phputil / json
A JSON encoder and decoder that can also convert PHP objects with private or protected attributes.
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Requires
- php: >=5.3
- phputil/rtti: >=1.4
README
A JSON encoder and decoder that can also convert PHP objects with private or protected attributes.
We use semantic versioning. See our releases.
Classes
Installation
composer require phputil/json
Depends only on phputil\RTTI. Requires PHP >= 5.4
.
Example 1
Converting an object with private
or protected
attributes.
<?php require_once 'vendor/autoload.php'; use \phputil\JSON; class Foo { private $a = 1; protected $b = 2; public $c = 3; function getA() { return $this->a; } function getB() { return $this->b; } function getC() { return $this->c; } } echo JSON::encode( new Foo() ); // { "a": 1, "b": 2, "c": 3 } ?>
Example 2
Converting a dynamic object.
$obj = new stdClass(); $obj->name = 'Suzan'; $obj->age = 21; echo JSON::encode( $obj ); // { "name": "Suzan", "age": 21 }
Example 3
Converting an array
of dynamic objects to JSON and back again.
$obj1 = new stdClass(); $obj1->name = 'Bob'; $obj2 = new stdClass(); $obj2->name = 'Suzan'; $obj2->age = 21; $json = JSON::encode( array( $obj1, $obj2 ) ); echo $json; // [ { "name": "Bob" }, { "name": "Suzan", "age": 21 } ] $array = JSON::decode( $json ); var_dump( $array ); // array with the two PHP dynamic objects
Example 4
Converting attributes from classes that use the __call
magic method.
class Foo { private $a = 1; protected $b = 2; public $c = 3; function __call( $name, $args ) { if ( 'getA' === $name ) { return $this->a; } if ( 'getB' === $name ) { return $this->b; } if ( 'getC' === $name ) { return $this->c; } } } echo JSON::encode( new Foo() ); // { "a": 1, "b": 2, "c": 3 }
Example 5
Ignoring NULL
values in objects' attributes or array values.
$arr = array( 'name' => 'Bob', 'phone' => null, 'age' => 21 ); // phone is null // true as the third argument makes encode() to ignore null values echo JSON::encode( $arr, 'get', true ); // { "name": "Bob", "age": 21 }
Example 6
Using value conversors. A value conversor is a function to convert values of a certain type correctly. For example, suppose that you need to convert values of the type DateTime
to the format year-month-day
. All you need is to register the type and a function to convert its values, using the static method addConversion
:
JSON::addConversion( 'DateTime', function( $value ) { return $value->format( 'Y-m-d' ); // year-month-day } ); $obj = new stdClass(); $obj->user = 'bob'; $obj->birthdate = new DateTime( "12/31/1980" ); // month/day/year echo JSON::encode( $obj ); // { "user": "bob", "birthdate": "1980-12-31" }