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denoland-deno/std/encoding/README.md

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# encoding
Helper module for dealing with external data structures.
- [`ascii85`](#ascii85)
- [`base32`](#base32)
- [`binary`](#binary)
- [`csv`](#csv)
- [`toml`](#toml)
- [`yaml`](#yaml)
## Binary
Implements equivalent methods to Go's `encoding/binary` package.
Available Functions:
```typescript
sizeof(dataType: RawTypes): number
getNBytes(r: Deno.Reader, n: number): Promise<Uint8Array>
varnum(b: Uint8Array, o: VarnumOptions = {}): number | null
varbig(b: Uint8Array, o: VarbigOptions = {}): bigint | null
putVarnum(b: Uint8Array, x: number, o: VarnumOptions = {}): number
putVarbig(b: Uint8Array, x: bigint, o: VarbigOptions = {}): number
readVarnum(r: Deno.Reader, o: VarnumOptions = {}): Promise<number>
readVarbig(r: Deno.Reader, o: VarbigOptions = {}): Promise<bigint>
writeVarnum(w: Deno.Writer, x: number, o: VarnumOptions = {}): Promise<number>
writeVarbig(w: Deno.Writer, x: bigint, o: VarbigOptions = {}): Promise<number>
```
## CSV
### API
#### `readMatrix(reader: BufReader, opt: ReadOptions = { comma: ",", trimLeadingSpace: false, lazyQuotes: false }): Promise<string[][]>`
Parse the CSV from the `reader` with the options provided and return
`string[][]`.
#### `parse(input: string | BufReader, opt: ParseOptions = { header: false }): Promise<unknown[]>`:
Parse the CSV string/buffer with the options provided. The result of this
function is as follows:
- If you don't provide both `opt.header` and `opt.parse`, it returns
`string[][]`.
- If you provide `opt.header` but not `opt.parse`, it returns `object[]`.
- If you provide `opt.parse`, it returns an array where each element is the
value returned from `opt.parse`.
##### `ParseOptions`
- **`header: boolean | string[] | HeaderOptions[];`**: If a boolean is provided,
the first line will be used as Header definitions. If `string[]` or
`HeaderOptions[]` those names will be used for header definition.
- **`parse?: (input: unknown) => unknown;`**: Parse function for the row, which
will be executed after parsing of all columns. Therefore if you don't provide
header and parse function with headers, input will be `string[]`.
##### `HeaderOptions`
- **`name: string;`**: Name of the header to be used as property.
- **`parse?: (input: string) => unknown;`**: Parse function for the column. This
is executed on each entry of the header. This can be combined with the Parse
function of the rows.
##### `ReadOptions`
- **`comma?: string;`**: Character which separates values. Default: `','`
- **`comment?: string;`**: Character to start a comment. Default: `'#'`
- **`trimLeadingSpace?: boolean;`**: Flag to trim the leading space of the
value. Default: `false`
- **`lazyQuotes?: boolean;`**: Allow unquoted quote in a quoted field or non
double quoted quotes in quoted field. Default: 'false`
- **`fieldsPerRecord?`**: Enabling the check of fields for each row. If == 0,
first row is used as referral for the number of fields.
### Usage
```ts
import { parse } from "https://deno.land/std/encoding/csv.ts";
const string = "a,b,c\nd,e,f";
console.log(
2020-05-18 06:10:19 -04:00
await parse(string, {
header: false,
}),
);
// output:
// [["a", "b", "c"], ["d", "e", "f"]]
```
## TOML
This module parse TOML files. It follows as much as possible the
[TOML specs](https://toml.io/en/latest). Be sure to read the supported types as
not every specs is supported at the moment and the handling in TypeScript side
is a bit different.
### Supported types and handling
- :heavy_check_mark: [Keys](https://toml.io/en/latest#keys)
- :exclamation: [String](https://toml.io/en/latest#string)
- :heavy_check_mark: [Multiline String](https://toml.io/en/latest#string)
- :heavy_check_mark: [Literal String](https://toml.io/en/latest#string)
- :exclamation: [Integer](https://toml.io/en/latest#integer)
- :heavy_check_mark: [Float](https://toml.io/en/latest#float)
- :heavy_check_mark: [Boolean](https://toml.io/en/latest#boolean)
- :heavy_check_mark:
[Offset Date-time](https://toml.io/en/latest#offset-date-time)
- :heavy_check_mark:
[Local Date-time](https://toml.io/en/latest#local-date-time)
- :heavy_check_mark: [Local Date](https://toml.io/en/latest#local-date)
- :exclamation: [Local Time](https://toml.io/en/latest#local-time)
- :heavy_check_mark: [Table](https://toml.io/en/latest#table)
- :heavy_check_mark: [Inline Table](https://toml.io/en/latest#inline-table)
- :exclamation: [Array of Tables](https://toml.io/en/latest#array-of-tables)
:exclamation: _Supported with warnings see [Warning](#Warning)._
#### :warning: Warning
##### String
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- Regex : Due to the spec, there is no flag to detect regex properly in a TOML
declaration. So the regex is stored as string.
##### Integer
2019-10-09 17:22:22 -04:00
For **Binary** / **Octal** / **Hexadecimal** numbers, they are stored as string
to be not interpreted as Decimal.
##### Local Time
2019-10-09 17:22:22 -04:00
Because local time does not exist in JavaScript, the local time is stored as a
string.
##### Inline Table
Inline tables are supported. See below:
```toml
animal = { type = { name = "pug" } }
## Output { animal: { type: { name: "pug" } } }
animal = { type.name = "pug" }
## Output { animal: { type : { name : "pug" } }
animal.as.leaders = "tosin"
## Output { animal: { as: { leaders: "tosin" } } }
"tosin.abasi" = "guitarist"
## Output { tosin.abasi: "guitarist" }
```
##### Array of Tables
At the moment only simple declarations like below are supported:
```toml
[[bin]]
name = "deno"
path = "cli/main.rs"
[[bin]]
name = "deno_core"
path = "src/foo.rs"
[[nib]]
name = "node"
path = "not_found"
```
will output:
```json
{
"bin": [
{ "name": "deno", "path": "cli/main.rs" },
{ "name": "deno_core", "path": "src/foo.rs" }
],
"nib": [{ "name": "node", "path": "not_found" }]
}
```
### Basic usage
```ts
import { parse, stringify } from "https://deno.land/std/encoding/toml.ts";
const obj = {
bin: [
{ name: "deno", path: "cli/main.rs" },
{ name: "deno_core", path: "src/foo.rs" },
],
nib: [{ name: "node", path: "not_found" }],
};
const tomlString = stringify(obj);
console.log(tomlString);
// =>
// [[bin]]
// name = "deno"
// path = "cli/main.rs"
// [[bin]]
// name = "deno_core"
// path = "src/foo.rs"
// [[nib]]
// name = "node"
// path = "not_found"
const tomlObject = parse(tomlString);
console.log(tomlObject);
// =>
// {
// bin: [
// { name: "deno", path: "cli/main.rs" },
// { name: "deno_core", path: "src/foo.rs" }
// ],
// nib: [ { name: "node", path: "not_found" } ]
// }
```
## YAML
YAML parser / dumper for Deno
Heavily inspired from [js-yaml]
### Basic usage
`parse` parses the yaml string, and `stringify` dumps the given object to YAML
string.
```ts
import { parse, stringify } from "https://deno.land/std/encoding/yaml.ts";
const data = parse(`
foo: bar
baz:
- qux
- quux
`);
console.log(data);
// => { foo: "bar", baz: [ "qux", "quux" ] }
const yaml = stringify({ foo: "bar", baz: ["qux", "quux"] });
console.log(yaml);
// =>
// foo: bar
// baz:
// - qux
// - quux
```
If your YAML contains multiple documents in it, you can use `parseAll` for
handling it.
```ts
import { parseAll } from "https://deno.land/std/encoding/yaml.ts";
const data = parseAll(`
---
id: 1
name: Alice
---
id: 2
name: Bob
---
id: 3
name: Eve
`);
console.log(data);
// => [ { id: 1, name: "Alice" }, { id: 2, name: "Bob" }, { id: 3, name: "Eve" } ]
```
### API
#### `parse(str: string, opts?: ParserOption): unknown`
Parses the YAML string with a single document.
#### `parseAll(str: string, iterator?: Function, opts?: ParserOption): unknown`
Parses the YAML string with multiple documents. If the iterator is given, it's
applied to every document instead of returning the array of parsed objects.
#### `stringify(obj: object, opts?: DumpOption): string`
Serializes `object` as a YAML document.
### :warning: Limitations
- `binary` type is currently not stable
- `function`, `regexp`, and `undefined` type are currently not supported
### More example
See https://github.com/nodeca/js-yaml.
## base32
[RFC4648 base32](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4648#section-6) encoder/decoder
for Deno
### Basic usage
`encode` encodes a `Uint8Array` to RFC4648 base32 representation, and `decode`
decodes the given RFC4648 base32 representation to a `Uint8Array`.
```ts
import { encode, decode } from "https://deno.land/std/encoding/base32.ts";
const b32Repr = "RC2E6GA=";
const binaryData = decode(b32Repr);
console.log(binaryData);
// => Uint8Array [ 136, 180, 79, 24 ]
console.log(encode(binaryData));
// => RC2E6GA=
```
## ascii85
Ascii85/base85 encoder and decoder with support for multiple standards
### Basic usage
`encode` encodes a `Uint8Array` to a ascii85 representation, and `decode`
decodes the given ascii85 representation to a `Uint8Array`.
```ts
import { encode, decode } from "https://deno.land/std/encoding/ascii85.ts";
const a85Repr = "LpTqp";
const binaryData = decode(a85Repr);
console.log(binaryData);
// => Uint8Array [ 136, 180, 79, 24 ]
console.log(encode(binaryData));
// => LpTqp
```
### Specifying a standard and delimeter
By default all functions are using the most popular Adobe version of ascii85 and
not adding any delimeter. However, there are three more standards supported -
btoa (different delimeter and additional compression of 4 bytes equal to 32),
[Z85](https://rfc.zeromq.org/spec/32/) and
[RFC 1924](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc1924). It's possible to use a
different encoding by specifying it in `options` object as a second parameter.
Similarly, it's possible to make `encode` add a delimeter (`<~` and `~>` for
Adobe, `xbtoa Begin` and `xbtoa End` with newlines between the delimeters and
encoded data for btoa. Checksums for btoa are not supported. Delimeters are not
supported by other encodings.)
encoding examples:
```ts
import { encode, decode } from "https://deno.land/std/encoding/ascii85.ts";
const binaryData = new Uint8Array([136, 180, 79, 24]);
console.log(encode(binaryData));
// => LpTqp
console.log(encode(binaryData, { standard: "Adobe", delimeter: true }));
// => <~LpTqp~>
console.log(encode(binaryData, { standard: "btoa", delimeter: true }));
/* => xbtoa Begin
LpTqp
xbtoa End */
console.log(encode(binaryData, { standard: "RFC 1924" }));
// => h_p`_
console.log(encode(binaryData, { standard: "Z85" }));
// => H{P}{
```