On Thursday, 17 May 2012 at 14:08:27 UTC, Vincent wrote:
On Sunday, 25 March 2012 at 17:50:45 UTC, Andrea Fontana wrote:
Hope it's clear...
Nope, it's something like chess and have nothing common with
simplicity of the real JSON usage! This is example from C#:
var p = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Person>("{some real JSON,
not crapy EOS}");
var str = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(p);
That's it! And this is how it SHOULD be implemented. Cannot
catch why this stupid realization came to standard library...
:((
I'm pretty new to D, but I am an expert Java developer, self
claimed. I am fluent in many other languages as well. In all
languages there is a basis documentation.
Read the documentation for parseJSON and you'll see that it
should be possible to send in a straight JSON string. I think the
complex example is a bit stupid. It scares developers away from
the lang.
Feel free to correct me of course.