On Wed, Mar 21, 2018 at 07:28:26PM +0000, g...@jeffhostetler.com wrote:

> It includes a new "struct json_writer" which is used to guide the
> accumulation of JSON data -- knowing whether an object or array is
> currently being composed.  This allows error checking during construction.
> 
> It also allows construction of nested structures using an inline model (in
> addition to the original bottom-up composition).
> 
> The test helper has been updated to include both the original unit tests and
> a new scripting API to allow individual tests to be written directly in our
> t/t*.sh shell scripts.

Thanks for all of this. The changes look quite sensible to me (I do
still suspect we could do the "first_item" thing without having to
allocate, but I really like the assertions you were able to put in).

> So I think for our uses here, defining this as "JSON-like" is probably the
> best answer.  We write the strings as we received them (from the file system,
> the index, or whatever).  These strings are properly escaped WRT double
> quotes, backslashes, and control characters, so we shouldn't have an issue
> with decoders getting out of sync -- only with them rejecting non-UTF-8
> sequences.

Yeah, I think I've come to the same conclusion. My main goal in raising
it now was to see if there was some other format we might use before we
go too far down the JSON road. But as far as I can tell there really
isn't another good option.

> WRT binary data, I had not intended using this for binary data.  And without
> knowing what kinds or quantity of binary data we might use it for, I'd like
> to ignore this for now.

Yeah, I don't have any plans here either. I was thinking more about
things like author names and file paths.

-Peff

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