third_party_rust_serde/serde
Josh Triplett 45c45e87bf Fix hand-written enum variant deserializations to allow u64 discriminant
Automatically generated enum variant deserializers allowed any integer
type as the discriminant, but the hand-written ones for specific enum
types such as Result or IpAddr only allowed types up to u32. This broke
some non-human-readable deserializers for these enums, with
deserializers that emit any integer type as a u64. Switch the visit_u32
methods to visit_u64 methods to allow discriminants to have any size up
to a u64.
2020-09-10 23:24:33 -07:00
..
src Fix hand-written enum variant deserializations to allow u64 discriminant 2020-09-10 23:24:33 -07:00
build.rs Link to feature announcements where available 2020-06-19 13:30:14 -07:00
Cargo.toml Release 1.0.115 2020-08-10 15:51:19 -07:00
crates-io.md Simplify readme as rendered on crates.io 2018-05-27 19:18:30 -07:00
LICENSE-APACHE Include readme and licenses in crates.io archive 2017-02-20 21:11:57 -08:00
LICENSE-MIT Include readme and licenses in crates.io archive 2017-02-20 21:11:57 -08:00
README.md Include readme and licenses in crates.io archive 2017-02-20 21:11:57 -08:00

Serde Build Status Latest Version serde: rustc 1.13+ serde_derive: rustc 1.31+

Serde is a framework for serializing and deserializing Rust data structures efficiently and generically.


You may be looking for:

Serde in action

Click to show Cargo.toml. Run this code in the playground.
[dependencies]

# The core APIs, including the Serialize and Deserialize traits. Always
# required when using Serde. The "derive" feature is only required when
# using #[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)] to make Serde work with structs
# and enums defined in your crate.
serde = { version = "1.0", features = ["derive"] }

# Each data format lives in its own crate; the sample code below uses JSON
# but you may be using a different one.
serde_json = "1.0"

use serde::{Serialize, Deserialize};

#[derive(Serialize, Deserialize, Debug)]
struct Point {
    x: i32,
    y: i32,
}

fn main() {
    let point = Point { x: 1, y: 2 };

    // Convert the Point to a JSON string.
    let serialized = serde_json::to_string(&point).unwrap();

    // Prints serialized = {"x":1,"y":2}
    println!("serialized = {}", serialized);

    // Convert the JSON string back to a Point.
    let deserialized: Point = serde_json::from_str(&serialized).unwrap();

    // Prints deserialized = Point { x: 1, y: 2 }
    println!("deserialized = {:?}", deserialized);
}

Getting help

Serde is one of the most widely used Rust libraries so any place that Rustaceans congregate will be able to help you out. For chat, consider trying the #general or #beginners channels of the unofficial community Discord, the #rust-usage channel of the official Rust Project Discord, or the #general stream in Zulip. For asynchronous, consider the [rust] tag on StackOverflow, the /r/rust subreddit which has a pinned weekly easy questions post, or the Rust Discourse forum. It's acceptable to file a support issue in this repo but they tend not to get as many eyes as any of the above and may get closed without a response after some time.


License

Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.
Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in Serde by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.