meilisearch/permissive-json-pointer/README.md
Tamo 1ef87cc6d0
chore: move permissive-json-pointer in the meilisearch repository
Update permissive-json-pointer/src/lib.rs

Co-authored-by: Clément Renault <clement@meilisearch.com>
2022-04-20 19:24:41 +02:00

134 lines
2.3 KiB
Markdown
Raw Permalink Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

# Permissive json pointer
This crate provide an interface a little bit similar to what you know as “json pointer”.
But its actually doing something quite different.
## The API
The crate provide only one function called [`select_values`].
It takes one object in parameter and a list of selectors.
It then returns a new object containing only the fields you selected.
## The selectors
The syntax for the selector is easier than with other API.
There is only ONE special symbol, its the `.`.
If you write `dog` and provide the following object;
```json
{
"dog": "bob",
"cat": "michel"
}
```
Youll get back;
```json
{
"dog": "bob",
}
```
Easy right?
Now the dot can either be used as a field name, or as a nested object.
For example, if you have the following json;
```json
{
"dog.name": "jean",
"dog": {
"name": "bob",
"age": 6
}
}
```
What a crappy json! But never underestimate your users, they [_WILL_](https://xkcd.com/1172/)
somehow base their entire workflow on this kind of json.
Here with the `dog.name` selector both fields will be
selected and the following json will be returned;
```json
{
"dog.name": "jean",
"dog": {
"name": "bob",
}
}
```
And as you can guess, this crate is as permissive as possible.
Itll match everything it can!
Consider this even more crappy json;
```json
{
"pet.dog.name": "jean",
"pet.dog": {
"name": "bob"
},
"pet": {
"dog.name": "michel"
},
"pet": {
"dog": {
"name": "milan"
}
}
}
```
If you write `pet.dog.name` everything will be selected.
## Matching arrays
With this kind of selectors you cant match a specific element in an array.
Your selector will be applied to all the element _in_ the array.
Consider the following json;
```json
{
"pets": [
{
"animal": "dog",
"race": "bernese mountain",
},
{
"animal": "dog",
"race": "golden retriever",
},
{
"animal": "cat",
"age": 8,
}
]
}
```
With the filter `pets.animal` youll get;
```json
{
"pets": [
{
"animal": "dog",
},
{
"animal": "dog",
},
{
"animal": "cat",
}
]
}
```
The empty element in an array gets removed. So if you were to look
for `pets.age` you would only get;
```json
{
"pets": [
{
"age": 8,
}
]
}
```
And I think thats all you need to know 🎉