__ _____ _____ _____ _____ _____
__| || __|| || | | ___ | _ || __|
| | ||__ || | || | | ||___|| ||__ |
|_____||_____||_____||_|___| |__|__||_____|
v0.9.26
npm install json-as
Add the transform to your asc
command (e.g. in package.json)
--transform json-as/transform
Alternatively, add it to your asconfig.json
{
// ...
"options": {
"transform": ["json-as/transform"]
}
}
If you'd like to see the code that the transform generates, run with JSON_DEBUG=true
import { JSON } from "json-as/assembly";
// @json or @serializable work here
@json
class Vec3 {
x: f32 = 0.0;
y: f32 = 0.0;
z: f32 = 0.0;
}
@json
class Player {
@alias("first name")
firstName!: string;
lastName!: string;
lastActive!: i32[];
// Drop in a code block, function, or expression that evaluates to a boolean
@omitif("this.age < 18")
age!: i32;
@omitnull()
pos!: Vec3 | null;
isVerified!: boolean;
}
const player: Player = {
firstName: "Emmet",
lastName: "West",
lastActive: [8, 27, 2022],
age: 23,
pos: {
x: 3.4,
y: 1.2,
z: 8.3
},
isVerified: true
};
const stringified = JSON.stringify<Player>(player);
const parsed = JSON.parse<Player>(stringified);
Classes can even have inheritance. Here's a nasty example
@json
class Base {}
@json
class Vec1 extends Base {
x: f32 = 1.0;
}
@json
class Vec2 extends Vec1 {
y: f32 = 2.0;
}
@json
class Vec3 extends Vec2 {
z: f32 = 3.0;
}
const arr: Base[] = [
new Vec1(),
new Vec2(),
new Vec3()
];
const serialized = JSON.stringify(arr);
// [{"x":1.0},{"x":1.0,"y":2.0},{"y":2.0,"x":1.0,"z":3.0}]
const parsed = JSON.parse<Base[]>(serialized);
You can also add it to your asconfig.json
{
// ...
"options": {
"transform": ["json-as/transform"]
}
}
If you use this project in your codebase, consider dropping a star. I would really appreciate it!
If you want a feature, drop an issue (and again, maybe a star). I'll likely add it in less than 7 days.
Contact me at:
Email: [email protected]
GitHub: JairusSW
Discord: jairussw
Run or view the benchmarks here
Below are benchmark results comparing JavaScript's built-in JSON implementation and JSON-AS
My library beats JSON (written in C++) on all counts and, I see many places where I can pull at least a 60% uplift in performance if I implement it.
Note: SIMD is in-development and only available on the v1
branch on GitHub
Serialization Benchmarks:
Value | JavaScript (ops/s) | JSON-AS (ops/s) | JSON-AS (Pages) | JSON-AS (SIMD+Pages) | Max Throughput |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
"hello world" | 7,124,361 | 44,290,480 (6.2x) | 73,601,235 (10.3x) | NOT IMPLEMENTED | 1.91 GB/s |
12345 | 9,611,677 | 66,900,642 (6.9x) | 145,924,333 (15.2x) | NOT IMPLEMENTED | 0.58 GB/s |
1.2345 | 7,227,259 | 20,322,939 (2.8x) | NOT IMPLEMENTED | NOT IMPLEMENTED | 0.16 GB/s |
[[],[[]],[[],[[]]]] | 5,655,429 | 34,453,102 (6.0x) | NOT IMPLEMENTED | NOT IMPLEMENTED | 1.32 GB/s |
{ x: f64, y: f64, z: f64 } | 3,878,604 | 44,557,996 (11.5x) | 113,203,242 (29.2x) | 172,023,231 (44.4x) | 8.61 GB/s |
Deserialization Benchmarks:
Value | JavaScript (ops/s) | JSON-AS (ops/s) | Difference |
---|---|---|---|
"hello world" | 12,210,131 | 24,274,496 | + 98% |
"12345" | 21,376,873 | 254,640,930 | + 1,191% |
1.2345 | 23,193,902 | 221,869,840 | + 987% |
[[],[[]],[[],[[]]]] | 4,777,227 | 74,921,123 | + 1,568% |
{ x: f64, y: f64, z: f64 } | 10,973,723 | 25,214,019 | + 230% |
And my PC specs:
Component | Specification |
---|---|
Wasmer Version | v4.3.0 |
CPU | AMD Ryzen 7 7800x3D @ 6.00 GHz |
Memory | T-Force DDR5 6000 MHz |
OS | Ubuntu WSL2 |
Please submit an issue to https://github.com/JairusSW/as-json/issues if you find anything wrong with this library