On Thursday, May 26, 2016 at 12:43:21 AM UTC+2, ZyX wrote:
> Most of time JSON is not written "by hand", it is created by some
> library functions. E.g. Python has `json` standard (almost always
> installed with the interpreter itself) module, VimL has built-in
> `json_encode`, etc: many modern languages have this either "built-in"
> or "in standard library", exceptions are usually positioning
> themselves as "system" (like Rust or C) or "light-weight" (like lua)
> languages. These functions would not create invalid JSON, they accept
> native data types and they may be optimized, so 99% of time it is
> better to use them even if you are absolutely sure you can write valid
> JSON by hand.
Thanks for that. For writing services/plugins/whatever I would, of course, rely on those libraries. I simply didn't have the need to do so in the past. That's why my knowledge about JSON is rather limited.
Right now, I have a particular use case - I'm playing with the new functions for a review of the upcoming version. So, I was looking for a simple example to be put in the article. Basically, I'm satisfied with telling the readers the default handler expects JSON.
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