Safe Haskell | None |
---|---|
Language | Haskell2010 |
Data.Aeson.Casing
Description
The casing utilities allow you to specify how Aeson renders and parses the field names in JSON messages. Snake, Camel, and Pascal case are all supported. To include casing modifiers in Aeson, attach options to instances of ToJSON and FromJSON.
data Person = Person { personFirstName :: Text , personLastName :: Text } deriving (Generic) instance ToJSON Person where toJSON = genericToJSON $ aesonPrefix snakeCase instance FromJSON Person where parseJSON = genericParseJSON $ aesonPrefix snakeCase
The above code will produce JSON messages like the following...
{ "first_name": "John", "last_name": "Doe" }
Documentation
aesonDrop :: Int -> (String -> String) -> Options Source
Creates an Aeson options object that drops a specific number of characters from the front of a field name, then applies a casing function.
aesonPrefix :: (String -> String) -> Options Source
Creates an Aeson options object that drops the field name prefix from a field, then applies a casing function. We assume a convention of the prefix always being lower case, and the first letter of the actual field name being uppercase. This accommodated for field names in GHC 7.8 and below.
data Person = Person { personFirstName :: Text , personLastName :: Text } deriving (Generic) data Dog = Dog { dogFirstName :: Text } deriving (Generic)
In the above cases, dog and person are always dropped from the JSON field names.
snakeCase :: String -> String Source
Snake casing, where the words are always lower case and separated by an underscore.
camelCase :: String -> String Source
Camel casing, where the words are separated by the first letter of each word being a capital. However, the first letter of the field is never a capital.
pascalCase :: String -> String Source
Pascal casing, where the words are separated by the first letter of each word being a capital. The first letter of the field is always a capital.