">
<syntaxhighlight lang="json">
{"property1":"name","property2":42}
{"property1":"name","property2":42}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>
but for obvious readability reasons, tabs and spaces are welcome.
but for obvious readability reasons, tabs and spaces are welcome.


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"boolean2": false
"boolean2": false
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Number ===
=== Number ===
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"number4": 10e10
"number4": 10e10
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== String ===
=== String ===
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"string2": "Is \"this\" a string?\tYes, Sir\u0021"
"string2": "Is \"this\" a string?\tYes, Sir\u0021"
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Object ===
=== Object ===
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}
}
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>


The null value is covered.
The null value is covered.
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"object1": null
"object1": null
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>


=== Array ===
=== Array ===
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]
]
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>




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};
};
}
}
</enforce>
</syntaxhighlight>





Revision as of 19:28, 30 July 2022

JSON Format

JSON stands for JavaScript Object Notation. It is a way to present data in a simple form.

See:

The parent class is always an object (the O from JSON).

{
}

A property is defined with its name on the left of the colon, and its value on the right. Properties and strings are defined by double-quotes ".
If another property follows, a comma is required. If no other property follows, there must be no comma.

There can be no comments in a JSON file.
{
	"property": 42
}
{
	"property1": 41,
	"property2": "fourty-two"
}

Spacing does not matter outside of the quotes.

{
	"property1": "name",
	"property2": 42
}

is identical to

{"property1":"name","property2":42}

but for obvious readability reasons, tabs and spaces are welcome.

Boolean

A boolean can be either true or false and nothing else.

{
	"boolean1": true,
	"boolean2": false
}

Number

A number can be either an integer or a float. There are no quotes around it. It cannot start with a period .. Scientific notations are accepted.

{
	"number1": 42,
	"number2": 4.2,
	"number3": -33,
	"number4": 10e10
}

String

Line returns cannot happen in JSON strings. The following character escape sequences are accepted:

{
	"string1": "This is a string",
	"string2": "Is \"this\" a string?\tYes, Sir\u0021"
}

Object

{
	"object1": {
		"property1": "sub-object"
	}
}

The null value is covered.

{
	"object1": null
}

Array

An array can contain anything: direct values, or other objects with named properties.

{
	"array1": [
		4,
		5,
		6
	],
	"array2": ["This", "is", "Sparta!"],
	"array3": [
		{
			"name": "object's name",
			"value": 33
		},
		{ "name": "another object, inlined", "value": 42 }
	]
}


Hydration

«
« Hydration refers to the process of filling an object with data. » (source)
  • Properties must be named the same in JSON and in the Enforce Script object. They are case-sensitive!
  • A missing property will not fail the JSON hydration.


Example

JSON Structure

MainClass.json

{
	"m_sMessage": "Hello Message",
	"m_subObject": {
		"integerValue": 1,
		"booleanValue": true
	};
}


Script Usage

class SecondaryJSONClass : JsonApiStruct { void SecondaryJSONClass() {} // Important, if you have a constructor it needs to take 0 parameters, as the engine will construct this class when you parse a json file. int integerValue; bool booleanValue; } class MainJSONClass : JsonApiStruct { protected string m_sMessage; // names need to match the JSON property name protected SecondaryJSONClass m_subObject; void Hydrate() { LoadFromFile("MainClass.json"); // loads JSON in the calling class Print("m_sMessage = " + m_sMessage); // Prints "Hello Message" Print("is sub-object null: " + (m_subObject == null)); if (m_subObject) { Print("sub-object/integerValue = " + m_subObject.integerValue); Print("sub-object/booleanValue = " + m_subObject.booleanValue); } } }


Serialisation