On Monday, 3 July 2017 at 14:04:47 UTC, ketmar wrote:
Yuri wrote:
On Sunday, 2 July 2017 at 21:15:41 UTC, ketmar wrote:
[...]
I share your sentiment in relation to std.json, ketmar.
On a side note, what would be a better way to
serialize/deserialize objects in D if std.json does not cut
i
On Monday, 3 July 2017 at 13:34:50 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
On Monday, 3 July 2017 at 13:26:52 UTC, Yuri wrote:
Yes, when accessing .integer instead of .floating then it
works, unfortunately that is not suitable for the task at
hand, it has to be a float.
Just write a helper function that ca
On Sunday, 2 July 2017 at 21:15:41 UTC, ketmar wrote:
so, write your own wrapper that will convert
INTEGER/UINTEGER/FLOAT to `double`. i think this is the best
solution (if there can be "best solution" with std.json at all).
I share your sentiment in relation to std.json, ketmar.
On a side no
On Sunday, 2 July 2017 at 21:12:48 UTC, Adam D. Ruppe wrote:
On Sunday, 2 July 2017 at 21:07:40 UTC, Yuri wrote:
It is expected to print '2' in the console, however an
exception is thrown:
std.json.JSONException@/build/ldc-I3nwWj/ldc-0.17.1/runtime/phobos/std/json.d(235):
JSONValue is not a f
Hi there,
consider the following simple use case:
import std.json;
float[] floats = [1,2,3];
JSONValue j = "{}".parseJSON;
j.object["floats"] = floats;
std.file.write("test.json", j.toString);
JSONValue jj = readText("test.json").parseJSON;
jj.object["floats"].array[1].floating.wri