1 unstable release
Uses old Rust 2015
0.2.1 | Sep 29, 2017 |
---|
#2046 in Encoding
Used in rdedup-prune
72KB
2.5K
SLoC
Rust Object Notation
RSON is a simple readable data serialization format that looks similar to Rust syntax. It's designed to support all of Serde's data model, so structs, enums, tuples, arrays, generic maps, and primitive values. RSON is a fork of RON library, but provides a more appropriate Rust-lang syntax.
Example in JSON
{
"materials": {
"metal": {
"reflectivity": 1.0
},
"plastic": {
"reflectivity": 0.5
}
},
"entities": [
{
"name": "hero",
"material": "metal"
},
{
"name": "moster",
"material": "plastic"
}
]
}
Notice these issues:
- Struct and maps are the same
- random order of exported fields
- annoying and inconvenient for reading
- doesn't work well with version control - quoted field names
- too verbose - no support for enums
- No trailing comma allowed
- No comments allowed
Same example in RSON
/*
* Scene object example
*/
Scene { // class name is optional
materials: { // this is a map
"metal": {
reflectivity: 1.0,
},
"plastic": {
reflectivity: 0.5,
},
},
entities: [ // this is an array
{ // this is a object
name: "hero",
material: "metal",
},
{
name: "monster",
material: "plastic",
},
],
}
The RSON format uses {
..}
brackets for heterogeneous structures (classes) and
homogeneous maps, where classes are different from maps by keys: in classes those
are identifiers, but in maps those are values. Additionally, it uses (
..)
brackets
for heterogeneous tuples, and [
..]
for homogeneous arrays. This distinction allows
to solve the biggest problem with JSON.
Same example in RON
Scene( // class name is optional
materials: { // this is a map
"metal": (
reflectivity: 1.0,
),
"plastic": (
reflectivity: 0.5,
),
},
entities: [ // this is an array
(
name: "hero",
material: "metal",
),
(
name: "monster",
material: "plastic",
),
],
)
Unlike RSON, the RON format uses (
..)
brackets for all heterogeneous structures (classes
and tuples), while preserving the {
..}
for maps, and [
..]
for homogeneous arrays. This
is non-traditional syntax for classes of both the JSON and the native Rust representation.
RSON heterogeneous structures syntax
Here are the general rules to parse the heterogeneous structures:
class is named? | fields are named? | what is it? | example |
---|---|---|---|
no | no | tuple | (a, b) |
yes/no | no | tuple struct | Name(a, b) |
yes | no | enum value | Variant(a, b) |
yes/no | yes | struct | {f1: a, f2: b,} |
Specification
There is a very basic, work in progress specification available on the wiki page.
Appendix
Why not XML?
- too verbose
- unclear how to treat attributes vs contents
Why not YAML?
- significant white-space
- specification is too big
Why not TOML?
- alien syntax
- absolute paths are not scalable
Why not RON?
- non-traditional syntax for classes
- confuse between class and map syntax
- does not support block comments
Why not XXX?
- if you know a better format, tell me!
License
RSON is dual-licensed under Apache-2.0 and MIT.
Dependencies
~100–330KB