Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Fixed Issue #171 - added two extra template overloads of operator[] for T* arguments #189

Merged
merged 3 commits into from
Jan 24, 2016
Merged
Show file tree
Hide file tree
Changes from 1 commit
Commits
File filter

Filter by extension

Filter by extension

Conversations
Failed to load comments.
Loading
Jump to
Jump to file
Failed to load files.
Loading
Diff view
Diff view
Prev Previous commit
Next Next commit
Fixed issue #171 - added extra operator[] template overloads
  • Loading branch information
Trevor Welsby committed Jan 23, 2016
commit 7e3245786c63c0923186b2b38c9c874ed2cc3942
80 changes: 72 additions & 8 deletions src/json.hpp
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -3062,8 +3062,6 @@ class basic_json
the object and filled with a `null` value to make `key` a valid reference.
In case the value was `null` before, it is converted to an object.

@note This function is required for compatibility reasons with Clang.

@param[in] key key of the element to access

@return reference to the element at key @a key
Expand All @@ -3083,7 +3081,75 @@ class basic_json
@since version 1.0.0
*/
template<typename T, std::size_t n>
reference operator[](const T (&key)[n])
reference operator[](T* (&key)[n])
{
return operator[](static_cast<const T>(key));
}

/*!
@brief read-only access specified object element

Returns a const reference to the element at with specified key @a key. No
bounds checking is performed.

@warning If the element with key @a key does not exist, the behavior is
undefined.

@note This function is required for compatibility reasons with Clang.

@param[in] key key of the element to access

@return const reference to the element at key @a key

@throw std::domain_error if JSON is not an object; example: `"cannot use
operator[] with null"`

@complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container.

@liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read using
the [] operator.,operatorarray__key_type_const}

@sa @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&) for access by reference
with range checking
@sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value

@since version 1.0.0
*/
template<typename T, std::size_t n>
const_reference operator[](T* (&key)[n]) const
{
return operator[](static_cast<const T>(key));
}

/*!
@brief access specified object element

Returns a reference to the element at with specified key @a key.

@note If @a key is not found in the object, then it is silently added to
the object and filled with a `null` value to make `key` a valid reference.
In case the value was `null` before, it is converted to an object.

@param[in] key key of the element to access

@return reference to the element at key @a key

@throw std::domain_error if JSON is not an object or null; example:
`"cannot use operator[] with null"`

@complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container.

@liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read and
written using the [] operator.,operatorarray__key_type}

@sa @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&) for access by reference
with range checking
@sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value

@since version 1.0.1
*/
template<typename T>
reference operator[](T* key)
{
// implicitly convert null to object
if (is_null())
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -3113,8 +3179,6 @@ class basic_json
@warning If the element with key @a key does not exist, the behavior is
undefined.

@note This function is required for compatibility reasons with Clang.

@param[in] key key of the element to access

@return const reference to the element at key @a key
Expand All @@ -3131,10 +3195,10 @@ class basic_json
with range checking
@sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value

@since version 1.0.0
@since version 1.0.1
*/
template<typename T, std::size_t n>
const_reference operator[](const T (&key)[n]) const
template<typename T>
const_reference operator[](T* key) const
{
// at only works for objects
if (is_object())
Expand Down
80 changes: 72 additions & 8 deletions src/json.hpp.re2c
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -3062,8 +3062,6 @@ class basic_json
the object and filled with a `null` value to make `key` a valid reference.
In case the value was `null` before, it is converted to an object.

@note This function is required for compatibility reasons with Clang.

@param[in] key key of the element to access

@return reference to the element at key @a key
Expand All @@ -3083,7 +3081,75 @@ class basic_json
@since version 1.0.0
*/
template<typename T, std::size_t n>
reference operator[](const T (&key)[n])
reference operator[](T* (&key)[n])
{
return operator[](static_cast<const T>(key));
}

/*!
@brief read-only access specified object element

Returns a const reference to the element at with specified key @a key. No
bounds checking is performed.

@warning If the element with key @a key does not exist, the behavior is
undefined.

@note This function is required for compatibility reasons with Clang.

@param[in] key key of the element to access

@return const reference to the element at key @a key

@throw std::domain_error if JSON is not an object; example: `"cannot use
operator[] with null"`

@complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container.

@liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read using
the [] operator.,operatorarray__key_type_const}

@sa @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&) for access by reference
with range checking
@sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value

@since version 1.0.0
*/
template<typename T, std::size_t n>
const_reference operator[](T* (&key)[n]) const
{
return operator[](static_cast<const T>(key));
}

/*!
@brief access specified object element

Returns a reference to the element at with specified key @a key.

@note If @a key is not found in the object, then it is silently added to
the object and filled with a `null` value to make `key` a valid reference.
In case the value was `null` before, it is converted to an object.

@param[in] key key of the element to access

@return reference to the element at key @a key

@throw std::domain_error if JSON is not an object or null; example:
`"cannot use operator[] with null"`

@complexity Logarithmic in the size of the container.

@liveexample{The example below shows how object elements can be read and
written using the [] operator.,operatorarray__key_type}

@sa @ref at(const typename object_t::key_type&) for access by reference
with range checking
@sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value

@since version 1.0.1
*/
template<typename T>
reference operator[](T* key)
{
// implicitly convert null to object
if (is_null())
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -3113,8 +3179,6 @@ class basic_json
@warning If the element with key @a key does not exist, the behavior is
undefined.

@note This function is required for compatibility reasons with Clang.

@param[in] key key of the element to access

@return const reference to the element at key @a key
Expand All @@ -3131,10 +3195,10 @@ class basic_json
with range checking
@sa @ref value() for access by value with a default value

@since version 1.0.0
@since version 1.0.1
*/
template<typename T, std::size_t n>
const_reference operator[](const T (&key)[n]) const
template<typename T>
const_reference operator[](T* key) const
{
// at only works for objects
if (is_object())
Expand Down
48 changes: 48 additions & 0 deletions test/unit.cpp
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -11504,4 +11504,52 @@ TEST_CASE("regression tests")
{
CHECK(json::parse("\"\\ud80c\\udc60abc\"").get<json::string_t>() == u8"\U00013060abc");
}

SECTION("issue #144 - Cannot index by key of type static constexpr const char*")
{
json j;

// Non-const access with key as "char []"
char array_key[] = "Key1";
CHECK_NOTHROW(j[array_key] = 1);
CHECK(j[array_key] == json(1));

// Non-const access with key as "const char[]"
const char const_array_key[] = "Key2";
CHECK_NOTHROW(j[const_array_key] = 2);
CHECK(j[const_array_key] == json(2));

// Non-const access with key as "char *"
char _ptr_key[] = "Key3";
char * ptr_key = &_ptr_key[0];
CHECK_NOTHROW(j[ptr_key] = 3);
CHECK(j[ptr_key] == json(3));

// Non-const access with key as "const char *"
const char * const_ptr_key = "Key4";
CHECK_NOTHROW(j[const_ptr_key] = 4);
CHECK(j[const_ptr_key] == json(4));

// Non-const access with key as "static constexpr const char *"
static constexpr const char* constexpr_ptr_key = "Key5";
CHECK_NOTHROW(j[constexpr_ptr_key] = 5);
CHECK(j[constexpr_ptr_key] == json(5));

const json j_const = j;

// Non-const access with key as "char []"
CHECK(j_const[array_key] == json(1));

// Non-const access with key as "const char[]"
CHECK(j_const[const_array_key] == json(2));

// Non-const access with key as "char *"
CHECK(j_const[ptr_key] == json(3));

// Non-const access with key as "const char *"
CHECK(j_const[const_ptr_key] == json(4));

// Non-const access with key as "static constexpr const char *"
CHECK(j_const[constexpr_ptr_key] == json(5));
}
}