carp_serializable 2.0.0 carp_serializable: ^2.0.0 copied to clipboard
Polymorphic JSON serialization based on json_serializable annotations.
CARP Serialization #
A package for polymorphic serialization to/from JSON build on top of json_serializable.
This package allows for implementing serialization and deserialization to/from JSON. This is done using the json_serializable package, so please study how the json_serializable package works, before using this package.
The key feature of this package is that it extends json_serializable with support for serialization of polymorphic classes, i.e. classes that inherits from each other. This is done by adding type information to the json.
Getting started #
To use this package, add carp_serializable
and json_annotation
as dependencies in your pubspec.yaml
file. Also add build_runner
and json_serializable
to the dev_dependencies
:
dependencies:
json_annotation: ^latest
carp_serializable: ^latest
dev_dependencies:
build_runner: any # For building json serialization
json_serializable: any
Usage #
To support polymorphic serialization, each class should:
- extend from
Serializable
- annotate the class with
@JsonSerializable
- add the three json methods
Function get fromJsonFunction => ...
factory ...fromJson(...)
Map<String, dynamic> toJson() => ...
- register the classes in the
FromJsonFactory()
registry. - build json function using the
flutter pub run build_runner build --delete-conflicting-outputs
command
Below is a simple example of two classes A
and B
where B extends A.
@JsonSerializable()
class A extends Serializable {
int index;
A([this.index = 0]) : super();
@override
Function get fromJsonFunction => _$AFromJson;
factory A.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) => FromJsonFactory().fromJson<A>(json);
@override
Map<String, dynamic> toJson() => _$AToJson(this);
}
@JsonSerializable(includeIfNull: false)
class B extends A {
String? str;
B([super.index, this.str]) : super();
@override
Function get fromJsonFunction => _$BFromJson;
factory B.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) => FromJsonFactory().fromJson<B>(json);
@override
Map<String, dynamic> toJson() => _$BToJson(this);
}
Note that the naming of the fromJson()
and toJson()
functions follows the json_serializable package. For example the fromJson
function for class A
is called _$AFromJson
.
The fromJsonFunction
must be registered on app startup (before use of de-serialization) in the FromJsonFactory
singleton, like this:
FromJsonFactory().register(A());
For this purpose it is helpful to have an empty constructor, but any constructor will work, since only getting the fromJsonFunction
function is used during registration.
Polymorphic serialization is handled by setting the __type
property in the Serializable
class. Per default, an object's runtimeType
is used as the __type
for an object. Hence, the JSON of objects of type A
and B
would look like this:
{
"__type": "A",
"index": 1
}
{
"__type": "B",
"index": 2
"str": "abc"
}
However, if you want to specify your own class type (e.g., if you get json serialized from another language which uses a package structure like Java, C# or Kotlin), you can specify the json type in the jsonType
property of the class.
For example, if the class B
above should use a different __type
annotation, using the following:
@JsonSerializable()
class B extends A {
<<as above>>
String get jsonType => 'dk.carp.$runtimeType';
}
In which case the JSON would look like:
{
"__type": "dk.carp.B",
"index": 2
"str": "abc"
}
You can also create nested classes, like this class C
:
@JsonSerializable(explicitToJson: true)
class C extends A {
B b;
C(super.index, this.b) : super();
@override
Function get fromJsonFunction => _$CFromJson;
factory C.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) => FromJsonFactory().fromJson<C>(json);
@override
Map<String, dynamic> toJson() => _$CToJson(this);
}
The following statement;
B b = B(2, 'abc');
C c = C(3, b);
will generate json like this:
{
"__type": "C",
"index": 3,
"b": {
"__type": "dk.carp.B",
"index": 2,
"str": "abc"
}
}
Note that in order to support "deep" or nested toJson serialization, you need to annotate the class with
@JsonSerializable(explicitToJson: true)
.
Once the serialization code is written as above, run the
flutter pub run build_runner build --delete-conflicting-outputs
command as usual to generate the toJson()
and fromJson()
methods.
Exception Handling #
When trying to deserialize an object from JSON, this package looks up the fromJson
function in the FromJsonFactory
. In case the type is not found - either because it is unknown or has not been registered - an SerializationException
will be thrown.
In order to avoid an exception, you can specify a default object to use in this exception case by specifying a notAvailable
parameter to the fromJson
method, like this:
class B extends A {
<<as above>>
factory B.fromJson(Map<String, dynamic> json) =>
FromJsonFactory().fromJson<B>(json, notAvailable: B(-1));
}
In case a deserialization method for B is not found, then the object B(-1)
is returned. This will not be the "correct" object, but at least the serialization is not stopped. This is useful in deserialization of large, nested JSON.
Universal Unique IDs #
Often in serialization, there is a need to generate or use unique IDs. Hence, the package also support the generation of a simple time-based Universal Unique ID (UUID):
// Generate a v1 (time-based) id
var uuid = Uuid().v1;
Note, however, that this UUID is very simple. If you need more sophisticated UUIDs, use the uuid package.
Features and bugs #
Please read about existing issues and file new feature requests and bug reports at the issue tracker.
License #
This software is copyright (c) the Technical University of Denmark (DTU) and is part of the Copenhagen Research Platform. This software is available 'as-is' under a MIT license.