JSON in Ruby
-
Dan already explained more than I could have. He also wrote a nice ruby script to include additional folders in $LOAD_PATH. Read all about it here: http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=180&t=29412&p=342471&hilit=!loadpaths
-
@dan rathbun said:
@myhand said:
I tried to get this to work but keep getting errors when trying to include the library:
require 'yajl'
If you do not specify some kind of filepath, then the file must be in one of the directories listed in the$LOAD_PATH
array.Ruby's
require()
first checks to see if the argument resolves to an absolute path, and if so, checks to see if the file exists, and if true, attempts to load it.Secondly, it checks to see if the argument is a relative path (incl. no path at all,) and if so,
require()
then iterates the$LOAD_PATH
array prepending the base paths in front of your relative path. If it finds match, it loads the file, IF such a path is NOT ALREADY present in the$LOADED_FEATURES
(aka$"
) array.Thank you Dan for the detailed explanation and links to starter guides. I will review and try this when I get home tonight. One interesting point in this case though is that the only file called yajl.* is c:/temp/yajl.rb which is also the file that contains the
require 'yajl/yajl'
line. There is a a subdirectory called yajl, but no files named "yajl.rb", "yajl.so" or "yajl.dll" anywhere else in the yajl library distribution... So cannot see how adding the "c:/temp" path to $LOAD_PATH will find the file as it does not appear to exist.
Will let you know.
-
@myhand said:
There is a a subdirectory called yajl, but no files named "yajl.rb", "yajl.so" or "yajl.dll" anywhere else in the yajl library distribution... So cannot see how adding the "c:/temp" path to $LOAD_PATH will find the file as it does not appear to exist.
Sounds like you don't have the complete library.
This is a list of files I have in my Yajl folder:[...]\rubylibs\yajl.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\1.8\yajl.so [...]\rubylibs\yajl\1.9\yajl.so [...]\rubylibs\yajl\bzip2.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\bzip2\stream_reader.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\bzip2\stream_writer.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\deflate.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\deflate\stream_reader.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\deflate\stream_writer.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\gzip.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\gzip\stream_reader.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\gzip\stream_writer.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\http_stream.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\json_gem.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\json_gem\encoding.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\json_gem\parsing.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\version.rb [...]\rubylibs\yajl\yajl.rb
-
@oricatmos said:
@myhand said:
There is a a subdirectory called yajl, but no files named "yajl.rb", "yajl.so" or "yajl.dll" anywhere else in the yajl library distribution... So cannot see how adding the "c:/temp" path to $LOAD_PATH will find the file as it does not appear to exist.
Sounds like you don't have the complete library.
This is a list of files I have in my Yajl folder:Yes OricAtmos, I think you are right. I took my version from here
https://rubygems.org/gems/yajl-ruby.
As I cannot install the gem in Sketchup I unzipped the gem file and took the files from the lib directory. This gives me the following files which is clearly not complete.
C;\Temp\lib\yajl C;\Temp\lib\yajl.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\bzip2 C;\Temp\lib\yajl\bzip2.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\deflate C;\Temp\lib\yajl\deflate.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\gzip C;\Temp\lib\yajl\gzip.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\http_stream.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\json_gem C;\Temp\lib\yajl\json_gem.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\version.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\bzip2\stream_reader.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\bzip2\stream_writer.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\deflate\stream_reader.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\deflate\stream_writer.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\gzip\stream_reader.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\gzip\stream_writer.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\json_gem\encoding.rb C;\Temp\lib\yajl\json_gem\parsing.rb
Where did you get the library from?
Cheers,
myhand
-
@myhand said:
Where did you get the library from?
I don't remember where I got the Windows binaries from. Perhaps I still have a bookmark in my web browser at work, but right now I'm at home and can't have a look. But since I have access to our project repository from home I can offer you this:
-
@oricatmos said:
@myhand said:
Where did you get the library from?
I don't remember where I got the Windows binaries from. Perhaps I still have a bookmark in my web browser at work, but right now I'm at home and can't have a look. But since I have access to our project repository from home I can offer you this:
Thanks OricAtmos! Will give it a try.
-
@myhand said:
Thanks OricAtmos! Will give it a try.
Did you get it to work? Unfortunately I've been unsuccessful in finding out where I got it from.
-
@oricatmos said:
@myhand said:
Thanks OricAtmos! Will give it a try.
Did you get it to work? Unfortunately I've been unsuccessful in finding out where I got it from.
Sorry, I got a bit tied up with trying to solve the MAC bug in my Material_Maintenance Plugin.
Thank you, I have now got it to not throw an error, but my test code does not seem to serialise objects, so will need to read the library docs to see what I am doing wrong
` require 'yajl'
h = {"key1", "val1", "key2", "val2"};
obj = ["Hello", "world", "I am here", ["where", "what", "are", "you"]];
class TestClass
@name = nil;
@adress = nil;
@list = nil;def initialize(p1, p2)
@name, @adress = p1, p2;
@list = [1,2,3.01,-4.35];
endend
t = TestClass.new("Richo", "37 Scotland Rd, Buckhurst Hill, IG9 5NP");
obj = ["Hello", "world", t, "I am here", ["where", "what", "are", "you"]];
str = Yajl::Encoder.encode(obj);
puts str;`
Produces
["Hello","world","#<TestClass;0x144d9cc0>","I am here",["where","what","are","you"]]
Instead of the
["Hello","world",{"@list";[1,2,3.01,-4.35],"@name";"Richo","@adress";"37 Scotland Rd, Buckhurst Hill, IG9 5NP"},"I am here",["where","what","are","you"]]
I would expect and which is what my simple JSON Serializer produces.
-
Hi OricAtmos,
I got it to work now thank you. It seems that it can only serialise Hash and Array objects though, which is good enough for most cases I guess. Given the non-trivial install and given the fact that it uses binary libraries, I suspect it will not work on a MAC either without libraries built for that.
I will therefore continue with my simple JSON encoder, which while probably much slower, is simple to install and should work out of the box on a MAC as it is pure RUBY. It can also encode standard objects which can be useful.
Thanks for your help in getting this working though. I will keep it in mind if I ever have to do large data sets.
-
All right, I wasn't aware Yajl isn't able to work with arbitrary objects. I was only using it to encode/decode hashes with simple values and arrays.
-
Hi guys,
I need some help. I have run into problems creating a json encoding where a string contains a single quote char. e.g. "Betty's pie shop"
somehow ruby creates a new char which replaces the y and the '. You can see this by executing the following command:
puts "Betty's pie shop"
and I get
Betts pie shops pie shop
if you past this into an editor that supports UTF8 you see that a special char has been added into where the y and ' was. Also note that the last bit of the string is now duplicated.
I can escape it, but this is then not a valid json string as json does not allow you to escape the ' char.
-
May be your encoding... only fails with single quotes here
> puts "Betty's pie shop" Betty's pie shop nil > p "Betty's pie shop" "Betty's pie shop" nil > print "Betty's pie shop\n" Betty's pie shop nil > print 'Betty's pie shop\n' Error; #<SyntaxError; (eval); compile error (eval); parse error, unexpected tIDENTIFIER, expecting $ print 'Betty's pie shop\n' ^> (eval)
john
-
@myhand said:
... somehow ruby creates a new char which replaces the y and the '. You can see this by executing the following command:
puts "Betty's pie shop"
and I get:
%(#008000)[>> Betts pie shops pie shop]
At the SketchUp Ruby Console:
` puts "Betty's pie shop"
>> Betty's pie shopputs "Betty's pie shop".inspect()
>> "Betty's pie shop"puts "Betty's pie shop".inspect().inspect()
>> ""Betty's pie shop""` -
s = %q(Dan's friggin' advice, "Hey, use Ruby's % lowercase 'q' interpretive delimiter. It's a great help when your bleepin' strings have "'" and '"' characters in them!")
%Q
and%
is a double-quoted string. You can choose any 2 delimeters you want.name = %$MyHand$
str = %q{I want some quotes right "HERE"! Let's go.}
-
@driven said:
May be your encoding... only fails with single quotes here
johnThought so too initially. But I got the same results by typing straight into the Sketchup Ruby console... Can you set encoding at the Sketchup level?
-
@dan rathbun said:
At the SketchUp Ruby Console:
` puts "Betty's pie shop"
>> Betty's pie shopputs "Betty's pie shop".inspect()
>> "Betty's pie shop"puts "Betty's pie shop".inspect().inspect()
>> ""Betty's pie shop""`This works for me today on my work PC. So must be something specific with my Sketchup installation/version at home. Both are Version 8 out of the box installations on Windows. The one that corrupts the "'" char is the Pro addition, while the one at work is the Standard edition.
-
@dan rathbun said:
s = %q(Dan's friggin' advice, "Hey, use Ruby's % lowercase 'q' interpretive delimiter. It's a great help when your bleepin' strings have "'" and '"' characters in them!")
%Q
and%
is a double-quoted string. You can choose any 2 delimeters you want.name = %$MyHand$
str = %q{I want some quotes right "HERE"! Let's go.}
Thank you Dan, I will give this a go tonight. As you might have guessed though the actual string I am having problems with (not the pie shop one ) is ComponentDefinition name field. Something like "Bath 6'x34"x54"". So I never actually input the string, I am just reading it. So I am not sure how I will use the above technique to step around the problem. Will have to give it some thought.
-
Disable ALL plugins and libraries, (Sketchup::plugins_disabled=true, close SketchUp and restart,) then try again ...
If it works, then you've installed a plugin that changes the
String
base class. A very big no-no, in a shared Ruby environment, such as SketchUp embedded Ruby (or DoubleCAD XT embedded Ruby, etc.)In a normal "system" Ruby script, changing a base class doesn't matter because (99% of the time,) a script runs in it's own temporary Ruby process, finishes, and the Ruby process exits.
So.. the most likely culprit would be a library that is written to run temporarily in "system" Ruby, such as
Yajl
, or the standardJSON
library, that changes theString
class, or the global methods in mixin moduleKernel
(such asputs
,) or even stream classes, likeIO
.Encoding. It is set to UTF-8 by SketchUp just after it loads the interpreter. It should stay that way. Changing it via
$KCODE
is not a good idea as that (editable) feature has been removed in newer Ruby versions. (You'd just set your code up to fail in a newer SketchUp version if it distro's with Ruby v1.9.x) -
@myhand said:
This works for me today on my work PC. So must be something specific with my Sketchup installation/version at home. Both are Version 8 out of the box installations on Windows. The one that corrupts the "'" char is the Pro addition, while the one at work is the Standard edition.
Do you have the SketchUp Developer Tools installed? (https://github.com/thomthom/sketchup-developer-tools) Might be that it's interfering.
Try with just your plugin installed.
-
Thanks guys, I will give this a go tonight. Yes I do have the SketchUp Developer Tools installed.
Advertisement