5531678e9e
* Mitigate HTTP/RPC Services Allow Unbounded Resource Usage Fixes #7159. Co-authored-by: Matt Keeler <mkeeler@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Paul Banks <banks@banksco.de> |
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.codeclimate.yml | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
Gopkg.lock | ||
Gopkg.toml | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
Taskfile.yml | ||
accessors.go | ||
constants.go | ||
conversions.go | ||
doc.go | ||
map.go | ||
mutations.go | ||
security.go | ||
tests.go | ||
type_specific_codegen.go | ||
value.go |
README.md
Objx
Objx - Go package for dealing with maps, slices, JSON and other data.
Get started:
- Install Objx with one line of code, or update it with another
- Check out the API Documentation http://godoc.org/github.com/stretchr/objx
Overview
Objx provides the objx.Map
type, which is a map[string]interface{}
that exposes a powerful Get
method (among others) that allows you to easily and quickly get access to data within the map, without having to worry too much about type assertions, missing data, default values etc.
Pattern
Objx uses a preditable pattern to make access data from within map[string]interface{}
easy. Call one of the objx.
functions to create your objx.Map
to get going:
m, err := objx.FromJSON(json)
NOTE: Any methods or functions with the Must
prefix will panic if something goes wrong, the rest will be optimistic and try to figure things out without panicking.
Use Get
to access the value you're interested in. You can use dot and array
notation too:
m.Get("places[0].latlng")
Once you have sought the Value
you're interested in, you can use the Is*
methods to determine its type.
if m.Get("code").IsStr() { // Your code... }
Or you can just assume the type, and use one of the strong type methods to extract the real value:
m.Get("code").Int()
If there's no value there (or if it's the wrong type) then a default value will be returned, or you can be explicit about the default value.
Get("code").Int(-1)
If you're dealing with a slice of data as a value, Objx provides many useful methods for iterating, manipulating and selecting that data. You can find out more by exploring the index below.
Reading data
A simple example of how to use Objx:
// Use MustFromJSON to make an objx.Map from some JSON
m := objx.MustFromJSON(`{"name": "Mat", "age": 30}`)
// Get the details
name := m.Get("name").Str()
age := m.Get("age").Int()
// Get their nickname (or use their name if they don't have one)
nickname := m.Get("nickname").Str(name)
Ranging
Since objx.Map
is a map[string]interface{}
you can treat it as such. For example, to range
the data, do what you would expect:
m := objx.MustFromJSON(json)
for key, value := range m {
// Your code...
}
Installation
To install Objx, use go get:
go get github.com/stretchr/objx
Staying up to date
To update Objx to the latest version, run:
go get -u github.com/stretchr/objx
Supported go versions
We support the lastest two major Go versions, which are 1.8 and 1.9 at the moment.
Contributing
Please feel free to submit issues, fork the repository and send pull requests!