Skip to content

dpranke/pyjson5

Repository files navigation

pyjson5

A Python implementation of the JSON5 data format.

JSON5 extends the JSON data interchange format to make it slightly more usable as a configuration language:

  • JavaScript-style comments (both single and multi-line) are legal.

  • Object keys may be unquoted if they are legal ECMAScript identifiers

  • Objects and arrays may end with trailing commas.

  • Strings can be single-quoted, and multi-line string literals are allowed.

There are a few other more minor extensions to JSON; see the above page for the full details.

This project implements a reader and writer implementation for Python; where possible, it mirrors the standard Python JSON API package for ease of use.

There is one notable difference from the JSON api: the load() and loads() methods support optionally checking for (and rejecting) duplicate object keys; pass allow_duplicate_keys=False to do so (duplicates are allowed by default).

This is an early release. It has been reasonably well-tested, but it is SLOW. It can be 1000-6000x slower than the C-optimized JSON module, and is 200x slower (or more) than the pure Python JSON module.

Please Note: This library only handles JSON5 documents, it does not allow you to read arbitrary JavaScript. For example, bare integers can be legal object keys in JavaScript, but they aren't in JSON5.

Known issues

  • Did I mention that it is SLOW?

  • The implementation follows Python3's json implementation where possible. This means that the encoding method to dump() is ignored, and unicode strings are always returned.

  • The cls keyword argument that json.load()/json.loads() accepts to specify a custom subclass of JSONDecoder is not and will not be supported, because this implementation uses a completely different approach to parsing strings and doesn't have anything like the JSONDecoder class.

  • The cls keyword argument that json.dump()/json.dumps() accepts is also not supported, for consistency with json5.load(). The default keyword is supported, though, and might be able to serve as a workaround.

Contributing

On Mac

The easiest thing to do is to install uv and use uv and the //run script to develop things. See ./run --help for the various commands that are supported. glop is the parser generator tool used to generate a parser from the grammar in json5/json5.g.

$ brew install uv
$ git clone https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5
$ git clone https://github.com/dpranke/glop
$ cd pyjson5
$ source $(./run devenv)  # To activate a venv w/ all the needed dev tools.

On other platforms

Install uv via whatever mechanism is appropriate.

Running the tests

$ ./run tests

Updating the packages

# Update the version in json5/version.py to $VERSION, which should be of
# the form X.Y.Z where X, Y, and Z are numbers.
$ git commit -a -m "Bump the version to $VERSION"
$ ./run regen
$ ./run presubmit
$ git tag "v$VERSION"
$ ./run build
$ ./run publish --prod
$ git push origin
$ git push --tags origin

(Assuming you have upload privileges to PyPI and the GitHub repo, of course.)

Version History / Release Notes

  • v0.9.28 (2024-11-11)

    • Fix GitHub CI to install uv so ./run tests works properly.
    • Mark Python3.13 as supported in package metadata.
    • Update dev package dependencies (note that the latest versions of coverage and pylint no longer work w/ Python3.8)
  • v0.9.27 (2024-11-10)

    • Fix typo in //README.md
  • v0.9.26 (2024-11-10)

    • GitHub issue #82 Add support for the strict parameter to load()/loads().
    • Significantly rework the infra and the run script to be contemporary.
  • v0.9.25 (2024-04-12)

    • GitHub issue #81 Explicitly specify the directory to use for the package in pyproject.toml.
  • v0.9.24 (2024-03-16)

    • Update GitHub workflow config to remove unnecessary steps and run on pull requests as well as commits.
    • Added note about removing hypothesize in v0.9.23.
    • No code changes.
  • v0.9.23 (2024-03-16)

    • Lots of cleanup:
      • Removed old code needed for Python2 compatibility.
      • Removed tests using hypothesize. This ran model-based checks and didn't really add anything useful in terms of coverage to the test suite, and it introduced dependencies and slowed down the tests significantly. It was a good experiment but I think we're better off without it.
      • Got everything linting cleanly with pylint 3.1 and ruff check using ruff 0.3.3 (Note that commit message in 00d73a3 says pylint 3.11, which is a typo).
      • Code reformatted with ruff format
      • Added missing tests to bring coverage up to 100%.
      • Lots of minor code changes as the result of linting and coverage testing, but no intentional functional differences.
  • v0.9.22 (2024-03-06)

    • Attempt to fix the GitHub CI configuration now that setup.py is gone. Also, test on 3.12 instead of 3.11.
    • No code changes.
  • v0.9.21 (2024-03-06)

    • Moved the benchmarks/*.json data files' license information to //LICENSE to (hopefully) make the Google linter happy.
  • v0.9.20 (2024-03-03)

    • Added json5.__version__ in addition to json5.VERSION.
    • More packaging modernization (no more setup.{cfg,py} files).
    • Mark Python3.12 as supported in project.classifiers.
    • Updated the //run script to use python3.
  • v0.9.19 (2024-03-03)

    • Replaced the benchmarking data files that came from chromium.org with three files obtained from other datasets on GitHub. Since this repo is vendored into the chromium/src repo it was occasionally confusing people who thought the data was actually used for non-benchmarking purposes and thus updating it for whatever reason.
    • No code changes.
  • v0.9.18 (2024-02-29)

    • Add typing information to the module. This is kind of a big change, but there should be no functional differences.
  • v0.9.17 (2024-02-19)

    • Move from setup.py to pyproject.toml.
    • No code changes (other than the version increasing).
  • v0.9.16 (2024-02-19)

    • Drop Python2 from setup.py
    • Add minimal packaging instructions to //README.md.
  • v0.9.15 (2024-02-19)

    • Merge in Pull request #66 to include the tests and sample file in a source distribution.
  • v0.9.14 (2023-05-14)

  • v0.9.13 (2023-03-16)

    • GitHub PR #64 Remove a field from one of the JSON benchmark files to reduce confusion in Chromium.
    • No code changes.
  • v0.9.12 (2023-01-02)

    • Fix GitHub Actions config file to no longer test against Python 3.6 or 3.7. For now we will only test against an "oldest" release (3.8 in this case) and a "current" release (3.11 in this case).
  • v0.9.11 (2023-01-02)

    • GitHub issue #60 Fixed minor Python2 compatibility issue by referring to float("inf") instead of math.inf.
  • v0.9.10 (2022-08-18)

    • GitHub issue #58 Updated the //README.md to be clear that parsing arbitrary JS code may not work.
    • Otherwise, no code changes.
  • v0.9.9 (2022-08-01)

    • GitHub issue #57 Fixed serialization for objects that subclass int or float: Previously we would use the objects str implementation, but that might result in an illegal JSON5 value if the object had customized str to return something illegal. Instead, we follow the lead of the JSON module and call int.__repr__ or float.__repr__ directly.
    • While I was at it, I added tests for dumps(-inf) and dumps(nan) when those were supposed to be disallowed by allow_nan=False.
  • v0.9.8 (2022-05-08)

    • GitHub issue #47 Fixed error reporting in some cases due to how parsing was handling nested rules in the grammar - previously the reported location for the error could be far away from the point where it actually happened.
  • v0.9.7 (2022-05-06)

    • GitHub issue #52 Fixed behavior of default fn in dump and dumps. Previously we didn't require the function to return a string, and so we could end up returning something that wasn't actually valid. This change now matches the behavior in the json module. Note: This is a potentially breaking change.
  • v0.9.6 (2021-06-21)

    • Bump development status classifier to 5 - Production/Stable, which the library feels like it is at this point. If I do end up significantly reworking things to speed it up and/or to add round-trip editing, that'll likely be a 2.0. If this version has no reported issues, I'll likely promote it to 1.0.
    • Also bump the tested Python versions to 2.7, 3.8 and 3.9, though earlier Python3 versions will likely continue to work as well.
    • GitHub issue #46 Fix incorrect serialization of custom subtypes
    • Make it possible to run the tests if hypothesis isn't installed.
  • v0.9.5 (2020-05-26)

    • Miscellaneous non-source cleanups in the repo, including setting up GitHub Actions for a CI system. No changes to the library from v0.9.4, other than updating the version.
  • v0.9.4 (2020-03-26)

  • v0.9.3 (2020-03-17)

    • GitHub pull #35 Fix from pastelmind@ for dump() not passing the right args to dumps().
    • Fix from p.skouzos@novafutur.com to remove the tests directory from the setup call, making the package a bit smaller.
  • v0.9.2 (2020-03-02)

  • v0.9.1 (2020-02-09)

    • GitHub issue #33: Fix stray trailing comma when dumping an object with an invalid key.
  • v0.9.0 (2020-01-30)

    • GitHub issue #29: Fix an issue where objects keys that started with a reserved word were incorrectly quoted.
    • GitHub issue #30: Fix an issue where dumps() incorrectly thought a data structure was cyclic in some cases.
    • GitHub issue #32: Allow for non-string keys in dicts passed to dump()/dumps(). Add an allow_duplicate_keys=False to prevent possible ill-formed JSON that might result.
  • v0.8.5 (2019-07-04)

    • GitHub issue #25: Add LICENSE and README.md to the dist.
    • GitHub issue #26: Fix printing of empty arrays and objects with indentation, fix misreporting of the position on parse failures in some cases.
  • v0.8.4 (2019-06-11)

    • Updated the version history, too.
  • v0.8.3 (2019-06-11)

    • Tweaked the README, bumped the version, forgot to update the version history :).
  • v0.8.2 (2019-06-11)

    • Actually bump the version properly, to 0.8.2.
  • v0.8.1 (2019-06-11)

    • Fix bug in setup.py that messed up the description. Unfortunately, I forgot to bump the version for this, so this also identifies as 0.8.0.
  • v0.8.0 (2019-06-11)

    • Add allow_duplicate_keys=True as a default argument to json5.load()/json5.loads(). If you set the key to False, duplicate keys in a single dict will be rejected. The default is set to True for compatibility with json.load(), earlier versions of json5, and because it's simply not clear if people would want duplicate checking enabled by default.
  • v0.7 (2019-03-31)

    • Changes dump()/dumps() to not quote object keys by default if they are legal identifiers. Passing quote_keys=True will turn that off and always quote object keys.
    • Changes dump()/dumps() to insert trailing commas after the last item in an array or an object if the object is printed across multiple lines (i.e., if indent is not None). Passing trailing_commas=False will turn that off.
    • The json5.tool command line tool now supports the --indent, --[no-]quote-keys, and --[no-]trailing-commas flags to allow for more control over the output, in addition to the existing --as-json flag.
    • The json5.tool command line tool no longer supports reading from multiple files, you can now only read from a single file or from standard input.
    • The implementation no longer relies on the standard json module for anything. The output should still match the json module (except as noted above) and discrepancies should be reported as bugs.
  • v0.6.2 (2019-03-08)

  • v0.6.1 (2018-05-22)

    • Cleaned up a couple minor nits in the package.
  • v0.6.0 (2017-11-28)

    • First implementation that attempted to implement 100% of the spec.
  • v0.5.0 (2017-09-04)

    • First implementation that supported the full set of kwargs that the json module supports.

About

A Python implementation of the JSON5 data format

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published