On Thursday, 10 May 2018 at 18:21:17 UTC, bachmeier wrote:
[snip]
I used replace("\\n", "\n")
Ah, I always forget the extra \.
On Thursday, 10 May 2018 at 17:59:26 UTC, jmh530 wrote:
On Thursday, 10 May 2018 at 15:01:57 UTC, rikki cattermole
wrote:
[snip]
You'll need to unescape them (which is pretty easy, a simple
replacement here).
For reference, this is invalid json[0]:
```
{
"1
2
3 "
}
`
On Thursday, 10 May 2018 at 15:01:57 UTC, rikki cattermole wrote:
[snip]
You'll need to unescape them (which is pretty easy, a simple
replacement here).
For reference, this is invalid json[0]:
```
{
"1
2
3 "
}
```
[0] https://jsonlint.com/
I don't see an unescape f
On Thursday, 10 May 2018 at 15:01:57 UTC, rikki cattermole wrote:
You'll need to unescape them (which is pretty easy, a simple
replacement here).
For reference, this is invalid json[0]:
```
{
"1
2
3 "
}
```
[0] https://jsonlint.com/
So I see the answer is that I don
On 11/05/2018 2:56 AM, bachmeier wrote:
I'm using std.json for the first time. I want to download the contents
of a markdown file from a web server. When I do that, the line breaks
are escaped, which I don't want. Here's an example:
import std.conv, std.json, std.stdio;
void main() {
str
I'm using std.json for the first time. I want to download the
contents of a markdown file from a web server. When I do that,
the line breaks are escaped, which I don't want. Here's an
example:
import std.conv, std.json, std.stdio;
void main() {
string data =
"This is a paragraph
with