Awesome
json 🐑
Work with JSON in Gleam!
Installation
Erlang/OTP 27.0 or higher is required when targeting Erlang. To use earlier versions of Erlang/OTP use version 1.0.1 of this package.
Add this package to your Gleam project.
# Erlang version <= OTP26
gleam add gleam_json@1
# Erlang version >= OTP27
gleam add gleam_json@2
Encoding
import myapp.{type Cat}
import gleam/json
pub fn cat_to_json(cat: Cat) -> String {
json.object([
#("name", json.string(cat.name)),
#("lives", json.int(cat.lives)),
#("flaws", json.null()),
#("nicknames", json.array(cat.nicknames, of: json.string)),
])
|> json.to_string
}
Parsing
JSON is parsed into a Dynamic
value which can be decoded using the
gleam/dynamic/decode
module from the Gleam standard library.
import myapp.{Cat}
import gleam/json
import gleam/dynamic/decode
pub fn cat_from_json(json_string: String) -> Result(Cat, json.DecodeError) {
let cat_decoder = {
use name <- decode.field("name", of: decode.string)
use name <- decode.field("lives", of: decode.int)
use name <- decode.field("nicknames", of: decode.list(decode.string))
decode.success(Cat(name:, lives:, nicknames:))
}
json.parse(from: json_string, using: cat_decoder)
}