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NAME
    JSON::Parse - Parse JSON

SYNOPSIS
        use JSON::Parse 'parse_json';
        my $json = '["golden", "fleece"]';
        my $perl = parse_json ($json);
        # Same effect as $perl = ['golden', 'fleece'];

    Convert JSON into Perl.

VERSION
    This documents version 0.61 of JSON::Parse corresponding to git commit
    033269fa8972fdce8626aa65cd11a5394ab50492
    <https://github.com/benkasminbullock/JSON-Parse/commit/033269fa8972fdce8
    626aa65cd11a5394ab50492> released on Thu Feb 11 09:14:04 2021 +0900.

DESCRIPTION
    A module for parsing JSON. (JSON means "JavaScript Object Notation" and
    it is specified in "RFC 8259".)

    JSON::Parse offers the function "parse_json", which takes a string
    containing JSON, and returns an equivalent Perl structure. It also
    offers validation of JSON via "valid_json", which returns true or false
    depending on whether the JSON is correct or not, and
    "assert_valid_json", which produces a descriptive fatal error if the
    JSON is invalid. A function "read_json" reads JSON from a file, and
    there is a safer version of "parse_json" called "parse_json_safe" which
    doesn't throw exceptions.

    For special cases of parsing, there are also methods "new" and "parse",
    which create a JSON parsing object and run it on text. See "METHODS".

    JSON::Parse accepts only UTF-8 as input. See "UTF-8 only" and "Handling
    of Unicode".

FUNCTIONS
  assert_valid_json
        use JSON::Parse 'assert_valid_json';
        eval {
            assert_valid_json ('["xyz":"b"]');
        };
        if ($@) {
            print "Your JSON was invalid: $@\n";
        }
        # Prints "Unexpected character ':' parsing array"

    produces output

        Your JSON was invalid: JSON error at line 1, byte 7/11: Unexpected character ':' parsing array starting from byte 1: expecting whitespace: 'n', '\r', '\t', ' ' or comma: ',' or end of array: ']' at /usr/home/ben/projects/json-parse/examples/assert.pl line 6.

    (This example is included as assert.pl
    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/JSON-Parse-0.61/examples/assert
    .pl> in the distribution.)

    This is the underlying function for "valid_json". It runs at the same
    speed, but it throws an error if the JSON is wrong, rather than
    returning 1 or 0. See "DIAGNOSTICS" for the error format, which is
    identical to "parse_json".

    This cannot detect key collisions in the JSON since it does not store
    values. See "Key collisions" for more on this module's handling of
    non-unique names in the JSON.

    The method equivalent to this is "check".

    The behaviour of disallowing empty inputs was changed in version 0.49.

  parse_json
        use JSON::Parse 'parse_json';
        my $perl = parse_json ('{"x":1, "y":2}');

    This function converts JSON into a Perl structure, either an array
    reference, a hash reference, or a scalar.

    If the first argument does not contain a complete valid JSON text, is
    the undefined value, an empty string, or a string containing only
    whitespace "parse_json" throws a fatal error ("dies").

    If the argument contains valid JSON, the return value is either a hash
    reference, an array reference, or a scalar. If the input JSON text is a
    serialized object, a hash reference is returned:

        use JSON::Parse ':all';
        my $perl = parse_json ('{"a":1, "b":2}');
        print ref $perl, "\n";

    produces output

        HASH

    (This example is included as hash.pl
    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/JSON-Parse-0.61/examples/hash.p
    l> in the distribution.)

    If the input JSON text is a serialized array, an array reference is
    returned:

        use JSON::Parse ':all';
        my $perl = parse_json ('["a", "b", "c"]');
        print ref $perl, "\n";

    produces output

        ARRAY

    (This example is included as array.pl
    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/JSON-Parse-0.61/examples/array.
    pl> in the distribution.)

    Otherwise a Perl scalar is returned.

    The behaviour of allowing a scalar was added in version 0.32 of this
    module. This brings it into line with the new specification for JSON.
    The behaviour of disallowing empty inputs was changed in version 0.49.

    The function "parse_json_safe" offers a version of this function with
    various safety features enabled. The method "parse" is equivalent to
    this.

  parse_json_safe
    This is almost the same thing as "parse_json", but has the following
    differences:

    Does not throw exceptions
        If the JSON is invalid, a warning is printed and the undefined value
        is returned, as if calling "parse_json" like this:

            eval {
                $out = parse_json ($json);
            };
            if ($@) {
                carp $@;
                $out = undef;
            }

    Detects key collisions
        This switches on "detect_collisions", so that if the JSON contains
        non-unique names, a warning is printed and the undefined value is
        returned. See "Key collisions" for an explanation of what a key
        collision is.

    Booleans are not read-only
        This switches on "copy_literals" so that JSON true, false and null
        values are copied. These values can be modified, but they will not
        be converted back into "true" and "false" by JSON::Create.

    Errors are reported by carp
        Parsing errors are reported by "carp" in Carp, so the error line
        number refers to the caller's line.

    As the name implies, this is meant to be a "safety-first" version of
    "parse_json".

    ๐ŸŽฒ This function was added in version 0.38.

  read_json
        use JSON::Parse 'read_json';
        my $p = read_json ('filename');

    This is exactly the same as "parse_json" except that it reads the JSON
    from the specified file rather than a scalar. The file must be in the
    UTF-8 encoding, and is opened as a character file using
    ":encoding(utf8)" (see PerlIO::encoding and perluniintro). The output is
    marked as character strings.

    The method equivalent is "read".

    This is a convenience function written in Perl. You may prefer to read
    the file yourself using another module if you need faster performance.

    This was renamed from "json_file_to_perl" in version 0.59. The old name
    will also continue to work indefinitely.

  valid_json
        use JSON::Parse 'valid_json';
        if (valid_json ($json)) {
            # do something
        }

    "valid_json" returns *1* if its argument is valid JSON and *0* if not.
    It runs several times faster than "parse_json". This gain in speed is
    obtained because it discards the input data after reading it, rather
    than storing it into Perl variables.

    This does not supply the actual errors which caused invalidity. Use
    "assert_valid_json" to get error messages when the JSON is invalid.

    This cannot detect duplicate keys in JSON objects because it does not
    store values. See "Key collisions" for more on this module's handling of
    non-unique names in the JSON.

METHODS
    If you need to parse JSON and you are not satisfied with the parsing
    options offered by "parse_json" and "parse_json_safe", you can create a
    JSON parsing object with "new" and set various options on the object,
    then use it with "parse" or "read".

    There are options to copy JSON literals ("true", "false", "null") with
    "copy_literals", switch off fatal errors with "warn_only", detect
    duplicate keys in objects with "detect_collisions", set the maximum
    depth of nested objects and arrays with "set_max_depth", produce
    machine-readable parsing errors with "diagnostics_hash", and set the
    JSON literals to user defined values with the methods described under
    "Methods for manipulating literals".

    These methods only affect the object created with "new"; they do not
    globally affect the behaviour of "parse_json" or "parse_json_safe".

  check
        eval {
            $jp->check ($json);
        };

    This does the same thing as "assert_valid_json", except its behaviour
    can be modified using the "diagnostics_hash" method.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.48. This is for the benefit of
    JSON::Repair.

  copy_literals
        $jp->copy_literals (1);

    With a true value, copy JSON literal values ("null", "true", and
    "false") into new Perl scalar values, and don't put read-only values
    into the output.

    With a false value, use read-only scalars:

        $jp->copy_literals (0);

    The "copy_literals (1)" behaviour is the behaviour of "parse_json_safe".
    The "copy_literals (0)" behaviour is the behaviour of "parse_json".

    If the user also sets user-defined literals with "set_true", "set_false"
    and "set_null", that takes precedence over this.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

  detect_collisions
        $jp->detect_collisions (1);

    This switches on a check for hash key collisions (non-unique names in
    JSON objects). If a collision is found, an error message "Name is not
    unique" is printed, which also gives the non-unique name and the byte
    position where the start of the colliding string was found:

        use JSON::Parse;
        my $jp = JSON::Parse->new ();
        $jp->detect_collisions (1);
        eval {
            $jp->parse ('{"animals":{"cat":"moggy","cat":"feline","cat":"neko"}}');
        };
        print "$@\n" if $@;

    produces output

        JSON error at line 1, byte 28/55: Name is not unique: "cat" parsing object starting from byte 12 at /usr/home/ben/projects/json-parse/examples/../blib/lib/JSON/Parse.pm line 131.

    (This example is included as collide.pl
    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/JSON-Parse-0.61/examples/collid
    e.pl> in the distribution.)

    The "detect_collisions (1)" behaviour is the behaviour of
    "parse_json_safe". The "detect_collisions (0)" behaviour is the
    behaviour of "parse_json".

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

  diagnostics_hash
        $jp->diagnostics_hash (1);

    This changes diagnostics produced by errors from a simple string into a
    hash reference containing various fields. This is incompatible with
    "warn_only".

    This replaces the previous experimental global variable
    $json_diagnostics, which was removed from the module. The hash keys and
    values are identical to those provided in the object returned by
    $json_diagnostics, with the addition of a key "error as string" which
    returns the usual error.

    This requires Perl version 5.14 or later.

    An example of the use of this method to "repair" broken JSON is in the
    module "JSON::Repair".

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.46.

  get_max_depth
       my $max_depth = $jp->get_max_depth ();

    This returns the maximum nesting depth of objects or arrays in the input
    JSON. The default value is 10,000.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.58.

  new
        my $jp = JSON::Parse->new ();

    Create a new JSON::Parse object.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

  parse
        my $out = $jp->parse ($json);

    This does the same thing as "parse_json", except its behaviour can be
    modified using object methods.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

    This was renamed from "run" in version 0.60.

  read
        my $json = $jp->read ($file);

    Read a file, parse the contained JSON, and return the output. This
    method is equivalent to the function "read_json".

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.60.

  set_max_depth
        $jp->set_max_depth (42);

    Set the maximum nesting depth of objects or arrays in the input JSON.
    The default value is 10,000.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.58.

  upgrade_utf8
        $jp->upgrade_utf8 (1);

    Upgrade input from bytes to characters automatically.

    This can be switched off again using any false value:

        $jp->upgrade_utf8 (0);

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.61.

  warn_only
        $jp->warn_only (1);

    Warn, don't die, on error. Failed parsing returns the undefined value,
    "undef", and prints a warning.

    This can be switched off again using any false value:

        $jp->warn_only ('');

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.41.

  Methods for manipulating literals
    These methods alter what is written into the Perl structure when the
    parser sees a literal value, "true", "false" or "null" in the input
    JSON.

    This number of methods is needed because of the possibility that a user
    wants to set the output for "false" to be "undef":

        $jp->set_false (undef);

    Thus, we cannot use a single function "$jp->false (undef)" to cover both
    setting and deleting of values.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This facility was added in version 0.38.

   set_true
        $jp->set_true ("Yes, that is so true");

    Supply a scalar to be used in place of the JSON "true" literal.

    This example puts the string "Yes, that is so true" into the hash or
    array when we hit a "true" literal, rather than the default read-only
    scalar:

        use JSON::Parse;
        my $json = '{"yes":true,"no":false}';
        my $jp = JSON::Parse->new ();
        $jp->set_true ('Yes, that is so true');
        my $out = $jp->parse ($json);
        print $out->{yes}, "\n";

    prints

        Yes, that is so true

    To override the previous value, call it again with a new value. To
    delete the value and revert to the default behaviour, use "delete_true".

    If you give this a value which is not "true", as in Perl will evaluate
    it as a false in an if statement, it prints a warning "User-defined
    value for JSON true evaluates as false". You can switch this warning off
    with "no_warn_literals".

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

   delete_true
        $jp->delete_true ();

    Delete the user-defined true value. See "set_true".

    This method is "safe" in that it has absolutely no effect if no
    user-defined value is in place. It does not return a value.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

   set_false
        $jp->set_false (JSON::PP::Boolean::false);

    Supply a scalar to be used in place of the JSON "false" literal.

    In the above example, when we hit a "false" literal, we put
    "JSON::PP::Boolean::false" in the output, similar to JSON::PP and other
    CPAN modules like Mojo::JSON or JSON::XS.

    To override the previous value, call it again with a new value. To
    delete the value and revert to the default behaviour, use
    "delete_false".

    If you give this a value which is not "false", as in Perl will evaluate
    it as a false in an if statement, it prints a warning "User-defined
    value for JSON false evaluates as true". You can switch this warning off
    with "no_warn_literals".

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

   delete_false
        $jp->delete_false ();

    Delete the user-defined false value. See "set_false".

    This method is "safe" in that it has absolutely no effect if no
    user-defined value is in place. It does not return a value.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

   set_null
        $jp->set_null (0);

    Supply a scalar to be used in place of the JSON "null" literal.

    To override the previous value, call it again with a new value. To
    delete the value and revert to the default behaviour, use "delete_null".

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

   delete_null
        $jp->delete_null ();

    Delete the user-defined null value. See "set_null".

    This method is "safe" in that it has absolutely no effect if no
    user-defined value is in place. It does not return a value.

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

   no_warn_literals
        $jp->no_warn_literals (1);

    Use a true value to switch off warnings about setting boolean values to
    contradictory things. For example if you want to set the JSON "false"
    literal to turn into the string "false",

        $jp->no_warn_literals (1);
        $jp->set_false ("false");

    See also "Contradictory values for "true" and "false"".

    This also switches off the warning "User-defined value overrules
    copy_literals".

    ๐ŸŽฒ This method was added in version 0.38.

OLD INTERFACE
    The following alternative function names are accepted. These are the
    names used for the functions in old versions of this module. These names
    are not deprecated and will never be removed from the module.

    The names ending in "_to_perl" seem quite silly in retrospect since
    surely it is obvious that one is programming in Perl.

  json_to_perl
    This is exactly the same function as "parse_json".

  json_file_to_perl
    This is exactly the same function as "read_json". The function was
    renamed in version 0.59, after the same function in
    "File::JSON::Slurper".

  run
    This is the old name for "parse".

  validate_json
    This is exactly the same function as "assert_valid_json".

Mapping from JSON to Perl
    JSON elements are mapped to Perl as follows:

  JSON numbers
    JSON numbers become Perl numbers, either integers or double-precision
    floating point numbers, or possibly strings containing the number if
    parsing of a number by the usual methods fails somehow.

    JSON does not allow leading zeros, like *0123*, or leading plus signs,
    like *+100*, in numbers, so these cause an "Unexpected character" error.
    JSON also does not allow numbers of the form *1.*, but it does allow
    things like *0e0* or *1E999999*. As far as possible these are accepted
    by JSON::Parse.

  JSON strings
    JSON strings become Perl strings. The JSON escape characters such as
    "\t" for the tab character (see section 2.5 of "RFC 8259") are mapped to
    the equivalent ASCII character.

   Handling of Unicode
    Inputs must be in the UTF-8 format. See "UTF-8 only".

    In addition, JSON::Parse rejects UTF-8 which encodes non-characters such
    as "U+FFFF" and ill-formed characters such as incomplete halves of
    surrogate pairs.

    Unicode encoding points in the input of the form "\u3000" are converted
    into the equivalent UTF-8 bytes.

    Surrogate pairs in the form "\uD834\uDD1E" are also handled. If the
    second half of the surrogate pair is missing, an "Unexpected character"
    or "Unexpected end of input" error is thrown. If the second half of the
    surrogate pair is present but contains an impossible value, a "Not
    surrogate pair" error is thrown.

    If the input to "parse_json" is marked as Unicode characters, the output
    strings will be marked as Unicode characters. If the input is not marked
    as Unicode characters, the output strings will not be marked as Unicode
    characters. Thus,

        use JSON::Parse ':all';
        # The scalar $sasori looks like Unicode to Perl
        use utf8;
        my $sasori = '["่ "]';
        my $p = parse_json ($sasori);
        print utf8::is_utf8 ($p->[0]);
        # Prints 1.

    but

        use JSON::Parse ':all';
        # The scalar $ebi does not look like Unicode to Perl
        no utf8;
        my $ebi = '["ๆตท่€"]';
        my $p = parse_json ($ebi);
        print utf8::is_utf8 ($p->[0]);
        # Prints nothing.

    Escapes of the form \uXXXX (see page three of "RFC 8259") are mapped to
    ASCII if XXXX is less than 0x80, or to UTF-8 if XXXX is greater than or
    equal to 0x80.

    Strings containing \uXXXX escapes greater than 0x80 are also upgraded to
    character strings, regardless of whether the input is a character string
    or a byte string, thus regardless of whether Perl thinks the input
    string is Unicode, escapes like \u87f9 are converted into the equivalent
    UTF-8 bytes and the particular string in which they occur is marked as a
    character string:

        use JSON::Parse ':all';
        no utf8;
        # ่Ÿน
        my $kani = '["\u87f9"]';
        my $p = parse_json ($kani);
        print "It's marked as a character string" if utf8::is_utf8 ($p->[0]);
        # Prints "It's marked as a character string" because it's upgraded
        # regardless of the input string's flags.

    This is modelled on the behaviour of Perl's "chr":

        no utf8;
        my $kani = '87f9';
        print "hex is character string\n" if utf8::is_utf8 ($kani);
        # prints nothing
        $kani = chr (hex ($kani));
        print "chr makes it a character string\n" if utf8::is_utf8 ($kani);
        # prints "chr makes it a character string"

    However, JSON::Parse also upgrades the remaining part of the string into
    a character string, even when it's not marked as a character string. For
    example,

        use JSON::Parse ':all';
        use Unicode::UTF8 'decode_utf8';
        no utf8;
        my $highbytes = "ใ‹";
        my $not_utf8 = "$highbytes\\u3042";
        my $test = "{\"a\":\"$not_utf8\"}";
        my $out = parse_json ($test);
        # JSON::Parse does something unusual here in promoting the first part
        # of the string into UTF-8.
        print "JSON::Parse gives this: ", $out->{a}, "\n";
        # Perl cannot assume that $highbytes is in UTF-8, so it has to just
        # turn the initial characters into garbage.
        my $add_chr = $highbytes . chr (0x3042);
        print "Perl's output is like this: ", $add_chr, "\n";
        # In fact JSON::Parse's behaviour is equivalent to this:
        my $equiv = decode_utf8 ($highbytes) . chr (0x3042);
        print "JSON::Parse did something like this: ", $equiv, "\n";
        # With character strings switched on, Perl and JSON::Parse do the same
        # thing.
        use utf8;
        my $is_utf8 = "ใ‹";
        my $test2 = "{\"a\":\"$is_utf8\\u3042\"}";
        my $out2 = parse_json ($test2);
        print "JSON::Parse: ", $out2->{a}, "\n";
        my $add_chr2 = $is_utf8 . chr (0x3042);
        print "Native Perl: ", $add_chr2, "\n";

    produces output

        JSON::Parse gives this: ใ‹ใ‚
        Perl's output is like this: รฃยย‹ใ‚
        JSON::Parse did something like this: ใ‹ใ‚
        JSON::Parse: ใ‹ใ‚
        Native Perl: ใ‹ใ‚

    (This example is included as unicode-details.pl
    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/JSON-Parse-0.61/examples/unicod
    e-details.pl> in the distribution.)

    Although in general the above would be an unsafe practice, JSON::Parse
    can do things this way because JSON is a text-only, Unicode-only format.
    To ensure that invalid inputs are never upgraded, JSON::Parse checks
    each input byte to make sure that it forms UTF-8. See also "UTF-8 only".
    Doing things this way, rather than the way that Perl does it, was one of
    the original motivations for writing this module.

  JSON arrays
    JSON arrays become Perl array references. The elements of the Perl array
    are in the same order as they appear in the JSON.

    Thus

        my $p = parse_json ('["monday", "tuesday", "wednesday"]');

    has the same result as a Perl declaration of the form

        my $p = [ 'monday', 'tuesday', 'wednesday' ];

  JSON objects
    JSON objects become Perl hashes. The members of the JSON object become
    key and value pairs in the Perl hash. The string part of each object
    member becomes the key of the Perl hash. The value part of each member
    is mapped to the value of the Perl hash.

    Thus

        my $j = <<EOF;
        {"monday":["blue", "black"],
         "tuesday":["grey", "heart attack"],
         "friday":"Gotta get down on Friday"}
        EOF

        my $p = parse_json ($j);

    has the same result as a Perl declaration of the form

        my $p = {
            monday => ['blue', 'black'],
            tuesday => ['grey', 'heart attack'],
            friday => 'Gotta get down on Friday',
        };

   Key collisions
    A key collision is something like the following.

        use JSON::Parse qw/parse_json parse_json_safe/;
        my $j = '{"a":1, "a":2}';
        my $p = parse_json ($j);
        print "Ambiguous key 'a' is ", $p->{a}, "\n";
        my $q = parse_json_safe ($j);

    produces output

        JSON::Parse::parse_json_safe: Name is not unique: "a" parsing object starting from byte 1 at /usr/home/ben/projects/json-parse/examples/key-collision.pl line 8.
        Ambiguous key 'a' is 2

    (This example is included as key-collision.pl
    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/JSON-Parse-0.61/examples/key-co
    llision.pl> in the distribution.)

    Here the key "a" could be either 1 or 2. As seen in the example,
    "parse_json" overwrites the first value with the second value.
    "parse_json_safe" halts and prints a warning. If you use "new" you can
    switch key collision on and off with the "detect_collisions" method.

    The rationale for "parse_json" not to give warnings is that Perl doesn't
    give information about collisions when storing into hash values, and
    checking for collisions for every key will degrade performance for the
    sake of an unlikely occurrence. The JSON specification says "The names
    within an object SHOULD be unique." (see "RFC 8259", page 5), although
    it's not a requirement.

    For performance, "valid_json" and "assert_valid_json" do not store hash
    keys, thus they cannot detect this variety of problem.

  Literals
   false
    "parse_json" maps the JSON false literal to a readonly scalar which
    evaluates to the empty string, or to zero in a numeric context. (This
    behaviour changed from version 0.36 to 0.37. In versions up to 0.36, the
    false literal was mapped to a readonly scalar which evaluated to 0
    only.) "parse_json_safe" maps the JSON literal to a similar scalar
    without the readonly constraints. If you use a parser created with
    "new", you can choose either of these behaviours with "copy_literals",
    or you can tell JSON::Parse to put your own value in place of falses
    using the "set_false" method.

   null
    "parse_json" maps the JSON null literal to a readonly scalar
    $JSON::Parse::null which evaluates to "undef". "parse_json_safe" maps
    the JSON literal to the undefined value. If you use a parser created
    with "new", you can choose either of these behaviours with
    "copy_literals", or you can tell JSON::Parse to put your own value in
    place of nulls using the "set_null" method.

   true
    "parse_json" maps the JSON true literal to a readonly scalar which
    evaluates to 1. "parse_json_safe" maps the JSON literal to the value 1.
    If you use a parser created with "new", you can choose either of these
    behaviours with "copy_literals", or you can tell JSON::Parse to put your
    own value in place of trues using the "set_true" method.

   Round trips and compatibility
    The Perl versions of literals produced by "parse_json" will be converted
    back to JSON literals if you use "create_json" in JSON::Create. However,
    JSON::Parse's literals are incompatible with the other CPAN JSON
    modules. For compatibility with other CPAN modules, create a JSON::Parse
    object with "new", and set JSON::Parse's literals with "set_true",
    "set_false", and "set_null".

   A round trip with JSON::Tiny
    This example demonstrates round-trip compatibility using JSON::Tiny,
    version 0.58:

        use utf8;
        use JSON::Tiny '0.58', qw(decode_json encode_json);
        use JSON::Parse;
        use JSON::Create;
        my $cream = '{"clapton":true,"hendrix":false}';
        my $jp = JSON::Parse->new ();
        my $jc = JSON::Create->new (sort => 1);

        print "First do a round-trip of our modules:\n\n";
        print $jc->create ($jp->parse ($cream)), "\n\n";

        print "Now do a round-trip of JSON::Tiny:\n\n";
        print encode_json (decode_json ($cream)), "\n\n";

        print "๐Ÿฅด First, incompatible mode:\n\n";
        print 'tiny(parse): ', encode_json ($jp->parse ($cream)), "\n";
        print 'create(tiny): ', $jc->create (decode_json ($cream)), "\n\n";

        # Set our parser to produce these things as literals:
        $jp->set_true (JSON::Tiny::true);
        $jp->set_false (JSON::Tiny::false);

        print "๐Ÿ”„ Compatibility with JSON::Parse:\n\n";
        print 'tiny(parse):', encode_json ($jp->parse ($cream)), "\n\n";
        $jc->bool ('JSON::Tiny::_Bool');

        print "๐Ÿ”„ Compatibility with JSON::Create:\n\n";
        print 'create(tiny):', $jc->create (decode_json ($cream)), "\n\n";

        print "๐Ÿ”„ JSON::Parse and JSON::Create are still compatible too:\n\n";
        print $jc->create ($jp->parse ($cream)), "\n";

    produces output

        First do a round-trip of our modules:

        {"clapton":true,"hendrix":false}

        Now do a round-trip of JSON::Tiny:

        {"clapton":true,"hendrix":false}

        ๐Ÿฅด First, incompatible mode:

        tiny(parse): {"clapton":1,"hendrix":""}
        create(tiny): {"clapton":1,"hendrix":0}

        ๐Ÿ”„ Compatibility with JSON::Parse:

        tiny(parse):{"clapton":true,"hendrix":false}

        ๐Ÿ”„ Compatibility with JSON::Create:

        create(tiny):{"clapton":true,"hendrix":false}

        ๐Ÿ”„ JSON::Parse and JSON::Create are still compatible too:

        {"clapton":true,"hendrix":false}

    (This example is included as json-tiny-round-trip-demo.pl
    <https://fastapi.metacpan.org/source/BKB/JSON-Parse-0.61/examples/json-t
    iny-round-trip-demo.pl> in the distribution.)

    Most of the other CPAN modules use similar methods to JSON::Tiny, so the
    above example can easily be adapted. See also "Interoperability" in
    JSON::Create for various examples.

   Modifying the values
    "parse_json" maps all the literals to read-only values. Because of this,
    attempting to modifying the boolean values in the hash reference
    returned by "parse_json" will cause "Modification of a read-only value
    attempted" errors:

        my $in = '{"hocus":true,"pocus":false,"focus":null}';
        my $p = json_parse ($in);
        $p->{hocus} = 99;
        # "Modification of a read-only value attempted" error occurs

    Since the hash values are read-only scalars, "$p->{hocus} = 99" is like
    this:

        undef = 99;

    If you need to modify the returned hash reference, then delete the value
    first:

        my $in = '{"hocus":true,"pocus":false,"focus":null}';
        my $p = json_parse ($in);
        delete $p->{pocus};
        $p->{pocus} = 99;
        # OK

    Similarly with array references, delete the value before altering:

        my $in = '[true,false,null]';
        my $q = json_parse ($in);
        delete $q->[1];
        $q->[1] = 'magic';

    Note that the return values from parsing bare literals are not read-only
    scalars, so

        my $true = JSON::Parse::json_parse ('true');
        $true = 99;

    produces no error. This is because Perl copies the scalar.

RESTRICTIONS
    This module imposes the following restrictions on its input.

    JSON only
        JSON::Parse is a strict parser. It only accepts input which exactly
        meets the criteria of "RFC 8259". That means, for example,
        JSON::Parse does not accept single quotes (') instead of double
        quotes ("), or numbers with leading zeros, like 0123. JSON::Parse
        does not accept control characters (0x00 - 0x1F) in strings, missing
        commas between array or hash elements like "["a" "b"]", or trailing
        commas like "["a","b","c",]". It also does not accept trailing
        non-whitespace, like the second "]" in "["a"]]".

        You may find "JSON::Repair" by the same authors as JSON::Parse
        useful if you need to process JSON-like text with tolerance for
        errors.

    No incremental parsing
        JSON::Parse does not parse incrementally. It only parses
        fully-formed JSON strings which include all opening and closing
        brackets. This is an inherent part of the design of the module.
        Incremental parsing in the style of XML::Parser would require some
        kind of callback structure to deal with the elements of the
        partially digested structures, but JSON::Parse was never designed to
        do this; it merely converts what it sees into a Perl structure.
        Claims to offer incremental JSON parsing in other modules'
        documentation should be diligently verified.

    UTF-8 only
        JSON::Parse only parses the UTF-8 format. If input is in a different
        Unicode encoding than UTF-8, convert the input before handing it to
        this module. For example, for the UTF-16 format,

            use Encode 'decode';
            my $input_utf8 = decode ('UTF-16', $input);
            my $perl = parse_json ($input_utf8);

        or, for a file, use ":encoding" (see PerlIO::encoding and
        perluniintro):

            open my $input, "<:encoding(UTF-16)", 'some-json-file';

        JSON::Parse does not try to determine the nature of the octet stream
        using BOM markers. A BOM marker in the input consists of bytes 0xFE
        and 0xFF, both of which are invalid as UTF-8, and thus will cause a
        fatal error.

        This restriction to UTF-8 applies regardless of whether Perl thinks
        that the input string is a character string or a byte string.
        Non-UTF-8 input will cause an "Unexpected character" error.

        The latest specification for JSON, "RFC 8259", specifies it to be a
        UTF-8 only format.

        JSON::Parse does not accept Unicode non-characters (U+FFFF, UFDDO,
        etc.), UTF-8 representing surrogate pair code points, or bytes
        outside the range of Unicode code points as UTF-8 bytes.

DIAGNOSTICS
    "valid_json" does not produce error messages. "parse_json" and
    "assert_valid_json" die on encountering invalid input. "parse_json_safe"
    uses "carp" in Carp to pass error messages as warnings.

    Error messages have the line number, and the byte number where
    appropriate, of the input which caused the problem. The line number is
    formed simply by counting the number of "\n" (linefeed, ASCII 0x0A)
    characters in the whitespace part of the JSON.

    In "parse_json" and "assert_valid_json", parsing errors are fatal, so to
    continue after an error occurs, put the parsing into an "eval" block:

        my $p;
        eval {
            $p = parse_json ($j);
        };
        if ($@) {
            # handle error
        }

    The following error messages are produced:

    Unexpected character
        An unexpected character (byte) was encountered in the input. For
        example, when looking at the beginning of a string supposedly
        containing JSON, if the module encounters a plus sign, it will give
        an error like this:

            assert_valid_json ('+');

        gives output

            JSON error at line 1, byte 1/1: Unexpected character '+' parsing initial state: expecting whitespace: 'n', '\r', '\t', ' ' or start of string: '"' or digit: '0-9' or minus: '-' or start of an array or object: '{', '[' or start of literal: 't', 'f', 'n'

        The message always includes a list of what characters are allowed.

        If there is some recognizable structure being parsed, the error
        message will include its starting point in the form "starting from
        byte n":

            assert_valid_json ('{"this":"\a"}');

        gives output

            JSON error at line 1, byte 11/13: Unexpected character 'a' parsing string starting from byte 9: expecting escape: '', '/', '"', 'b', 'f', 'n', 'r', 't', 'u'

        A feature of JSON is that parsing it requires only one byte to be
        examined at a time. Thus almost all parsing problems can be handled
        using the "Unexpected character" error type, including spelling
        errors in literals:

            assert_valid_json ('[true,folse]');

        gives output

            JSON error at line 1, byte 8/12: Unexpected character 'o' parsing literal starting from byte 7: expecting 'a'

        and the missing second half of a surrogate pair:

            assert_valid_json ('["\udc00? <-- should be a second half here"]');

        gives output

            JSON error at line 1, byte 9/44: Unexpected character '?' parsing unicode escape starting from byte 3: expecting '\'

        All kinds of errors can occur parsing numbers, for example a missing
        fraction,

            assert_valid_json ('[1.e9]');

        gives output

            JSON error at line 1, byte 4/6: Unexpected character 'e' parsing number starting from byte 2: expecting digit: '0-9'

        and a leading zero,

            assert_valid_json ('[0123]');

        gives output

            JSON error at line 1, byte 3/6: Unexpected character '1' parsing number starting from byte 2: expecting whitespace: 'n', '\r', '\t', ' ' or comma: ',' or end of array: ']' or dot: '.' or exponential sign: 'e', 'E'

        The error message is this complicated because all of the following
        are valid here: whitespace: "[0 ]"; comma: "[0,1]", end of array:
        "[0]", dot: "[0.1]", or exponential: "[0e0]".

        These are all handled by this error. Thus the error messages are a
        little confusing as diagnostics.

        Versions of this module prior to 0.29 gave more informative messages
        like "leading zero in number". (The messages weren't documented.)
        The reason to change over to the single message was because it makes
        the parsing code simpler, and because the testing code described in
        "TESTING" makes use of the internals of this error to check that the
        error message produced actually do correspond to the invalid and
        valid bytes allowed by the parser, at the exact byte given.

        This is a bytewise error, thus for example if a miscoded UTF-8
        appears in the input, an error message saying what bytes would be
        valid at that point will be printed.

            no utf8;
            use JSON::Parse 'assert_valid_json';

            # Error in first byte:

            my $bad_utf8_1 = chr (hex ("81"));
            eval { assert_valid_json ("[\"$bad_utf8_1\"]"); };
            print "$@\n";

            # Error in third byte:

            my $bad_utf8_2 = chr (hex ('e2')) . chr (hex ('9C')) . 'b';
            eval { assert_valid_json ("[\"$bad_utf8_2\"]"); };
            print "$@\n";

        prints

            JSON error at line 1, byte 3/5: Unexpected character 0x81 parsing string starting from byte 2: expecting printable ASCII or first byte of UTF-8: '\x20-\x7f', '\xC2-\xF4' at examples/bad-utf8.pl line 10.

            JSON error at line 1, byte 5/7: Unexpected character 'b' parsing string starting from byte 2: expecting bytes in range 80-bf: '\x80-\xbf' at examples/bad-utf8.pl line 16.

    Unexpected end of input
        The end of the string was encountered before the end of whatever was
        being parsed was. For example, if a quote is missing from the end of
        the string, it will give an error like this:

            assert_valid_json ('{"first":"Suzuki","second":"Murakami","third":"Asada}');

        gives output

            JSON error at line 1: Unexpected end of input parsing string starting from byte 47

    Not surrogate pair
        While parsing a string, a surrogate pair was encountered. While
        trying to turn this into UTF-8, the second half of the surrogate
        pair turned out to be an invalid value.

            assert_valid_json ('["\uDC00\uABCD"]');

        gives output

            JSON error at line 1: Not surrogate pair parsing unicode escape starting from byte 11

    Empty input
        This error occurs for an input which is an empty (no length or
        whitespace only) or an undefined value.

            assert_valid_json ('');

        gives output

            JSON error: Empty input parsing initial state

        Prior to version 0.49, this error was produced by
        "assert_valid_json" only, but it is now also produced by
        "parse_json".

    Name is not unique
        This error occurs when parsing JSON when the user has chosen
        "detect_collisions". For example an input like

            my $p = JSON::Parse->new ();
            $p->detect_collisions (1);
            $p->run ('{"hocus":1,"pocus":2,"hocus":3}');

        gives output

            JSON error at line 1, byte 23/31: Name is not unique: "hocus" parsing object starting from byte 1 at blib/lib/JSON/Parse.pm line 131.

        where the JSON object has two keys with the same name, "hocus". The
        terminology "name is not unique" is from the JSON specification.

    Contradictory values for "true" and "false"

        User-defined value for JSON false evaluates as true
            This happens if you set JSON false to map to a true value:

                $jp->set_false (1);

            To switch off this warning, use "no_warn_literals".

            ๐ŸŽฒ This warning was added in version 0.38.

        User-defined value for JSON true evaluates as false
            This happens if you set JSON true to map to a false value:

                $jp->set_true (undef);

            To switch off this warning, use "no_warn_literals".

            ๐ŸŽฒ This warning was added in version 0.38.

        User-defined value overrules copy_literals
            This warning is given if you set up literals with
            "copy_literals" then you also set up your own true, false, or
            null values with "set_true", "set_false", or "set_null".

            ๐ŸŽฒ This warning was added in version 0.38.

PERFORMANCE
    On the author's computer, the module's speed of parsing is approximately
    the same as JSON::XS, with small variations depending on the type of
    input. For validation, "valid_json" is faster than any other module
    known to the author, and up to ten times faster than JSON::XS.

    Some special types of input, such as floating point numbers containing
    an exponential part, like "1e09", seem to be about two or three times
    faster to parse with this module than with JSON::XS. In JSON::Parse,
    parsing of exponentials is done by the system's "strtod" function, but
    JSON::XS contains its own parser for exponentials, so these results may
    be system-dependent.

    At the moment the main place JSON::XS wins over JSON::Parse is in
    strings containing escape characters, where JSON::XS is about 10% faster
    on the module author's computer and compiler. As of version 0.33,
    despite some progress in improving JSON::Parse, I haven't been able to
    fully work out the reason behind the better speed.

    There is some benchmarking code in the github repository under the
    directory "benchmarks" for those wishing to test these claims. The
    script benchmarks/bench
    <https://github.com/benkasminbullock/JSON-Parse/033269fa8972fdce8626aa65
    cd11a5394ab50492/benchmarks/bench> is an adaptation of the similar
    script in the JSON::XS distribution. The script benchmarks/pub-bench.pl
    <https://github.com/benkasminbullock/JSON-Parse/033269fa8972fdce8626aa65
    cd11a5394ab50492/benchmarks/pub-bench.pl> runs the benchmarks and prints
    them out as POD.

    The following benchmark tests used version 0.58_01 of JSON::Parse,
    version 4.03 of "JSON::XS", and version 4.25 of "Cpanel::JSON::XS" on
    Perl version v5.32.0 compiled with Clang version FreeBSD clang version
    10.0.1 on FreeBSD 12.2. The files in the "benchmarks" directory of
    JSON::Parse. short.json and long.json are the benchmarks used by
    "JSON::XS".

    short.json
            Repetitions: 10 x 100 = 1000
            --------------+------------+------------+
            module        |      1/min |        min |
            --------------|------------|------------|
            Cpanel        | 313007.761 |  0.0000319 |
            JP::valid     | 838860.800 |  0.0000119 |
            JSON::Parse   | 310689.185 |  0.0000322 |
            JSON::XS      | 303935.072 |  0.0000329 |
            --------------+------------+------------+

    long.json
            Repetitions: 10 x 100 = 1000
            --------------+------------+------------+
            module        |      1/min |        min |
            --------------|------------|------------|
            Cpanel        |   5611.860 |  0.0017819 |
            JP::valid     |  13586.991 |  0.0007360 |
            JSON::Parse   |   4924.048 |  0.0020308 |
            JSON::XS      |   6406.452 |  0.0015609 |
            --------------+------------+------------+

    words-array.json
            Repetitions: 10 x 100 = 1000
            --------------+------------+------------+
            module        |      1/min |        min |
            --------------|------------|------------|
            Cpanel        |  34749.826 |  0.0002878 |
            JP::valid     | 270600.258 |  0.0000370 |
            JSON::Parse   |  34017.064 |  0.0002940 |
            JSON::XS      |  35726.610 |  0.0002799 |
            --------------+------------+------------+

    exp.json
            Repetitions: 10 x 100 = 1000
            --------------+------------+------------+
            module        |      1/min |        min |
            --------------|------------|------------|
            Cpanel        |  46759.242 |  0.0002139 |
            JP::valid     | 117817.528 |  0.0000849 |
            JSON::Parse   |  46759.242 |  0.0002139 |
            JSON::XS      |  19195.899 |  0.0005209 |
            --------------+------------+------------+

    literals.json
            Repetitions: 10 x 100 = 1000
            --------------+------------+------------+
            module        |      1/min |        min |
            --------------|------------|------------|
            Cpanel        |  33026.016 |  0.0003028 |
            JP::valid     | 384798.532 |  0.0000260 |
            JSON::Parse   |  40840.351 |  0.0002449 |
            JSON::XS      |  33689.189 |  0.0002968 |
            --------------+------------+------------+

    cpantesters.json
            Repetitions: 10 x 100 = 1000
            --------------+------------+------------+
            module        |      1/min |        min |
            --------------|------------|------------|
            Cpanel        |    212.377 |  0.0470860 |
            JP::valid     |   1309.043 |  0.0076392 |
            JSON::Parse   |    207.491 |  0.0481949 |
            JSON::XS      |    226.439 |  0.0441620 |
            --------------+------------+------------+

SEE ALSO
    RFC 8259
        JSON is specified in RFC 8259 "The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)
        Data Interchange Format" <http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc8259.txt>.

    json.org
        <https://json.org> is the website for JSON, authored by Douglas
        Crockford.

  Other CPAN modules for parsing and producing JSON
    The โญ represents the number of votes this module has received on
    metacpan, on a logarithmic scale. Modules which we recommend are marked
    with ๐Ÿ‘. Deprecated modules and modules which are definitely buggy (bug
    reports/pull requests ignored) and abandoned (no releases for several
    years) are marked with ๐Ÿ‘Ž and/or ๐Ÿ›. Modules we can't work out are marked
    with ๐Ÿ˜•.

    Modules by the same author

        JSON::Create
            ๐Ÿ‘ JSON::Create is a companion module to JSON::Parse by the same
            author.

        JSON::Repair
            JSON::Repair is an example module which demonstrates using
            JSON::Parse to apply some kinds of heuristics to repair "relaxed
            JSON" or otherwise broken JSON into compliant JSON.

        JSON::Server
            JSON::Server is a module which offers a JSON-only, UTF-8 only
            server using "JSON::Parse" and "JSON::Create".

        JSON::Tokenize
            JSON::Tokenize is part of the JSON::Parse distribution, a
            tokenizer which reduces a JSON string to tokens. This makes the
            JSON::Parse tokenizer available to people who want to write
            their own JSON parsers.

        JSON::Whitespace
            JSON::Whitespace is for manipulating the "insignificant
            whitespace" part of JSON.

    Reading and writing JSON

        Cpanel::JSON::XS
            [โญโญ Author: RURBAN <https://metacpan.org/author/RURBAN>; Date:
            "2020-10-28"; Version: 4.25]

            This is a fork of JSON::XS. Please see the module for details
            about the reasons for the fork.

        File::JSON::Slurper
            [โญ Author: NEILB <https://metacpan.org/author/NEILB>; Date:
            "2020-11-18"; Version: 1.00]

            Slurp a JSON file into a data structure, and the reverse. It
            relies on "JSON::MaybeXS".

        Glib::JSON
            [โญ Author: EBASSI <https://metacpan.org/author/EBASSI>; Date:
            "2015-04-19"; Version: 0.002]

            Uses the JSON library from Glib, a library of C functions for
            the Linux GNOME desktop project, so it is independent of the
            other CPAN modules. Judging from the fairly sparse
            documentation, it seems to be a module where you build the JSON
            on the fly rather than converting a Perl structure wholesale
            into JSON.

        JSON
            [โญโญ Author: ISHIGAKI <https://metacpan.org/author/ISHIGAKI>;
            Date: "2021-01-24"; Version: 4.03]

            This calls on either JSON::PP or JSON::XS.

        JSON::DWIW
            [Author: DOWENS <https://metacpan.org/author/DOWENS>; Date:
            "2010-09-29"; Version: 0.47]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž๐Ÿ› This module "Does What I Want", where "I" refers to the
            module's author. Development seems to have ceased in 2010, there
            is a long list of unfixed bugs, and some of the module's
            features seem to predate Unicode support in Perl. It is written
            in XS, and it claims to accept a wide variety of non-JSON
            formats such as comments, single-quoted strings, trailing
            commas, etc.

        JSON::PP
            [โญโญ Author: ISHIGAKI <https://metacpan.org/author/ISHIGAKI>;
            Date: "2021-01-23"; Version: 4.06]

            This is part of the Perl core, installed when you install Perl.
            "PP" stands for "Pure Perl", which means it is in Perl-only
            without the XS (C-based) parsing. This is slower but may be
            necessary if you cannot install modules requiring a C compiler.

        JSON::Slurper
            [โญ Author: SRCHULO <https://metacpan.org/author/SRCHULO>; Date:
            "2019-10-30"; Version: 0.12]

            Convenient file slurping and spurting of data using JSON. Uses
            "JSON::PP" or "Cpanel::JSON::XS" if available. The basic idea
            seems to be that it uses context to return arrays or hashes as
            required, and read and write files without extra stages of
            opening and closing the file.

        JSON::Syck
            [โญโญ Author: TODDR <https://metacpan.org/author/TODDR>; Date:
            "2020-10-26"; Version: 1.34]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž๐Ÿ› Takes advantage of a similarity between YAML (yet another
            markup language) and JSON to provide a JSON parser/producer
            using YAML::Syck.

            We have never tried this module, but it seems to be
            semi-deprecated (the ABSTRACT says "consider using JSON::XS
            instead!") and there are a lot of bug reports
            <https://github.com/toddr/YAML-Syck/issues> about things like
            failing to process equals signs. However, the maintainer is
            fixing some of the bugs and making new releases, so we're not
            really sure.

        JSON::Tiny
            [โญโญ Author: DAVIDO <https://metacpan.org/author/DAVIDO>; Date:
            "2017-11-12"; Version: 0.58]

            This is a fork of "Mojo::JSON".

        JSON::XS
            [โญโญโญ Author: MLEHMANN <https://metacpan.org/author/MLEHMANN>;
            Date: "2020-10-27"; Version: 4.03]

            This is an all-purpose JSON module in XS, which means it
            requires a C compiler to install.

        JSON::YAJL
            [โญ Author: LBROCARD <https://metacpan.org/author/LBROCARD>;
            Date: "2011-08-05"; Version: 0.10]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž๐Ÿ› Wraps a C library called yajl. The module has been abandoned
            since ten years ago. Bug reports include serious errors, and
            pull requests have been ignored.

        Mojo::JSON
            [โญโญโญ Author: SRI <https://metacpan.org/author/SRI>; Date:
            "2021-01-17"; Version: 8.71]

            Part of the Mojolicious standalone web framework, "pure Perl"
            JSON reader/writer. As of version 8.70 of Mojolicious, this
            actually depends on "JSON::PP" but will load "Cpanel::JSON::XS"
            if it is available.

    Combination modules
        These modules rely on more than one back-end module to process JSON
        for you.

        JSON::Any
            [โญ Author: ETHER <https://metacpan.org/author/ETHER>; Date:
            "2015-06-10"; Version: 1.39]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž This now-deprecated module combines "JSON::DWIW", "JSON::XS"
            versions one and two, and "JSON::Syck".

        JSON::MaybeXS
            [โญโญ Author: ETHER <https://metacpan.org/author/ETHER>; Date:
            "2020-11-13"; Version: 1.004003]

            A module which combines "Cpanel::JSON::XS", "JSON::XS", and
            "JSON::PP". The original "JSON" combines "JSON::XS" and
            "JSON::PP", but this prioritizes "Cpanel::JSON::XS" over
            "JSON::XS".

        JSON::XS::VersionOneAndTwo
            [Author: LBROCARD <https://metacpan.org/author/LBROCARD>; Date:
            "2008-02-13"; Version: 0.31]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž A "combination module" which supports two different interfaces
            of "JSON::XS". However, JSON::XS is now onto version 4.

        Mojo::JSON::MaybeXS
            [โญ Author: DBOOK <https://metacpan.org/author/DBOOK>; Date:
            "2019-08-07"; Version: 1.002]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž This pulls in "JSON::MaybeXS" instead of "Mojo::JSON" for
            Mojolicious users. It seems to have been rendered obsolete by
            modern versions of Mojolicious due to changes to make that
            depend on "Cpanel::JSON::XS" if available.

    Test-related modules

        Test2::Tools::JSON
            [Author: AKIYM <https://metacpan.org/author/AKIYM>; Date:
            "2019-08-07"; Version: 0.05]

        Test::Deep::JSON
            [โญ Author: MOTEMEN <https://metacpan.org/author/MOTEMEN>; Date:
            "2018-04-24"; Version: 0.05]

            Compare JSON with Test::Deep. As of version 0.05, it relies on
            "JSON::MaybeXS".

        Test::JSON
            [โญ Author: OVID <https://metacpan.org/author/OVID>; Date:
            "2009-08-09"; Version: 0.11]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž This offers a way to compare two different JSON strings to see
            if they refer to the same object. The most recent version, 0.11,
            was released in 2009, and it relies on the deprecated
            "JSON::Any", which makes it essentially abandoned.

        Test::JSON::Entails
            [Author: VOJ <https://metacpan.org/author/VOJ>; Date:
            "2012-09-14"; Version: 0.2]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž Test whether one JSON or Perl structure entails/subsumes
            another. The most recent version is from 2012, and it relies on
            "JSON::Any", so it is probably abandoned. Also, oddly but not
            uniquely for CPAN modules with the name JSON in the title, it
            seems to not actually have that much to do with JSON, which is a
            data serialisation format, but actually be testing Perl hashes
            and arrays.

        Test::JSON::More
            [Author: BAYASHI <https://metacpan.org/author/BAYASHI>; Date:
            "2016-04-28"; Version: 0.02]

            JSON Test Utility. As of version 0.02, it relies on "JSON" but
            it is able to use "JSON::XS" instead, and so probably
            "Cpanel::JSON::XS" would be OK too. According to the
            documentation, it can test JSON for validity and compare JSON
            strings with keys in a different order, and presumably with
            different whitespace.

    Type-related modules
        These untangle numbers, strings, and booleans into JSON types.

        JSON::TypeInference
            [Author: AEREAL <https://metacpan.org/author/AEREAL>; Date:
            "2015-10-26"; Version: "v1.0.2"]

            ๐Ÿ˜• Virtually undocumented, it's not clear what this does.

        JSON::Types
            [โญ Author: TYPESTER <https://metacpan.org/author/TYPESTER>;
            Date: "2012-10-17"; Version: 0.05]

            Change the type of a Perl variable so that it comes out as a
            number, a string, or a boolean in the output JSON.

        JSON::Types::Flexible
            [Author: PINE <https://metacpan.org/author/PINE>; Date:
            "2017-04-01"; Version: 0.03]

            The module is barely documented, but from looking at the test
            file
            <https://metacpan.org/source/PINE/JSON-Types-Flexible-0.03/t%2Fj
            son%2Ftypes%2Fflexible%2Fclass.t>, this seems to enable you to
            change the output type of a number or a string so that you can,
            for example, make the number 1 come out as either a number, 1, a
            string "1", or a boolean, "true", in the output JSON.

        JSON::Typist
            [โญ Author: RJBS <https://metacpan.org/author/RJBS>; Date:
            "2019-12-26"; Version: 0.006]

            "Replace mushy strings and numbers with rigidly typed
            replacements"

            Since Perl muddles strings and numbers, this enables you to work
            out whether your input JSON was "123" (a string) or 123 (a
            number).

    Special-purpose modules

        App::JSON::to
            [โญ Author: DOLMEN <https://metacpan.org/author/DOLMEN>; Date:
            "2015-03-04"; Version: 1.000]

            Convert JSON data to other formats. It reads your JSON file or
            input and converts it into either YAML or Perl native format
            using Data::Dumper.

        boolean
            [โญโญ Author: INGY <https://metacpan.org/author/INGY>; Date:
            "2016-07-08"; Version: 0.46]

            ๐Ÿ‘ This module offers "true" and "false" literals in Perl, so you
            just have

                use boolean;
                my $something = true;

            This is very useful for dealing with JSON.

        Config::JSON
            [Author: RIZEN <https://metacpan.org/author/RIZEN>; Date:
            "2014-12-25"; Version: 1.5202]

            Configuration files in JSON, with hash comments also allowed.

        Devel::JSON
            [โญ Author: DOLMEN <https://metacpan.org/author/DOLMEN>; Date:
            "2017-09-03"; Version: 1.001]

            For one-liners.

                If you use this module from the command-line, the last value
                of your one-liner (-e) code will be serialized as JSON data.

        Inline::JSON
            [Author: KILNA <https://metacpan.org/author/KILNA>; Date:
            "2012-07-27"; Version: "v1.0.4"]

            "Embed JSON data structures directly into your Perl code".
            Relies on "JSON".

        JSON::Builder
            [Author: KNI <https://metacpan.org/author/KNI>; Date:
            "2015-04-16"; Version: 0.04]

            Create JSON under memory limitations.

        JSON::Color
            [โญ Author: PERLANCAR <https://metacpan.org/author/PERLANCAR>;
            Date: "2020-06-09"; Version: 0.130]

            ๐ŸŒˆ This module generates JSON colorized with ANSI escape
            sequences.

        JSON_File
            [โญ Author: GETTY <https://metacpan.org/author/GETTY>; Date:
            "2014-09-11"; Version: 0.004]

        JSON::MultiValueOrdered
            [Author: TOBYINK <https://metacpan.org/author/TOBYINK>; Date:
            "2020-01-27"; Version: 0.006]

            "JSON::MultiValueOrdered" is a special-purpose module for
            parsing JSON objects which have key collisions (something like
            "{"a":1,"a":2}") within objects.

            (JSON::Parse's handling of key collisions is discussed in "Key
            collisions" in this document.)

        JSON::String
            [Author: BRUMMETT <https://metacpan.org/author/BRUMMETT>; Date:
            "2015-02-04"; Version: "v0.2.0"]

            Automatically change a JSON string when a data structure changes
            using tied scalars.

    Patch, path, pointer, schema, and transform modules

        JSON::Assert
            [Author: SGREEN <https://metacpan.org/author/SGREEN>; Date:
            "2017-07-07"; Version: 0.08]

            "Asserts JSONPaths into a JSON data structure for correct
            values/matches"

        JSON::GRDDL
        JSON::Hyper
        JSON::MergePatch
            [โญ Author: SOJIRO <https://metacpan.org/author/SOJIRO>; Date:
            "2016-02-24"; Version: 0.04]

        JSON::Patch
            [Author: MIXAS <https://metacpan.org/author/MIXAS>; Date:
            "2018-10-25"; Version: 0.04]

            ๐Ÿ˜• We don't know what this does, or how it relates to JSON. The
            example in the synopsis section of the document doesn't show any
            JSON, it shows an example of altering nested hashes in Perl.

        JSON::Path
            [โญ Author: POPEFELIX <https://metacpan.org/author/POPEFELIX>;
            Date: "2018-05-05"; Version: 0.420]

            Search nested hashref/arrayref structures using JSONPath.

        JSON::Pointer
            [โญ Author: ZIGOROU <https://metacpan.org/author/ZIGOROU>; Date:
            "2015-08-13"; Version: 0.07]

            Extract parts of a JSON string.

        JSON::Schema::ToJSON
            "Generate example JSON structures from JSON Schema definitions"

        JSON::T
            [โญ Author: TOBYINK <https://metacpan.org/author/TOBYINK>; Date:
            "2014-09-28"; Version: 0.104]

            Transform JSON using JsonT

        JSON::Transform
            [โญ Author: ETJ <https://metacpan.org/author/ETJ>; Date:
            "2020-01-01"; Version: 0.03]

        JSON::Validator
            [โญโญ Author: JHTHORSEN <https://metacpan.org/author/JHTHORSEN>;
            Date: "2021-01-24"; Version: 4.12]

            "Validate data against a JSON schema" - you can decide what the
            JSON is supposed to contain.

    JSON extensions
        These modules extend JSON with comments and other things.

        JSON::Diffable
            [โญ Author: PHAYLON <https://metacpan.org/author/PHAYLON>; Date:
            "2014-12-10"; Version: 0.000002]

            "A relaxed and easy diffable JSON variant"

        JSON::Relaxed
            [Author: MIKO <https://metacpan.org/author/MIKO>; Date:
            "2016-04-30"; Version: 0.05]

            "An extension of JSON that allows for better human-readability".

        JSONY
            [โญ Author: INGY <https://metacpan.org/author/INGY>; Date:
            "2020-04-27"; Version: "v0.1.21"]

            "Relaxed JSON with a little bit of YAML"

    Web interactions via JSON

        Crypt::JWT
            [โญโญ Author: MIK <https://metacpan.org/author/MIK>; Date:
            "2021-01-10"; Version: 0.031]

            Module covers JSON Web Tokens, JSON Web Signature, and JSON Web
            Encryption.

        JSON::API
            [โญ Author: GFRANKS <https://metacpan.org/author/GFRANKS>; Date:
            "2019-07-01"; Version: "v1.1.1"]

            Combines LWP::UserAgent and JSON to make a unified module to
            communicate with a web server via JSON.

        LWP::JSON::Tiny
            [โญ Author: SKINGTON <https://metacpan.org/author/SKINGTON>;
            Date: "2018-05-11"; Version: 0.014]

        WWW::JSON
            [โญ Author: ANTIPASTA <https://metacpan.org/author/ANTIPASTA>;
            Date: "2015-05-27"; Version: 1.02]

            "Make working with JSON Web API's as painless as possible"

    Extension modules
        These modules extend the existing modules with some extra bits.

        JSON::XS::Sugar
            [Author: MAXMIND <https://metacpan.org/author/MAXMIND>; Date:
            "2015-04-01"; Version: 1.01]

            Provides booleans and number/string forcing for "JSON::XS".

        Silki::JSON
            [โญ Author: DROLSKY <https://metacpan.org/author/DROLSKY>; Date:
            "2011-09-19"; Version: 0.29]

            Switches on formatting and strict utf8 in a "JSON::XS" object.

    Demonstration modules
        These modules provide a JSON parser as a demonstration of another
        technology.

        JSON::Decode::Marpa
            [Author: PERLANCAR <https://metacpan.org/author/PERLANCAR>;
            Date: "2014-08-27"; Version: 0.02]

        JSON::Decode::Regexp
            [Author: PERLANCAR <https://metacpan.org/author/PERLANCAR>;
            Date: "2018-03-25"; Version: 0.101]

            ๐Ÿ›๐ŸฆŸ๐Ÿฆ‹๐Ÿž JSON parser as a single Perl Regex, originally by Randal
            Schwartz. This may be ingenious, but it's not remotely a useful
            JSON parser. For example, looking at the string part, it
            provides no Unicode validation, no support for Unicode escapes
            <https://metacpan.org/release/JSON-Decode-Regexp/source/lib/JSON
            /Decode/Regexp.pm#L141> and it allows invalid escapes such as
            "\xFF"
            <https://metacpan.org/release/JSON-Decode-Regexp/source/lib/JSON
            /Decode/Regexp.pm#L137>.

        MarpaX::Demo::JSONParser
            [Author: RSAVAGE <https://metacpan.org/author/RSAVAGE>; Date:
            "2019-06-18"; Version: 1.08]

        Pegex::JSON
            [Author: INGY <https://metacpan.org/author/INGY>; Date:
            "2020-01-22"; Version: 0.31]

            ๐Ÿ› Based on Pegex. See our bug report
            <https://github.com/pegex-parser/pegex-json-pm/issues/3>.

    Other modules
        Modules which are parts of bigger distributions have not been
        included here except by accident.

        App::JSON::Tools
            [Author: KABLAMO <https://metacpan.org/author/KABLAMO>; Date:
            "2016-08-05"; Version: 0.01]

            Undocumented command-line tools for JSON.

        App::JSONPretty
            [โญ Author: MSTROUT <https://metacpan.org/author/MSTROUT>; Date:
            "2011-02-02"; Version: 1]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž๐Ÿ› JSON prettification script. For whatever reason the script
            encapsulates the entirety of an old version of the "JSON" module
            dating from before "JSON::PP" was included in the Perl core.

            If you need this kind of script, there is something called
            json_xs which comes with "JSON::XS", or equivalently
            cpanel_json_xs in the forked module "Cpanel::JSON::XS".

        ARGV::JSON
            [โญ Author: MOTEMEN <https://metacpan.org/author/MOTEMEN>; Date:
            "2013-12-18"; Version: 0.01]

        Jasonify
            [Author: BOBK <https://metacpan.org/author/BOBK>; Date:
            "2020-03-04"; Version: "v0.20.064"]

        JS::JSON
            [Author: INGY <https://metacpan.org/author/INGY>; Date:
            "2008-08-30"; Version: 0.02]

            ๐Ÿ‘Ž This is JavaScript code which was uploaded to CPAN. The
            original JavaScript is now obsolete since the thing it codes is
            included in all modern web browsers.

        JSON::Eval
            [Author: TOBYINK <https://metacpan.org/author/TOBYINK>; Date:
            "2019-10-27"; Version: 0.002]

            Eval Perl code found in JSON. This module enables one to encode
            and decode Perl scalar references and code references to JSON.

        JSON::ize
            [โญ Author: MAJENSEN <https://metacpan.org/author/MAJENSEN>;
            Date: "2019-07-13"; Version: 0.202]

            Something about one-liners.

        JSON::JSend
            [Author: HOEKIT <https://metacpan.org/author/HOEKIT>; Date:
            "2016-04-23"; Version: 0.02]

        JSON::Lines
            [โญ Author: LNATION <https://metacpan.org/author/LNATION>; Date:
            "2020-10-25"; Version: 0.03]

            "JSON Lines is a convenient format for storing structured data
            that may be processed one record at a time."

        JSON::Meth
            [โญ Author: ZOFFIX <https://metacpan.org/author/ZOFFIX>; Date:
            "2015-11-28"; Version: 1.001007]

            ๐Ÿ˜• Claims to be "no nonsense JSON encoding/decoding as method
            calls on data". From the documentation:

                Don't make me think and give me what I want! This module
                automatically figures out whether you want to encode a Perl
                data structure to JSON or decode a JSON string to a Perl
                data structure.

        JSON::ON
            [Author: EWILHELM <https://metacpan.org/author/EWILHELM>; Date:
            "2013-06-26"; Version: "v0.0.3"]

            JavaScript object notation object notator.

        JSON::SL
            [โญ Author: MNUNBERG <https://metacpan.org/author/MNUNBERG>;
            Date: "2017-11-10"; Version: "v1.0.7"]

        JSON::Streaming::Reader
            [โญ Author: MART <https://metacpan.org/author/MART>; Date:
            "2012-11-24"; Version: 0.06]

        JSON::Streaming::Writer
            [Author: MART <https://metacpan.org/author/MART>; Date:
            "2012-11-24"; Version: 0.03]

        JSON::Util
            [Author: JKUTEJ <https://metacpan.org/author/JKUTEJ>; Date:
            "2015-09-03"; Version: 0.06]

            Relies on JSON::MaybeXS and the author's other module IO::Any,
            so that you can put either a file name or a JSON string as the
            argument and it tries to work out which one you have given it.
            That is ingenious, but it seems that if you are a programmer who
            cannot distinguish whether your input string is a file name or
            JSON, you have a very serious problem.

        JSON::XS::ByteString
            [โญ Author: CINDY <https://metacpan.org/author/CINDY>; Date:
            "2020-04-18"; Version: 1.004]

            ๐Ÿ˜• The README
            <https://metacpan.org/source/CINDY/JSON-XS-ByteString-1.004/READ
            ME> claims it is a "thin wrapper around JSON::XS", but it
            contains a complete implementation of JSON
            <https://metacpan.org/source/CINDY/JSON-XS-ByteString-1.004/Byte
            String.xs>, which seems to have partly been copy-pasted from the
            JSON::XS source code, but internally it doesn't make any
            reference to JSON::XS. The licence and copyright statement don't
            mention JSON::XS's original author at all so we're not sure if
            this is a fork, a wrapper, or a reimplementation.

            We haven't tried downloading this or installing it, but
            according to the documentation, this module encodes numbers with
            quotes around them, so "{this => 2}" turns into "{"this":"2"}".

        JSON_minify
            [Author: RCOSCALI <https://metacpan.org/author/RCOSCALI>; Date:
            "2021-01-24"; Version: 1.1]

        Text::JSON::Nibble
            [Author: DAEMON <https://metacpan.org/author/DAEMON>; Date:
            "2017-05-02"; Version: 1.01]

            Nibble complete JSON objects from buffers.

            This seems to be for extracting JSON from the midst of noise.

SCRIPT
    A script "validjson" is supplied with the module. This runs
    "assert_valid_json" on its inputs, so run it like this.

         validjson *.json

    The default behaviour is to just do nothing if the input is valid. For
    invalid input it prints what the problem is:

        validjson ids.go
        ids.go: JSON error at line 1, byte 1/7588: Unexpected character '/' parsing initial state: expecting whitespace: '\n', '\r', '\t', ' ' or start of string: '"' or digit: '0-9' or minus: '-' or start of an array or object: '{', '[' or start of literal: 't', 'f', 'n'.

    If you need confirmation, use its --verbose option:

        validjson -v *.json

        atoms.json is valid JSON.
        ids.json is valid JSON.
        kanjidic.json is valid JSON.
        linedecomps.json is valid JSON.
        radkfile-radicals.json is valid JSON.

DEPENDENCIES
    Carp

EXPORTS
    The module exports nothing by default. Functions "parse_json",
    "parse_json_safe", "read_json", "valid_json" and "assert_valid_json", as
    well as the old function names "validate_json", "json_file_to_perl", and
    "json_to_perl", can be exported on request.

    All of the functions can be exported using the tag ':all':

        use JSON::Parse ':all';

TESTING
  Internal testing code
    The module incorporates extensive testing related to the production of
    error messages and validation of input. Some of the testing code is
    supplied with the module in the /t/ subdirectory of the distribution.

    More extensive testing code is in the git repository. This is not
    supplied in the CPAN distribution. A script, randomjson.pl
    <https://github.com/benkasminbullock/JSON-Parse/033269fa8972fdce8626aa65
    cd11a5394ab50492/randomjson.pl>, generates a set number of bytes of
    random JSON and checks that the module's bytewise validation of input is
    correct. It does this by taking a valid fragment, then adding each
    possible byte from 0 to 255 to see whether the module correctly
    identifies it as valid or invalid at that point, then randomly picking
    one of the valid bytes and adding it to the fragment and continuing the
    process until a complete valid JSON input is formed. The module has
    undergone about a billion repetitions of this test.

    This setup relies on a C file, json-random-test.c
    <https://github.com/benkasminbullock/JSON-Parse/033269fa8972fdce8626aa65
    cd11a5394ab50492/json-random-test.c>, which isn't in the CPAN
    distribution, and it also requires Json3.xs
    <https://github.com/benkasminbullock/JSON-Parse/033269fa8972fdce8626aa65
    cd11a5394ab50492/Json3.xs> to be edited to make the macro "TESTRANDOM"
    true (uncomment line 7 of the file). The testing code uses C
    setjmp/longjmp, so it's not guaranteed to work on all operating systems
    and is commented out for CPAN releases.

    A pure C version called random-test.c
    <https://github.com/benkasminbullock/JSON-Parse/033269fa8972fdce8626aa65
    cd11a5394ab50492/random-test.c> also exists. This applies exactly the
    same tests, and requires no Perl at all.

    If you're interested in testing your own JSON parser, the outputs
    generated by randomjson.pl
    <https://github.com/benkasminbullock/JSON-Parse/033269fa8972fdce8626aa65
    cd11a5394ab50492/randomjson.pl> are quite a good place to start. The
    default is to produce UTF-8 output, which looks pretty horrible since it
    tends to produce long strings of UTF-8 garbage. (This is because it
    chooses randomly from 256 bytes and the end-of-string marker """ has
    only a 1/256 chance of being chosen, so the strings tend to get long and
    messy). You can mess with the internals of JSON::Parse by setting
    MAXBYTE in json-common.c to 0x80, recompiling (you can ignore the
    compiler warnings), and running randomjson.pl again to get just ASCII
    random JSON things. This breaks the UTF-8 functionality of JSON::Parse,
    so please don't install that version.

  JSON Parsing Test Suite
    JSON::Parse version 0.58 passes most of the JSON Parsing Test Suite,
    with the exception that JSON::Parse rejects various erroneous UTF-8
    inputs, for example JSON::Parse will throw an error for non-character
    code points like Unicode U+FFFF and U+10FFFF. This parser only accepts
    valid UTF-8 as input. See "UTF-8 only".

    In our opinion it would be a disservice to users of this module to allow
    bytes containing useless fragments such as incomplete parts of surrogate
    pairs, or invalid characters, just because the JSON specification
    doesn't actually explicitly demand rejecting these kinds of garbage
    inputs. Please see the function "daft_test" in the file xt/JPXT.pm for
    exactly which of these elements of the test suite we do not comply with.
    We note that this comment from Douglas Crockford, the inventor of JSON,
    JSON parser
    <https://github.com/douglascrockford/JSON-c/blob/master/utf8_decode.c#L3
    8-L43>, dated 2005, agrees with our opinion on this point.

    JSON::Parse version 0.58 also introduced "get_max_depth" and
    "set_max_depth" to prevent the stack overflow errors caused by some very
    deeply nested inputs such as those of the JSON Parsing Test Suite.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    Toby Inkster (TOBYINK) suggested some of the new function names which
    replaced the "OLD INTERFACE" names. Nicolas Immelman and Shlomi Fish
    (SHLOMIF) reported memory leaks which were fixed in 0.32 and 0.40.
    Github user kolmogorov42 reported a bug which led to 0.42. Github user
    SteveGlassman found an error in string copying for long strings, fixed
    in 0.57. Lars Dษชแด‡แด„แด‹แดแดก (DAXIM) pointed out problems with the JSON Parsing
    Test Suite which led to the addition of stack protection and
    "set_max_depth" and "get_max_depth" in 0.58.

AUTHOR
    Ben Bullock, <bkb AT cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT & LICENCE
    This package and associated files are copyright (C) 2013-2021 Ben
    Bullock.

    You can use, copy, modify and redistribute this package and associated
    files under the Perl Artistic Licence or the GNU General Public Licence.


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