Why does the glTF schema define enums like this? - json

If I search for "enum" in the glTF 2.0 schema, I see a lot of definitions of enums like:
"type": {
"description": "Specifies if the camera uses a perspective or orthographic projection.",
"gltf_detailedDescription": "Specifies if the camera uses a perspective or orthographic projection. Based on this, either the camera's `perspective` or `orthographic` property will be defined.",
"anyOf": [
{
"enum": [ "perspective" ]
},
{
"enum": [ "orthographic" ]
},
{
"type": "string"
}
]
},
(from the camera schema)
I have several questions about this:
I don't understand why this is anyOf instead of oneOf? My understanding is that a camera type is EITHER perspective or orthographic, and my understanding of json schema is that 'anyOf' allows validation against multiple values in the array).
I don't understand the "type":"string" field? To me that reads as though any string value would be valid? This seems inconsistent with the camera definition of glTF?
There are multiple instances of enums like this. see also:
here here
Thanks in advance for any clarity someone can provide.

At the time (2017) we were using JSON schema draft v4, and support for enums was not up to where we needed it to be. Previously there had been a simple list of enums, but I requested there to be per-enum descriptions in the schema. This better documents the individual enum values in the schema, and allows formatting software to display the description of an individual enum value. I filed an issue on that here:
https://github.com/KhronosGroup/glTF/issues/891
Further down that issue, a problem was uncovered with oneOf that made it incompatible with TypeScript, and a decision was made to switch to anyOf instead. You can still only choose one of the available enums, in spite of this change.
Later, in the Pull Request that implemented this change, one of the spec editors explained that the extra "type" : "string" on the end there is to allow future forwards-compatibility. Basically this means that glTF 2.0 extensions are allowed (and encouraged) to define new enum values that don't exist in core glTF 2.0 schema, and they may do so without violating the schema. They cannot arbitrarily add new fields, however, as the schema is strict about that. New fields must be placed into an extension or extras object of the appropriate name. But new enums can go right in the same field where the existing enums are now.
Ultimately, we ended up with a schema that may be a little cumbersome for humans to look at, but works well in a wide variety of validation software that deals with JSON schemas. And the humans can just look at the Properties Reference README instead of the raw schema files, it's easier on the eyes.

Related

How to mark in a json file which schema describes it

My goal is simple: I want to know what schema describes the given json file, meaning I need to mark it somehow. Example:
{
"Id": 100,
"name": "example"
}
What is not clear from the example below is what schema definition describes it, in other words what are the required fields and what are the other fields available in it.
I'm looking not only for validation, but rather ease-of-work with this jsonn file. For example, I'd like to use it as a configuration file. I need to know what properties are available and what properties are mandatory.
I'm looking for something like this:
{
"$schemaDefinition": "URL to the schema definition",
"Id": 100,
"name": "example"
}
What I don't know is what is the valid way doing it. I read through back and forth the json-schema.org but it doesn't discusses this. However, I remember I saw this solution somewhere.
As a result, I hope..., editor can pick up the schema and provide intellisense. Or the poor person who is going to work with the json file (configure something) knows where to look for available and mandatory configuration properties.
I have found it.
{
"$schema": "URL to the schema definition",
"Id": 100,
"name": "example"
}
If the schema file is stored in Github you have to use the url to the raw content.
Jetbrains products can pick up the schema definition without any problem.

Remove the invalid records from JSON after validation with schema?

I've stumbled upon this problem and after doing a bit of research here I am.
I have a json file which I want to validate against *Json-Schema. Now most of the libraries developed for this purpose in java, which are listed here, do a great a job in validating the file and provide well formatted reasons for it. But there's no feature of removing the invalid records completely. I tried ever-it/org package and couldn't find anything that pertains to the requirement.
For example if I'm having array inside a json object then its possible for one of the array elements to be invalid and the same I want to remove.
{ "key1" : "value1",
"key2" : [
{
"key3":"temp",
"key4":12
},
{ --> this object invalid for some reason hence should be removed
"key3":"temp",
"key4":"dsds"
},
{
"key3":"temp",
"key4":"anything"
}
]
}
Except Of Course manually removing the invalid records/objects from file by tracking the object from start with the help of error messages upon validation, Is there any already implemented solution for this?
*Json-Schema : It is basically a standard way of representing the data format and its structure for json files. There are few versions in it, draft-07 and draft-06 for instance. Read more about it here.

How should you reference the JSON schema that a JSON object conforms to?

There was another question similar to the one I am asking here (Can you specify the schema URI on a JSON document that conforms to a JSON schema?) that was tagged as a duplicate of (How to reference schema of json which is top level array), but I have nuanced variation of the question.
While it appears that there isn't anything in the JSON schema definition (https://json-schema.org/), is there a best practice that people follow in regards to indicating within a JSON object/document which JSON schema it conforms to (or is supposed to conform to)?
Would it be wrong to reference the schema using the $schema tag within a JSON object/document? It seems like referencing the schema it conforms to would also be a be a good way to "version" JSON objects/documents.
I very much doubt there is an "acceptable" answer to this question.
There's nothing to stop you from using the $schema attribute as part of your own personal convention.
There is some real-world precedent to this. Some Azure quickstart templates use $schema to reference the JSON Schema they adhere to eg: https://github.com/Azure/azure-quickstart-templates/blob/master/101-azure-bastion/azuredeploy.parameters.json (Thanks to Mark T for his comment)
{
"$schema": "https://schema.management.azure.com/schemas/2015-01-01/deploymentParameters.json#",
"contentVersion": "1.0.0.0",
"parameters": {
"bastion-host-name": {
"value": "GEN-UNIQUE-8"
},
"location": {
"value": "southcentralus"
}
}
}
However, with a lack of official guidance we should perhaps just accept that the concept of schema-instance (as taken from XSD) is not a good fit for a lightweight definition language such as jsonschema.
I would be interested to understand your use-case where linking JSON instances explicitly with their schemas is a requirement.

How to customise error message for invalid input?

How to customise error message for invalid input?
{
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#",
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"username": {
"type": "string",
"pattern": "^[A-Za-z0-9-_.]+$",
"minLength": 3
},
"password": {
"type": "string",
"minLength": 8,
"pattern": "^(?=.*[a-z])(?=.*[A-Z])(?=.*\\d)[a-zA-Z\\d\\W]$"
}
},
"required": [
"username",
"password"
],
"errors": [
{
"property": "username",
"message": "min 3 characters, do not use spaces or special characters"
}
]
}
For example, if username input is not of required min length or doesn't satisfy regex pattern, display one custom message min 3 characters, do not use spaces or special characters
Custom error messages are not supported. However, there is some discussion going on to add a feature like this in the next version of JSON Schema.
Update 2021-01-26
JSON Schema never ended up supporting the customization of error messages in this way. The main problem with this is that appropriate error messaging is dependent on the audience and the context, so defining one message in this way is limiting. For example, a developer needs different feedback than an end user.
Instead, JSON Schema standardized the results that come back from a validation. This allows you to process the results to produce output that is appropriate for your audience. In theory libraries can be developed to produce error messaging for certain audiences. These would be decoupled from your validator library allowing you to more easily switch to another implementation in the future.
However, even the best error message producing libraries wouldn't solve the specific case presented in the original question. A library can't take a regular expression and produce a meaningful message. The good news is, JSON Schema provides an extension mechanism called vocabularies that you can use to create a custom keyword to annotate your schemas with the information that an output processor needs to produce a better error message. For example, the errors keyword in the original question would appear in the standard output results and can be used by an output processor as one of the ways it produces nice user facing error messages.
Unfortunately, no one has built one of these standard output processors yet, so you won't be able to pick one up off the shelf. It shouldn't be too hard to do, but you'd have to write it yourself. https://github.com/atlassian/better-ajv-errors is one of these output processor tools, but it uses ajv's proprietary output format rather than the standard format.
Both the standardized output format and JSON Schema Vocabularies are new in draft 2019-09 which has not seen big adoption so far. As time goes on, we expect to see more tools that make these kinds of customizations easy.

Can comments be used in JSON?

Can I use comments inside a JSON file? If so, how?
No.
JSON is data-only. If you include a comment, then it must be data too.
You could have a designated data element called "_comment" (or something) that should be ignored by apps that use the JSON data.
You would probably be better having the comment in the processes that generates/receives the JSON, as they are supposed to know what the JSON data will be in advance, or at least the structure of it.
But if you decided to:
{
"_comment": "comment text goes here...",
"glossary": {
"title": "example glossary",
"GlossDiv": {
"title": "S",
"GlossList": {
"GlossEntry": {
"ID": "SGML",
"SortAs": "SGML",
"GlossTerm": "Standard Generalized Markup Language",
"Acronym": "SGML",
"Abbrev": "ISO 8879:1986",
"GlossDef": {
"para": "A meta-markup language, used to create markup languages such as DocBook.",
"GlossSeeAlso": ["GML", "XML"]
},
"GlossSee": "markup"
}
}
}
}
}
No, comments of the form //… or /*…*/ are not allowed in JSON. This answer is based on:
https://www.json.org
RFC 4627:
The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)
RFC 8259 The JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) Data Interchange Format (supercedes RFCs 4627, 7158, 7159)
Include comments if you choose; strip them out with a minifier before parsing or transmitting.
I just released JSON.minify() which strips out comments and whitespace from a block of JSON and makes it valid JSON that can be parsed. So, you might use it like:
JSON.parse(JSON.minify(my_str));
When I released it, I got a huge backlash of people disagreeing with even the idea of it, so I decided that I'd write a comprehensive blog post on why comments make sense in JSON. It includes this notable comment from the creator of JSON:
Suppose you are using JSON to keep configuration files, which you would like to annotate. Go ahead and insert all the comments you like. Then pipe it through JSMin before handing it to your JSON parser. - Douglas Crockford, 2012
Hopefully that's helpful to those who disagree with why JSON.minify() could be useful.
Comments were removed from JSON by design.
I removed comments from JSON because I saw people were using them to hold parsing directives, a practice which would have destroyed interoperability. I know that the lack of comments makes some people sad, but it shouldn't.
Suppose you are using JSON to keep configuration files, which you would like to annotate. Go ahead and insert all the comments you like. Then pipe it through JSMin before handing it to your JSON parser.
Source: Public statement by Douglas Crockford on G+
JSON does not support comments. It was also never intended to be used for configuration files where comments would be needed.
Hjson is a configuration file format for humans. Relaxed syntax, fewer mistakes, more comments.
See hjson.github.io for JavaScript, Java, Python, PHP, Rust, Go, Ruby, C++ and C# libraries.
DISCLAIMER: YOUR WARRANTY IS VOID
As has been pointed out, this hack takes advantage of the implementation of the spec. Not all JSON parsers will understand this sort of JSON. Streaming parsers in particular will choke.
It's an interesting curiosity, but you should really not be using it for anything at all. Below is the original answer.
I've found a little hack that allows you to place comments in a JSON file that will not affect the parsing, or alter the data being represented in any way.
It appears that when declaring an object literal you can specify two values with the same key, and the last one takes precedence. Believe it or not, it turns out that JSON parsers work the same way. So we can use this to create comments in the source JSON that will not be present in a parsed object representation.
({a: 1, a: 2});
// => Object {a: 2}
Object.keys(JSON.parse('{"a": 1, "a": 2}')).length;
// => 1
If we apply this technique, your commented JSON file might look like this:
{
"api_host" : "The hostname of your API server. You may also specify the port.",
"api_host" : "hodorhodor.com",
"retry_interval" : "The interval in seconds between retrying failed API calls",
"retry_interval" : 10,
"auth_token" : "The authentication token. It is available in your developer dashboard under 'Settings'",
"auth_token" : "5ad0eb93697215bc0d48a7b69aa6fb8b",
"favorite_numbers": "An array containing my all-time favorite numbers",
"favorite_numbers": [19, 13, 53]
}
The above code is valid JSON. If you parse it, you'll get an object like this:
{
"api_host": "hodorhodor.com",
"retry_interval": 10,
"auth_token": "5ad0eb93697215bc0d48a7b69aa6fb8b",
"favorite_numbers": [19,13,53]
}
Which means there is no trace of the comments, and they won't have weird side-effects.
Happy hacking!
Consider using YAML. It's nearly a superset of JSON (virtually all valid JSON is valid YAML) and it allows comments.
You can't. At least that's my experience from a quick glance at json.org.
JSON has its syntax visualized on that page. There isn't any note about comments.
Comments are not an official standard, although some parsers support C++-style comments. One that I use is JsonCpp. In the examples there is this one:
// Configuration options
{
// Default encoding for text
"encoding" : "UTF-8",
// Plug-ins loaded at start-up
"plug-ins" : [
"python",
"c++",
"ruby"
],
// Tab indent size
"indent" : { "length" : 3, "use_space": true }
}
jsonlint does not validate this. So comments are a parser specific extension and not standard.
Another parser is JSON5.
An alternative to JSON TOML.
A further alternative is jsonc.
The latest version of nlohmann/json has optional support for ignoring comments on parsing.
Here is what I found in the Google Firebase documentation that allows you to put comments in JSON:
{
"//": "Some browsers will use this to enable push notifications.",
"//": "It is the same for all projects, this is not your project's sender ID",
"gcm_sender_id": "1234567890"
}
You should write a JSON schema instead. JSON schema is currently a proposed Internet draft specification. Besides documentation, the schema can also be used for validating your JSON data.
Example:
{
"description": "A person",
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"name": {
"type": "string"
},
"age": {
"type": "integer",
"maximum": 125
}
}
}
You can provide documentation by using the description schema attribute.
If you are using Jackson as your JSON parser then this is how you enable it to allow comments:
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper().configure(Feature.ALLOW_COMMENTS, true);
Then you can have comments like this:
{
key: "value" // Comment
}
And you can also have comments starting with # by setting:
mapper.configure(Feature.ALLOW_YAML_COMMENTS, true);
But in general (as answered before) the specification does not allow comments.
NO. JSON used to support comments but they were abused and removed from the standard.
From the creator of JSON:
I removed comments from JSON because I saw people were using them to hold parsing directives, a practice which would have destroyed interoperability. I know that the lack of comments makes some people sad, but it shouldn't. - Douglas Crockford, 2012
The official JSON site is at JSON.org. JSON is defined as a standard by ECMA International. There is always a petition process to have standards revised. It is unlikely that annotations will be added to the JSON standard for several reasons.
JSON by design is an easily reverse-engineered (human parsed) alternative to XML. It is simplified even to the point that annotations are unnecessary. It is not even a markup language. The goal is stability and interoperablilty.
Anyone who understands the "has-a" relationship of object orientation can understand any JSON structure - that is the whole point. It is just a directed acyclic graph (DAG) with node tags (key/value pairs), which is a near universal data structure.
This only annotation required might be "//These are DAG tags". The key names can be as informative as required, allowing arbitrary semantic arity.
Any platform can parse JSON with just a few lines of code. XML requires complex OO libraries that are not viable on many platforms.
Annotations would just make JSON less interoperable. There is simply nothing else to add unless what you really need is a markup language (XML), and don't care if your persisted data is easily parsed.
BUT as the creator of JSON also observed, there has always been JS pipeline support for comments:
Go ahead and insert all the comments you like.
Then pipe it through JSMin before handing it to your JSON parser. - Douglas Crockford, 2012
If you are using the Newtonsoft.Json library with ASP.NET to read/deserialize you can use comments in the JSON content:
//"name": "string"
//"id": int
or
/* This is a
comment example */
PS: Single-line comments are only supported with 6+ versions of Newtonsoft Json.
Additional note for people who can't think out of the box: I use the JSON format for basic settings in an ASP.NET web application I made. I read the file, convert it into the settings object with the Newtonsoft library and use it when necessary.
I prefer writing comments about each individual setting in the JSON file itself, and I really don't care about the integrity of the JSON format as long as the library I use is OK with it.
I think this is an 'easier to use/understand' way than creating a separate 'settings.README' file and explaining the settings in it.
If you have a problem with this kind of usage; sorry, the genie is out of the lamp. People would find other usages for JSON format, and there is nothing you can do about it.
If your text file, which is a JSON string, is going to be read by some program, how difficult would it be to strip out either C or C++ style comments before using it?
Answer: It would be a one liner. If you do that then JSON files could be used as configuration files.
The idea behind JSON is to provide simple data exchange between applications. These are typically web based and the language is JavaScript.
It doesn't really allow for comments as such, however, passing a comment as one of the name/value pairs in the data would certainly work, although that data would obviously need to be ignored or handled specifically by the parsing code.
All that said, it's not the intention that the JSON file should contain comments in the traditional sense. It should just be the data.
Have a look at the JSON website for more detail.
JSON does not support comments natively, but you can make your own decoder or at least preprocessor to strip out comments, that's perfectly fine (as long as you just ignore comments and don't use them to guide how your application should process the JSON data).
JSON does not have comments. A JSON encoder MUST NOT output comments.
A JSON decoder MAY accept and ignore comments.
Comments should never be used to transmit anything meaningful. That is
what JSON is for.
Cf: Douglas Crockford, author of JSON spec.
I just encountering this for configuration files. I don't want to use XML (verbose, graphically, ugly, hard to read), or "ini" format (no hierarchy, no real standard, etc.) or Java "Properties" format (like .ini).
JSON can do all they can do, but it is way less verbose and more human readable - and parsers are easy and ubiquitous in many languages. It's just a tree of data. But out-of-band comments are a necessity often to document "default" configurations and the like. Configurations are never to be "full documents", but trees of saved data that can be human readable when needed.
I guess one could use "#": "comment", for "valid" JSON.
It depends on your JSON library. Json.NET supports JavaScript-style comments, /* commment */.
See another Stack Overflow question.
Yes, the new standard, JSON5 allows the C++ style comments, among many other extensions:
// A single line comment.
/* A multi-
line comment. */
The JSON5 Data Interchange Format (JSON5) is a superset of JSON that aims to alleviate some of the limitations of JSON. It is fully backwards compatible, and using it is probably better than writing the custom non standard parser, turning non standard features on for the existing one or using various hacks like string fields for commenting. Or, if the parser in use supports, simply agree we are using JSON 5 subset that is JSON and C++ style comments. It is much better than we tweak JSON standard the way we see fit.
There is already npm package, Python package, Java package and C library available. It is backwards compatible. I see no reason to stay with the "official" JSON restrictions.
I think that removing comments from JSON has been driven by the same reasons as removing the operator overloading in Java: can be used the wrong way yet some clearly legitimate use cases were overlooked. For operator overloading, it is matrix algebra and complex numbers. For JSON comments, its is configuration files and other documents that may be written, edited or read by humans and not just by parser.
JSON makes a lot of sense for config files and other local usage because it's ubiquitous and because it's much simpler than XML.
If people have strong reasons against having comments in JSON when communicating data (whether valid or not), then possibly JSON could be split into two:
JSON-COM: JSON on the wire, or rules that apply when communicating JSON data.
JSON-DOC: JSON document, or JSON in files or locally. Rules that define a valid JSON document.
JSON-DOC will allow comments, and other minor differences might exist such as handling whitespace. Parsers can easily convert from one spec to the other.
With regards to the remark made by Douglas Crockford on this issues (referenced by #Artur Czajka)
Suppose you are using JSON to keep configuration files, which you would like to annotate. Go ahead and insert all the comments you like. Then pipe it through JSMin before handing it to your JSON parser.
We're talking about a generic config file issue (cross language/platform), and he's answering with a JS specific utility!
Sure a JSON specific minify can be implemented in any language,
but standardize this so it becomes ubiquitous across parsers in all languages and platforms so people stop wasting their time lacking the feature because they have good use-cases for it, looking the issue up in online forums, and getting people telling them it's a bad idea or suggesting it's easy to implement stripping comments out of text files.
The other issue is interoperability. Suppose you have a library or API or any kind of subsystem which has some config or data files associated with it. And this subsystem is
to be accessed from different languages. Then do you go about telling people: by the way
don't forget to strip out the comments from the JSON files before passing them to the parser!
If you use JSON5 you can include comments.
JSON5 is a proposed extension to JSON that aims to make it easier for humans to write and maintain by hand. It does this by adding some minimal syntax features directly from ECMAScript 5.
The Dojo Toolkit JavaScript toolkit (at least as of version 1.4), allows you to include comments in your JSON. The comments can be of /* */ format. Dojo Toolkit consumes the JSON via the dojo.xhrGet() call.
Other JavaScript toolkits may work similarly.
This can be helpful when experimenting with alternate data structures (or even data lists) before choosing a final option.
JSON is not a framed protocol. It is a language free format. So a comment's format is not defined for JSON.
As many people have suggested, there are some tricks, for example, duplicate keys or a specific key _comment that you can use. It's up to you.
Disclaimer: This is silly
There is actually a way to add comments, and stay within the specification (no additional parser needed). It will not result into human-readable comments without any sort of parsing though.
You could abuse the following:
Insignificant whitespace is allowed before or after any token.
Whitespace is any sequence of one or more of the following code
points: character tabulation (U+0009), line feed (U+000A), carriage
return (U+000D), and space (U+0020).
In a hacky way, you can abuse this to add a comment. For instance: start and end your comment with a tab. Encode the comment in base3 and use the other whitespace characters to represent them. For instance.
010212 010202 011000 011000 011010 001012 010122 010121 011021 010202 001012 011022 010212 011020 010202 010202
(hello base three in ASCII) But instead of 0 use space, for 1 use line feed and for 2 use carriage return.
This will just leave you with a lot of unreadable whitespace (unless you make an IDE plugin to encode/decode it on the fly).
I never even tried this, for obvious reasons and neither should you.
You can have comments in JSONP, but not in pure JSON. I've just spent an hour trying to make my program work with this example from Highcharts.
If you follow the link, you will see
?(/* AAPL historical OHLC data from the Google Finance API */
[
/* May 2006 */
[1147651200000,67.79],
[1147737600000,64.98],
...
[1368057600000,456.77],
[1368144000000,452.97]
]);
Since I had a similar file in my local folder, there were no issues with the Same-origin policy, so I decided to use pure JSON… and, of course, $.getJSON was failing silently because of the comments.
Eventually I just sent a manual HTTP request to the address above and realized that the content-type was text/javascript since, well, JSONP returns pure JavaScript. In this case comments are allowed. But my application returned content-type application/json, so I had to remove the comments.
JSON doesn't allow comments, per se. The reasoning is utterly foolish, because you can use JSON itself to create comments, which obviates the reasoning entirely, and loads the parser data space for no good reason at all for exactly the same result and potential issues, such as they are: a JSON file with comments.
If you try to put comments in (using // or /* */ or # for instance), then some parsers will fail because this is strictly not
within the JSON specification. So you should never do that.
Here, for instance, where my image manipulation system has saved image notations and some basic formatted (comment) information relating to them (at the bottom):
{
"Notations": [
{
"anchorX": 333,
"anchorY": 265,
"areaMode": "Ellipse",
"extentX": 356,
"extentY": 294,
"opacity": 0.5,
"text": "Elliptical area on top",
"textX": 333,
"textY": 265,
"title": "Notation 1"
},
{
"anchorX": 87,
"anchorY": 385,
"areaMode": "Rectangle",
"extentX": 109,
"extentY": 412,
"opacity": 0.5,
"text": "Rect area\non bottom",
"textX": 98,
"textY": 385,
"title": "Notation 2"
},
{
"anchorX": 69,
"anchorY": 104,
"areaMode": "Polygon",
"extentX": 102,
"extentY": 136,
"opacity": 0.5,
"pointList": [
{
"i": 0,
"x": 83,
"y": 104
},
{
"i": 1,
"x": 69,
"y": 136
},
{
"i": 2,
"x": 102,
"y": 132
},
{
"i": 3,
"x": 83,
"y": 104
}
],
"text": "Simple polygon",
"textX": 85,
"textY": 104,
"title": "Notation 3"
}
],
"imageXW": 512,
"imageYW": 512,
"imageName": "lena_std.ato",
"tinyDocs": {
"c01": "JSON image notation data:",
"c02": "-------------------------",
"c03": "",
"c04": "This data contains image notations and related area",
"c05": "selection information that provides a means for an",
"c06": "image gallery to display notations with elliptical,",
"c07": "rectangular, polygonal or freehand area indications",
"c08": "over an image displayed to a gallery visitor.",
"c09": "",
"c10": "X and Y positions are all in image space. The image",
"c11": "resolution is given as imageXW and imageYW, which",
"c12": "you use to scale the notation areas to their proper",
"c13": "locations and sizes for your display of the image,",
"c14": "regardless of scale.",
"c15": "",
"c16": "For Ellipses, anchor is the center of the ellipse,",
"c17": "and the extents are the X and Y radii respectively.",
"c18": "",
"c19": "For Rectangles, the anchor is the top left and the",
"c20": "extents are the bottom right.",
"c21": "",
"c22": "For Freehand and Polygon area modes, the pointList",
"c23": "contains a series of numbered XY points. If the area",
"c24": "is closed, the last point will be the same as the",
"c25": "first, so all you have to be concerned with is drawing",
"c26": "lines between the points in the list. Anchor and extent",
"c27": "are set to the top left and bottom right of the indicated",
"c28": "region, and can be used as a simplistic rectangular",
"c29": "detect for the mouse hover position over these types",
"c30": "of areas.",
"c31": "",
"c32": "The textx and texty positions provide basic positioning",
"c33": "information to help you locate the text information",
"c34": "in a reasonable location associated with the area",
"c35": "indication.",
"c36": "",
"c37": "Opacity is a value between 0 and 1, where .5 represents",
"c38": "a 50% opaque backdrop and 1.0 represents a fully opaque",
"c39": "backdrop. Recommendation is that regions be drawn",
"c40": "only if the user hovers the pointer over the image,",
"c41": "and that the text associated with the regions be drawn",
"c42": "only if the user hovers the pointer over the indicated",
"c43": "region."
}
}
This is a "can you" question. And here is a "yes" answer.
No, you shouldn't use duplicative object members to stuff side channel data into a JSON encoding. (See "The names within an object SHOULD be unique" in the RFC).
And yes, you could insert comments around the JSON, which you could parse out.
But if you want a way of inserting and extracting arbitrary side-channel data to a valid JSON, here is an answer. We take advantage of the non-unique representation of data in a JSON encoding. This is allowed* in section two of the RFC under "whitespace is allowed before or after any of the six structural characters".
*The RFC only states "whitespace is allowed before or after any of the six structural characters", not explicitly mentioning strings, numbers, "false", "true", and "null". This omission is ignored in ALL implementations.
First, canonicalize your JSON by minifying it:
$jsonMin = json_encode(json_decode($json));
Then encode your comment in binary:
$hex = unpack('H*', $comment);
$commentBinary = base_convert($hex[1], 16, 2);
Then steg your binary:
$steg = str_replace('0', ' ', $commentBinary);
$steg = str_replace('1', "\t", $steg);
Here is your output:
$jsonWithComment = $steg . $jsonMin;
In my case, I need to use comments for debug purposes just before the output of the JSON. So I put the debug information in the HTTP header, to avoid breaking the client:
header("My-Json-Comment: Yes, I know it's a workaround ;-) ");
We are using strip-json-comments for our project. It supports something like:
/*
* Description
*/
{
// rainbows
"unicorn": /* ❤ */ "cake"
}
Simply npm install --save strip-json-comments to install and use it like:
var strip_json_comments = require('strip-json-comments')
var json = '{/*rainbows*/"unicorn":"cake"}';
JSON.parse(strip_json_comments(json));
//=> {unicorn: 'cake'}