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JSON::Any(3)	      User Contributed Perl Documentation	  JSON::Any(3)

NAME
       JSON::Any - Wrapper Class for the various JSON classes.

VERSION
       Version 1.25

SYNOPSIS
       This module will provide a coherent API to bring together the various
       JSON modules currently on CPAN. This module will allow you to code to
       any JSON API and have it work regardless of which JSON module is
       actually installed.

	       use JSON::Any;

	       my $j = JSON::Any->new;

	       $json = $j->objToJson({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'});
	       $obj = $j->jsonToObj($json);

       or

	       $json = $j->encode({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'});
	       $obj = $j->decode($json);

       or

	       $json = $j->Dump({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'});
	       $obj = $j->Load($json);

       or

	       $json = $j->to_json({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'});
	       $obj = $j->from_json($json);

       or without creating an object:

	       $json = JSON::Any->objToJson({foo=>'bar', baz=>'quux'});
	       $obj = JSON::Any->jsonToObj($json);

       On load, JSON::Any will find a valid JSON module in your @INC by
       looking for them in this order:

	       JSON::XS
	       JSON
	       JSON::DWIW

       And loading the first one it finds.

       You may change the order by specifying it on the "use JSON::Any" line:

	       use JSON::Any qw(DWIW XS JSON);

       Specifying an order that is missing one of the modules will prevent
       that module from being used:

	       use JSON::Any qw(DWIW XS JSON);

       This will check in that order, and will never attempt to load
       JSON::Syck. This can also be set via the $ENV{JSON_ANY_ORDER}
       environment variable.

       JSON::Syck has been deprecated by it's author, but in the attempt to
       still stay relevant as a "Compat Layer" JSON::Any still supports it.
       This support however has been made optional starting with JSON::Any
       1.19. In deference to a bug request starting with JSON 1.20 JSON::Syck
       and other deprecated modules will still be installed, but only as a
       last resort and will now include a warning.

	   use JSON::Any qw(Syck XS JSON);

       or

	   $ENV{JSON_ANY_ORDER} = 'Syck XS JSON';

       WARNING: If you call JSON::Any with an empty list

	   use JSON::Any ();

       It will skip the JSON package detection routines and will die loudly
       that it couldn't find a package.

FUNCTIONS
       "new"
	   Will take any of the parameters for the underlying system and pass
	   them through. However these values don't map between JSON modules,
	   so, from a portability standpoint this is really only helpful for
	   those paramters that happen to have the same name. This will be
	   addressed in a future release.

	   The one parameter that is universally supported (to the extent that
	   is supported by the underlying JSON modules) is "utf8". When this
	   parameter is enabled all resulting JSON will be marked as unicode,
	   and all unicode strings in the input data structure will be
	   preserved as such.

	   Also note that the "allow_blessed" parameter is recognised by all
	   the modules that throw exceptions when a blessed reference is given
	   them meaning that setting it to true works for all modules. Of
	   course, that means that you cannot set it to false intentionally in
	   order to always get such exceptions.

	   The actual output will vary, for example JSON will encode and
	   decode unicode chars (the resulting JSON is not unicode) wheras
	   JSON::XS will emit unicode JSON.

       "handlerType"
	   Takes no arguments, returns a string indicating which JSON Module
	   is in use.

       "handler"
	   Takes no arguments, if called on an object returns the internal
	   JSON::* object in use.  Otherwise returns the JSON::* package we
	   are using for class methods.

       "true"
	   Takes no arguments, returns the special value that the internal
	   JSON object uses to map to a JSON "true" boolean.

       "false"
	   Takes no arguments, returns the special value that the internal
	   JSON object uses to map to a JSON "false" boolean.

       "objToJson"
	   Takes a single argument, a hashref to be converted into JSON.  It
	   returns the JSON text in a scalar.

       "to_json"
       "Dump"
       "encode"
	   Aliases for objToJson, can be used interchangeably, regardless of
	   the underlying JSON module.

       "jsonToObj"
	   Takes a single argument, a string of JSON text to be converted back
	   into a hashref.

       "from_json"
       "Load"
       "decode"
	   Aliases for jsonToObj, can be used interchangeably, regardless of
	   the underlying JSON module.

AUTHORS
       Chris Thompson "cthom at cpan.org"

       Chris Prather "chris at prather.org"

       Robin Berjon "robin at berjon.com"

       Marc Mims "marc at questright.com"

       Tomas Doran "bobtfish at bobtfish.net"

BUGS
       Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-json-any at
       rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
       http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=JSON-Any
       <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=JSON-Any>.  I will be
       notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your
       bug as I make changes.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
       This module came about after discussions on irc.perl.org about the fact
       that there were now six separate JSON perl modules with different
       interfaces.

       In the spirit of Class::Any, JSON::Any was created with the
       considerable help of Matt 'mst' Trout.

       Simon Wistow graciously supplied a patch for backwards compat with
       JSON::XS versions previous to 2.01

       San Dimas High School Football Rules!

COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
       Copyright 2007-2009 Chris Thompson, some rights reserved.

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
       under the same terms as Perl itself.

perl v5.14.1			  2010-11-16			  JSON::Any(3)
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