oracular (3) JSON::Path.3pm.gz

Provided by: libjson-path-perl_1.0.6-1_all bug

NAME

       JSON::Path - search nested hashref/arrayref structures using JSONPath

VERSION

       version 1.0.6

SYNOPSIS

        my $data = {
         "store" => {
           "book" => [
             { "category" =>  "reference",
               "author"   =>  "Nigel Rees",
               "title"    =>  "Sayings of the Century",
               "price"    =>  8.95,
             },
             { "category" =>  "fiction",
               "author"   =>  "Evelyn Waugh",
               "title"    =>  "Sword of Honour",
               "price"    =>  12.99,
             },
             { "category" =>  "fiction",
               "author"   =>  "Herman Melville",
               "title"    =>  "Moby Dick",
               "isbn"     =>  "0-553-21311-3",
               "price"    =>  8.99,
             },
             { "category" =>  "fiction",
               "author"   =>  "J. R. R. Tolkien",
               "title"    =>  "The Lord of the Rings",
               "isbn"     =>  "0-395-19395-8",
               "price"    =>  22.99,
             },
           ],
           "bicycle" => [
             { "color" => "red",
               "price" => 19.95,
             },
           ],
         },
        };

        use JSON::Path 'jpath_map';

        # All books in the store
        my $jpath   = JSON::Path->new('$.store.book[*]');
        my @books   = $jpath->values($data);

        # The author of the last (by order) book
        my $jpath   = JSON::Path->new('$..book[-1:].author');
        my $tolkien = $jpath->value($data);

        # Convert all authors to uppercase
        jpath_map { uc $_ } $data, '$.store.book[*].author';

DESCRIPTION

       This module implements JSONPath, an XPath-like language for searching JSON-like structures.

       JSONPath is described at <http://goessner.net/articles/JsonPath/>.

   Constructor
       "JSON::Path->new($string)"
           Given a JSONPath expression $string, returns a "JSON::Path" object.

   Methods
       values($object)
           Evaluates the JSONPath expression against an object. The object $object can be either a nested Perl
           hashref/arrayref structure, or a JSON string capable of being decoded by JSON::MaybeXS::decode_json.

           Returns a list of structures from within $object which match against the JSONPath expression. In
           scalar context, returns the number of matches.

       value($object)
           Like "values", but returns just the first value. This method is an lvalue sub, which means you can
           assign to it:

             my $person = { name => "Robert" };
             my $path = JSON::Path->new('$.name');
             $path->value($person) = "Bob";

           TAKE NOTE! This will create keys in $object. E.G.:

               my $obj = { foo => 'bar' };
               my $path = JSON::Path->new('$.baz');
               $path->value($obj) = 'bak'; # $obj->{baz} is created and set to 'bak';

       paths($object)
           As per "values" but instead of returning structures which match the expression, returns canonical
           JSONPaths that point towards those structures.

       get($object)
           In list context, identical to "values", but in scalar context returns the first result.

       "set($object, $value, $limit)"
           Alters $object, setting the paths to $value. If set, then $limit limits the number of changes made.

           TAKE NOTE! This will create keys in $object. E.G.:

               my $obj = { foo => 'bar' };
               my $path = JSON::Path->new('$.baz');
               $path->set($obj, 'bak'); # $obj->{baz} is created and set to 'bak'

           Returns the number of changes made.

       "map($object, $coderef)"
           Conceptually similar to Perl's "map" keyword. Executes the coderef (in scalar context!) for each
           match of the path within the object, and sets a new value from the coderef's return value. Within the
           coderef, $_ may be used to access the old value, and $.  may be used to access the curent canonical
           JSONPath.

       "to_string"
           Returns the original JSONPath expression as a string.

           This method is usually not needed, as the JSON::Path should automatically stringify itself as
           appropriate. i.e. the following works:

            my $jpath = JSON::Path->new('$.store.book[*].author');
            print "I'm looking for: " . $jpath . "\n";

   Functions
       The following functions are available for export, but are not exported by default:

       "jpath($object, $path_string)"
           Shortcut for "JSON::Path->new($path_string)->values($object)".

       "jpath1($object, $path_string)"
           Shortcut for "JSON::Path->new($path_string)->value($object)".  Like "value", it can be used as an
           lvalue.

       "jpath_map { CODE } $object, $path_string"
           Shortcut for "JSON::Path->new($path_string)->map($object, $code)".

NAME

       JSON::Path - search nested hashref/arrayref structures using JSONPath

PERL SPECIFICS

       JSONPath is intended as a cross-programming-language method of searching nested object structures. There
       are however, some things you need to think about when using JSONPath in Perl...

   JSONPath Embedded Perl Expressions
       JSONPath expressions may contain subexpressions that are evaluated using the native host language. e.g.

        $..book[?($_->{author} =~ /tolkien/i)]

       The stuff between "?(" and ")" is a Perl expression that must return a boolean, used to filter results.
       As arbitrary Perl may be used, this is clearly quite dangerous unless used in a controlled environment.
       Thus, it's disabled by default. To enable, set:

        $JSON::Path::Safe = 0;

       There are some differences between the JSONPath spec and this implementation.

       •   JSONPath uses a variable '$' to refer to the root node.  This is not a legal variable name in Perl,
           so '$root' is used instead.

       •   JSONPath uses a variable '@' to refer to the current node.  This is not a legal variable name in
           Perl, so '$_' is used instead.

   Blessed Objects
       Blessed objects are generally treated as atomic values; JSON::Path will not follow paths inside them. The
       exception to this rule are blessed objects where:

         Scalar::Util::blessed($object)
         && $object->can('typeof')
         && $object->typeof =~ /^(ARRAY|HASH)$/

       which are treated as an unblessed arrayref or hashref appropriately.

BUGS

       Please report any bugs to <http://rt.cpan.org/>.

SEE ALSO

       Specification: <http://goessner.net/articles/JsonPath/>.

       Implementations in PHP, Javascript and C#: <http://code.google.com/p/jsonpath/>.

       Jayway JsonPath: <https://github.com/json-path/JsonPath>

       Related modules: JSON, JSON::JOM, JSON::T, JSON::GRDDL, JSON::Hyper, JSON::Schema.

       Similar functionality: Data::Path, Data::DPath, Data::SPath, Hash::Path, Path::Resolver::Resolver::Hash,
       Data::Nested, Data::Hierarchy... yes, the idea's not especially new. What's different is that JSON::Path
       uses a vaguely standardised syntax with implementations in at least three other programming languages.

AUTHOR

       Aurelia Peters <https://github.com/popefelix>

CONTRIBUTORS

       Toby Inkster https://github.com/tobyink

       Szymon Nieznański https://github.com/s-nez

       Heiko Jansen https://github.com/heikojansen

       Mitsuhiro Nakamura https://github.com/mnacamura

       David Escribano García https://github.com/DavidEGx

       Thomas Helsel https://github.com/thelsel

       Patrick Cronin https://github.com/PatrickCronin

       James Bowery https://github.com/jabowery

       Slaven Rezić https://github.com/eserte

       Max Laager https://github.com/mlaagerc2c

       Elvin Aslanov https://github.com/rwp0

       James Raspass https://github.com/JRaspass

       Bernhard Schmalhofer https://github.com/bschmalhofer

       Copyright 2007 Stefan Goessner.

       Copyright 2010-2013 Toby Inkster.

       Copyright 2021-2024 Aurelia Peters

       This module is tri-licensed. It is available under the X11 (a.k.a. MIT) licence; you can also
       redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

   a.k.a. "The MIT Licence"
       Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and
       associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
       without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
       copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the
       following conditions:

       The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial
       portions of the Software.

       THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
       LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO
       EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER
       IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR
       THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5
       programming language system itself.

AUTHOR

       Aurelia Peters <popefelix@gmail.com>

       This software is copyright (c) 2024 by Aurelia Peters.

       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5
       programming language system itself.