Wraps the best available JSON implementation available in a common interface
Overview
Anyjson loads whichever is the fastest JSON module installed and provides a uniform API regardless of which JSON implementation is used.Originally part of carrot (http://github.com/ask/carrot/)
Examples
To serialize a python object to a JSON string, call the serialize function:>>> import anyjson >>> anyjson.serialize(["test", 1, {"foo": 3.141592}, "bar"]) '["test", 1, {"foo": 3.141592}, "bar"]'Conversion the other way is done with the deserialize call.
>>> anyjson.deserialize("""["test", 1, {"foo": 3.141592}, "bar"]""") ['test', 1, {'foo': 3.1415920000000002}, 'bar']Regardless of the JSON implementation used, the exceptions will be the same. This means that trying to serialize something not compatible with JSON raises a TypeError:
>>> anyjson.serialize([object()]) Traceback (most recent call last): <snipped traceback> TypeError: object is not JSON encodableAnd deserializing a JSON string with invalid JSON raises a ValueError:
>>> anyjson.deserialize("""['missing square brace!""") Traceback (most recent call last): <snipped traceback> ValueError: cannot parse JSON description
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