Info
Version: | 1.0.2 |
Author(s): | https://github.com/miloyip/rapidjson/releases/tag/v1.0.2 |
Last Update: | Thursday, October 29, 2015 |
.NET Fiddle: | Create the first Fiddle |
Project Url: | https://github.com/miloyip/rapidjson/ |
NuGet Url: | https://www.nuget.org/packages/rapidjson |
Install
Install-Package rapidjson
dotnet add package rapidjson
paket add rapidjson
rapidjson Download (Unzip the "nupkg" after downloading)
Dependencies
Tags
- Small but complete.
Supports both SAX and DOM style API. SAX parser only a few hundred lines of code.
- Fast. In the order of magnitude of strlen(). Optionally supports SSE2/SSE4.2 for acceleration.
- Self-contained.
Minimal dependency on standard libraries. No BOOST, not even STL.
- Compact. Each JSON value is 16 or 20 bytes for 32 or 64-bit machines respectively (excluding text string storage). With the custom memory allocator, parser allocates memory compactly during parsing.
- Full RFC4627 compliance.
Supports UTF-8, UTF-16 and UTF-32.
- Support both in-situ parsing (directly decode strings into the source JSON text) and non-destructive parsing (decode strings into new buffers).
- Parse number to int/unsigned/int64_t/uint64_t/double depending on input
- Support custom memory allocation. Also, the default memory pool allocator can also be supplied with a user buffer (such as a buffer allocated on user's heap or - programme stack) to minimize allocation.
As the name implies, rapidjson is inspired by rapidxml.