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JSON in Ruby

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  • O Offline
    OricAtmos
    last edited by 30 Nov 2012, 16:00

    @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.

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    • M Offline
      Myhand
      last edited by 1 Dec 2012, 00:25

      @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];
      end

      end

      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.

      http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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      • M Offline
        Myhand
        last edited by 1 Dec 2012, 16:24

        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.

        http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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        • O Offline
          OricAtmos
          last edited by 1 Dec 2012, 17:17

          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.

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          • M Offline
            Myhand
            last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 00:23

            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.

            http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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            • D Offline
              driven
              last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 02:09

              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

              learn from the mistakes of others, you may not live long enough to make them all yourself...

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              • Dan RathbunD Offline
                Dan Rathbun
                last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 02:16

                @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 shop

                puts "Betty's pie shop".inspect()
                >> "Betty's pie shop"

                puts "Betty's pie shop".inspect().inspect()
                >> ""Betty's pie shop""`

                I'm not here much anymore.

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                • Dan RathbunD Offline
                  Dan Rathbun
                  last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 02:40

                  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.}

                  I'm not here much anymore.

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                  • M Offline
                    Myhand
                    last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 13:21

                    @driven said:

                    May be your encoding... only fails with single quotes here
                    john

                    Thought 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?

                    http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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                    • M Offline
                      Myhand
                      last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 13:31

                      @dan rathbun said:

                      At the SketchUp Ruby Console:
                      ` puts "Betty's pie shop"
                      >> Betty's pie shop

                      puts "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.

                      http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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                      • M Offline
                        Myhand
                        last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 13:42

                        @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.

                        http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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                        • Dan RathbunD Offline
                          Dan Rathbun
                          last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 14:15

                          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 standard JSON library, that changes the String class, or the global methods in mixin module Kernel (such as puts,) or even stream classes, like IO.

                          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)

                          I'm not here much anymore.

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                          • thomthomT Offline
                            thomthom
                            last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 14:48

                            @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.

                            Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                            List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                            • M Offline
                              Myhand
                              last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 15:45

                              Thanks guys, I will give this a go tonight. Yes I do have the SketchUp Developer Tools installed.

                              http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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                              • Dan RathbunD Offline
                                Dan Rathbun
                                last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 17:24

                                @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() and Sketchup::read_default() methods.

                                There are some topics on that and using gsub() and tr() before writing values.
                                The situation is similar because we also get these values with embedded single quotes from the application.

                                I'm not here much anymore.

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                                • M Offline
                                  Myhand
                                  last edited by 3 Dec 2012, 21:05

                                  @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.

                                  http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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                                  • M Offline
                                    Myhand
                                    last edited by 4 Dec 2012, 00:02

                                    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?

                                    http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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                                    • A Offline
                                      Aerilius
                                      last edited by 4 Dec 2012, 00:49

                                      1. 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
                                      2. 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.

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                                      • thomthomT Offline
                                        thomthom
                                        last edited by 4 Dec 2012, 08:43

                                        @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.)

                                        Thomas Thomassen — SketchUp Monkey & Coding addict
                                        List of my plugins and link to the CookieWare fund

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                                        • M Offline
                                          Myhand
                                          last edited by 4 Dec 2012, 12:00

                                          @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.

                                          http://www.keepingmyhandin.com/

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