JSON in Ruby
-
@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.
-
@myhand said:
... is
ComponentDefinition
name field. Something like "Bath 6'x34"x54"".OK.. yea that reminds me. We have similar problems with SketchUp's formatted Length strings when saving things into the registry with
Sketchup::write_default()
andSketchup::read_default()
methods.There are some topics on that and using
gsub()
andtr()
before writing values.
The situation is similar because we also get these values with embedded single quotes from the application. -
@thomthom said:
@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.
Yup it was the SketchUp Developer Tools. Disabling that fixed the problem thanks.
-
OK, with the single quote now working, I have run into the next (and hopefully the last) problem. It appears as if the
WebDialog.execute_script
method strips all \ characters from its arguments as it passes it into JavaScript. I think it is because it does a eval() call on the JS.
e.g.
js_command = "material_maintenance.Sketchup.callUI(\"a string >\\< with a \\\" in the middle\")"; puts "js_command = #{js_command}";
produces this in the Ruby console:
js_command = material_maintenance.Sketchup.callUI("a string >\< with a \" in the middle")
and this when you print the parameter to the callUI function as it hits JS.
a string >< with a " in the middle
replacing js_command with
js_command = "material_maintenance.Sketchup.callUI(\"a string >\\u005c\\u0022< with a \\u005c\\u0022 in the middle\")"
works and produces the desired output in JS
a string >\"< with a \" in the middle
but this feels a bit clunky. Any other ideas?
-
- You need to escape \ characters in the double-quoted javascript code that you want to bring into the webdialog (this first escaping is what makes a valid Ruby string).
%(#000000)["alert('C:\users')"] # bad Ruby string
%(#000000)["alert('C:\\users')"] # good Ruby string
- In the webdialog, the string arrives written in a script element. As always, the same escaping rules apply again:
%(#000000)[alert('C:\users')] // bad JavaScript code
%(#000000)[alert('C:\\users')] // good JavaScript code
=> So finally this means we need double escaping on the Ruby side!
%(#000000)["alert('C:\\\\users')"] # Ruby string
P.S: SketchUp does not offer error handling for syntax errors in the Ruby-to-JavaScript string. Assuming my js contains user generated data with unknown characters, or is broken (truncated), we will definitely get a popup about "Syntax Error" that we cannot suppress and handle in other ways. In order to get control of such errors, we could send the code as a JavaScript string and eval() it:
%(#000000)[webdialog.execute_script("try{eval(\"}bad_$yn7aX{\")}catch(e){}")]
All of this is an old story and to many people have suffered, discovered, solved this and re-invented the wheel. For an all-in-one solution that covers this and many other WebDialog issues (for example you will discovered that when sending \\\ from JS to Ruby, it randomly drops some ), please take a look and make use of the WebDialogX project.
- You need to escape \ characters in the double-quoted javascript code that you want to bring into the webdialog (this first escaping is what makes a valid Ruby string).
-
@myhand said:
method strips all \ characters from its arguments as it passes it into JavaScript. I think it is because it does a eval() call on the JS.
Almost - it injects a SCRIPT element in the webdialog - does pretty much the same thing.
So when you pass data to the WebDialog and something is amiss - check the string you're sending to the WebDialog - is it valid? What throws people off is that you have the quoting needed to create the Ruby string with the JS - and within the JS string you need to follow JS's own quoting and escaping rules.(Because execute_script adds a SCRIPT element for every call I prefer to remove the SCRIPT element on the JS side afterwards - as I don't like the idea of the DOM tree flooded with SCRIPT elements. I've yet to experience problems with it - but there's something about it that makes my OCD-nerve tingle.)
-
@aerilius said:
=> So finally this means we need double escaping on the Ruby side!
%(#000000)["alert('C:\\\\users')"] # Ruby string
I am sure I tried this last night, but will do some further tests again tonight.
@aerilius said:
In order to get control of such errors, we could send the code as a JavaScript string and eval() it:
%(#000000)[webdialog.execute_script("try{eval(\"}bad_$yn7aX{\")}catch(e){}")]
[/size]Nice idea, I might use this going forward.
@aerilius said:
please take a look and make use of the WebDialogX project.
I cannot access the content. I get "You do not have access to the wiki." message, even after I have registered.
-
@myhand said:
@aerilius said:
please take a look and make use of the WebDialogX project.
I cannot access the content. I get "You do not have access to the wiki." message, even after I have registered.
Sorry, it is a 5-slot private repository at this time, and we really need very experienced Rubyists for the slots.
And you are kinda re-inventing the wheel. Js has
%(#8000BF)[escape()]
and%(#8000BF)[unescape()]
, and Ruby has them in theURI
library.See topic: http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=180&t=49183#p442102
In fact I would vote for Ruby's
URI::Escape
module to be mixed into the SketchUp APIUI::WebDialog
class. -
@dan rathbun said:
Sorry, it is a 5-slot private repository at this time, and we really need very experienced Rubyists for the slots.
No problem Dan, I only looked there as Aerilius recommended I do so.
@dan rathbun said:
And you are kinda re-inventing the wheel. Js has
%(#8000BF)[escape()]
and%(#8000BF)[unescape()]
, and Ruby has them in theURI
library.See topic: http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=180&t=49183#p442102
In fact I would vote for Ruby's
URI::Escape
module to be mixed into the SketchUp APIUI::WebDialog
class.Thank you, I will try the URI library (I already use escape() in my latest JS code). I do not really want to reinvent the wheel, hence me asking the question here.
-
@aerilius said:
- You need to escape \ characters in the double-quoted javascript code that you want to bring into the webdialog (this first escaping is what makes a valid Ruby string).
%(#000000)["alert('C:\users')"] # bad Ruby string
%(#000000)["alert('C:\\users')"] # good Ruby string
- In the webdialog, the string arrives written in a script element. As always, the same escaping rules apply again:
%(#000000)[alert('C:\users')] // bad JavaScript code
%(#000000)[alert('C:\\users')] // good JavaScript code
=> So finally this means we need double escaping on the Ruby side!
%(#000000)["alert('C:\\\\users')"] # Ruby string
Thanks for a very clear explanation. I tried this last night and it worked. Need 7 '''s for a "!
- You need to escape \ characters in the double-quoted javascript code that you want to bring into the webdialog (this first escaping is what makes a valid Ruby string).
-
-
@dan rathbun said:
And you are kinda re-inventing the wheel. Js has
%(#8000BF)[escape()]
and%(#8000BF)[unescape()]
, and Ruby has them in theURI
library.See topic: http://sketchucation.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=180&t=49183#p442102
Thanks for this Dan! It works well, and I do not need to remember the number of slashes.
I see that escape() and unescape() are deprecated though and that you are recommended to use
decodeURI()
decodeURIComponent()
Which do you recommend or should I continue with unescape()?
-
@thomthom said:
@myhand said:
Need 7 '''s for a "!
What?
Sorry, meant you need
"a JSON escaped double quote need to be specified like this \\\\\\\" in Ruby for a WebDialog call"
to produce
"a JSON escaped double quote need to be specified like this \" in Ruby for a WebDialog call"
as the parameter of the JS function called.
-
Hmmm..
given a Js function named say()
.. and a Ruby string:
jarg = %q('a JSON escaped double quote need to be specified like this %q(\") in Ruby for a WebDialog call')
I usually do something like this:
dlg.execute_script("say(#{jarg});")
or I will leave the single quotes out of the jarg string, and put them in at the call ...
jarg = %q(a JSON escaped double quote need to be specified like this %q(\") in Ruby for a WebDialog call.)
dlg.execute_script( "say('" << jarg << "');" )
-
[quote="Myhand":31wco2xd]I see that
%(#8000BF)[escape()]
and%(#8000BF)[unescape()]
are deprecated (in Javascript,) though, and that you are recommending to use [them]
***%(#BF4000)[
@unknownuser said:]***
@unknownuser said:
](http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dz4x90hk(v)":31wco2xd]The unescape function should not be used to decode Uniform Resource Identifiers (URI). Use decodeURI and decodeURIComponent functions instead.
%(#8000BF)[decodeURI()]
%(#8000BF)[decodeURIComponent()]
Which do you recommend or should I continue with
%(#8000BF)[unescape()]
?The old functions are ASCII, the new ones are Unicode.
Taking a look at the most recent released ECMA-262 (but not the latest proposed revision,) the old functions are no longer listed.
see: ECMA-262, 5.1, Global Object: 15.1.3 URI Handling Function Properties
ECMAScript Language Specification
Standard ECMA-262
5.1 Edition / June 2011Link to the downloadable PDF of the specification.
But you need to handle the situation where an older browser does not have these functions so, write a wrapper in JS:
var unesc = function(uri) { var test = false; if (typeof(decodeURI) == "function") test = true; return test ? decodeURI(uri) ; unescape(uri); }
Advertisement