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◆ type_name()
template<template< typename U, typename V, typename... Args > class ObjectType = std::map, template< typename U, typename... Args > class ArrayType = std::vector, class StringType = std::string, class BooleanType = bool, class NumberIntegerType = std::int64_t, class NumberUnsignedType = std::uint64_t, class NumberFloatType = double, template< typename U > class AllocatorType = std::allocator, template< typename T, typename SFINAE=void > class JSONSerializer = adl_serializer>
| std::string nlohmann::basic_json< ObjectType, ArrayType, StringType, BooleanType, NumberIntegerType, NumberUnsignedType, NumberFloatType, AllocatorType, JSONSerializer >::type_name |
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Returns the type name as string to be used in error messages - usually to indicate that a function was called on a wrong JSON type.
- Returns
- basically a string representation of a the m_type member
- Complexity
- Constant.
- Example
- The following code exemplifies
type_name() for all JSON types. 10 json j_number_integer = 17; 11 json j_number_float = 23.42; 12 json j_object = {{ "one", 1}, { "two", 2}}; 13 json j_array = {1, 2, 4, 8, 16}; 14 json j_string = "Hello, world"; 17 std::cout << j_null.type_name() << '\n'; 18 std::cout << j_boolean.type_name() << '\n'; 19 std::cout << j_number_integer.type_name() << '\n'; 20 std::cout << j_number_float.type_name() << '\n'; 21 std::cout << j_object.type_name() << '\n'; 22 std::cout << j_array.type_name() << '\n'; 23 std::cout << j_string.type_name() << '\n'; basic_json<> json default JSON class
Output (play with this example online): null
boolean
number
number
object
array
string
The example code above can be translated withg++ -std=c++11 -Isrc doc/examples/type_name.cpp -o type_name
- Since
- version 1.0.0, public since 2.1.0
Definition at line 8084 of file json.hpp.
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