Simplifies manual JSON parsing with a type-safe API.
- No
dynamic
, no manual casting - Flexible inputs types, fixed output types
- Useful parsing error messages
import 'package:deep_pick/deep_pick.dart';
pick(json, 'parsing', 'is', 'fun').asBool(); // true
$ dart pub add deep_pick
dependencies:
deep_pick: ^1.0.0
This example demonstrates parsing of an HTTP response using deep_pick
. You can either use it to parse individual values of a json response or parse whole objects using the fromPick
constructor.
final response = await http.get(Uri.parse('https://api.countapi.xyz/stats'));
final json = jsonDecode(response.body);
// Parse individual fields (nullable)
final int? requests = pick(json, 'requests').asIntOrNull();
// Require values to be non-null or throw a useful error message
final int keys_created = pick(json, 'keys_created').asIntOrThrow();
// Pick deep nested values without parsing all objects in between
final String? version = pick(json, 'meta', 'version', 'commit').asStringOrNull();
// Parse a full object using a fromPick factory constructor
final CounterApiStats stats = CounterApiStats.fromPick(pick(json).required());
// Parse lists with a fromPick constructor
final List<CounterApiStats> multipleStats = pick(json, 'items')
.asListOrEmpty((pick) => CounterApiStats.fromPick(pick));
|
// Http response model
class CounterApiStats {
const CounterApiStats({
required this.requests,
required this.keys_created,
required this.keys_updated,
this.version,
});
final int requests;
final int keys_created;
final int keys_updated;
final String? version;
factory CounterApiStats.fromPick(RequiredPick pick) {
return CounterApiStats(
requests: pick('requests').asIntOrThrow(),
keys_created: pick('keys_created').asIntOrThrow(),
keys_updated: pick('keys_updated').asIntOrThrow(),
version: pick('version').asStringOrNull(),
);
}
} |
Returns the picked Object
as String representation.
It doesn't matter if the value is actually a int
, double
, bool
or any other Object.
pick
calls the objects toString
method.
pick('a').asStringOrThrow(); // "a"
pick(1).asStringOrNull(); // "1"
pick(1.0).asStringOrNull(); // "1.0"
pick(true).asStringOrNull(); // "true"
pick(User(name: "Jason")).asStringOrNull(); // User{name: Jason}
pick
tries to parse Strings with int.tryParse
and double.tryParse
.
A int
can be parsed as double
(no precision loss) but not vice versa because it could lead to mistakes.
pick(3).asIntOrThrow(); // 3
pick("3").asIntOrNull(); // 3
pick(1).asDoubleOrThrow(); // 1.0
pick("2.7").asDoubleOrNull(); // 2.7
Parsing a bool couldn't be easier with those self-explaining methods
pick(true).asBoolOrThrow(); // true
pick(false).asBoolOrThrow(); // true
pick(null).asBoolOrTrue(); // true
pick(null).asBoolOrFalse(); // false
pick(null).asBoolOrNull(); // null
pick('true').asBoolOrNull(); // true;
pick('false').asBoolOrNull(); // false;
deep_pick
does not treat the int
values 0
and 1
as bool
as some other languages do.
Write your own logic using .let
instead.
pick(1).asBoolOrNull(); // null
pick(1).letOrNull((pick) => pick.value == 1 ? true : pick.value == 0 ? false : null); // true
Accepts most common date formats such as
ISO 8601
includingRFC-3339
,RFC 1123
including HTTPdate
header, RSS2pubDate
,RFC 822
,RFC 1036
andRFC 2822
,RFC 850
includingRFC 1036
,COOKIE
ANSI C asctime()
pick('2021-11-01T11:53:15Z').asDateTimeOrNull(); // UTC
pick('2021-11-01T11:53:15+0000').asDateTimeOrNull(); // ISO 8601
pick('Monday, 01-Nov-21 11:53:15 UTC').asDateTimeOrThrow(); // RFC 850
pick('Wed, 21 Oct 2015 07:28:00 GMT').asDateTimeOrThrow(); // RFC 1123
pick('Sun Nov 6 08:49:37 1994').asDateTimeOrThrow(); // asctime()
When the JSON object contains a List of items that List can be mapped to a List<T>
of objects (T
).
pick([]).asListOrNull(SomeObject.fromPick);
pick([]).asListOrThrow(SomeObject.fromPick);
pick([]).asListOrEmpty(SomeObject.fromPick);
final users = [
{'name': 'John Snow'},
{'name': 'Daenerys Targaryen'},
];
List<Person> persons = pick(users).asListOrEmpty((pick) {
return Person(
name: pick('name').required().asString(),
);
});
class Person {
final String name;
Person({required this.name});
}
Extract the mapper function and use it as a reference allows to write it in a single line again 😄
List<Person> persons = pick(users).asListOrEmpty(Person.fromPick);
Replacing the static function with a factory constructor doesn't work.
Constructors cannot be referenced as functions, yet (dart-lang/language/issues/216).
Meanwhile, use .asListOrEmpty((it) => Person.fromPick(it))
when using a factory constructor.
pick
called in the fromPick
function uses the parameter pick
, not the top-level function.
This is possible because Pick
implements the .call()
method.
This allows chaining indefinitely on the same Pick
object while maintaining internal references for useful error messages.
Both versions produce the same result and shows you're not limited to 10 arguments.
pick(json, 'shoes', 1, 'tags', 0).asStringOrThrow();
pick(json)('shoes')(1)('tags')(0).asStringOrThrow();
To simplify the asList
API, the functions ignores null
values in the List
.
This allows the usage of RequiredPick
over Pick
in the map
function.
When null
is important for your logic you can process the null
value by providing an optional whenNull
mapper function.
pick([1, null, 3]).asListOrNull(
(it) => it.asInt(),
whenNull: (Pick pick) => 25;
);
// [1, 25, 3]
Picking the Map
is rarely used, because Pick
itself grants further picking using the .call(args)
method.
Converting back to a Map
is usually only used for existing fromMap
mapper functions.
pick(json).asMapOrNull<String, dynamic>();
pick(json).asMapOrThrow<String, dynamic>();
pick(json).asMapOrEmpty<String, dynamic>();
Parsers in deep_pick
are based on extension functions on the classes Pick
.
This makes it flexible and easy for 3rd-party types to add custom parsers.
This example parses a int
as Firestore Timestamp
.
import 'package:cloud_firestore/cloud_firestore.dart';
import 'package:deep_pick/deep_pick.dart';
extension TimestampPick on Pick {
Timestamp asFirestoreTimeStampOrThrow() {
final value = required().value;
if (value is Timestamp) {
return value;
}
if (value is int) {
return Timestamp.fromMillisecondsSinceEpoch(value);
}
throw PickException("value $value at $debugParsingExit can't be casted to Timestamp");
}
Timestamp? asFirestoreTimeStampOrNull() {
if (value == null) return null;
try {
return asFirestoreTimeStampOrThrow();
} catch (_) {
return null;
}
}
}
When using a custom type in only a few places, it might be overkill to create all the extensions. For those cases use the let function borrowed from Kotlin to creating neat one-liners.
final UserId id = pick(json, 'id').letOrNull((it) => UserId(it.asString()));
final Timestamp timestamp = pick(json, 'time')
.letOrThrow((it) => Timestamp.fromMillisecondsSinceEpoch(it.asInt()));
Picking values from a Firebase DocumentSnapshot
is usually very selective.
Only a fraction of the properties have to be parsed.
In this scenario it would be overkill to map the whole document to a Dart object.
Instead, parse the values in place while staying type-safe.
Use .asStringOrThrow()
when confident that the value is never null
and always exists.
The return type then becomes non-nullable (String
instead of String?
).
When the data
doesn't contain the full_name
field (against your assumption) it would crash throwing a PickException
.
final DocumentSnapshot userDoc =
await FirebaseFirestore.instance.collection('users').doc(userId).get();
final data = userDoc.data();
final String fullName = pick(data, 'full_name').asStringOrThrow();
final String? level = pick(data, 'level').asIntOrNull();
deep_pick
offers an alternative required()
API with the same result.
This is useful to make sure a value exists before parsing it.
In case it is null
or absent a useful error message is printed.
final String fullName = pick(data, 'full_name').required().asString();
Before Dart 2.12 and the new ?[]
operator one had to write a lot of code to prevent crashes when a value isn't set!
Reducing this boilerplate was the origin of deep_pick
.
String milestoneCreator;
final milestone = json['milestore'];
if (milestone != null) {
final creator = json['creator'];
if (creator != null) {
final login = creator['login'];
if (login is String) {
milestoneCreator = login;
}
}
}
print(milestoneCreator); // octocat
This example of parses an issue
object of the GitHub v3 API.
Today with Dart 2.12+ parsing Dart data structures has become way easier with the introduction of the ?[]
operator.
final json = jsonDecode(response.data);
final milestoneCreator = json?['milestone']?['creator']?['login'] as String?;
print(milestoneCreator); // octocat
deep_pick
backports this short syntax to previous Dart versions (<2.12
).
final milestoneCreator = pick(json, 'milestone', 'creator', 'login').asStringOrNull();
print(milestoneCreator); // octocat
But even with the latest Dart version, deep_pick
offers fantastic features over vanilla parsing using the ?[]
operators:
Different languages and their JSON libraries generate different JSON.
Sometimes id
s are String
, sometimes int
. Booleans are provided as true
or with quotes as String "true"
.
The meaning is the same but from a type perspective they are not.
deep_pick
does the basic conversions automatically.
By requesting a specific return type, apps won't break when a "price" usually returns double
(0.99
) but for whole numbers int
(1
instead of 1.0
).
pick(2).asIntOrNull(); // 2
pick('2').asIntOrNull(); // 2 (Sting -> int)
pick(42.0).asDoubleOrNull(); // 42.0
pick(42).asDoubleOrNull(); // 42.0 (double -> int)
pick(true).asBoolOrFalse(); // true
pick('true').asBoolOrFalse(); // true (String -> bool)
Using the ?[]
operator can crash for Lists.
Accessing a list item by index
outside of the available range causes a RangeError
.
You can't access index 23 when the List
has only 10 items.
json['shoes']?[23]?['id'] as String?;
// Unhandled exception:
// RangeError (index): Invalid value: Not in inclusive range 0..10: 23
pick
automatically catches the RangeError
and returns null
.
pick(json, 'shoes', 23, 'id').asStringOrNull(); // null
Vanilla Dart returns a type error because null
is not a String
.
There is no information available which part is null
or missing.
final milestoneCreator = json?['milestone']?['creator']?['login'] as String;
// Unhandled exception:
// type 'Null' is not a subtype of type 'String' in type cast
deep_pick
shows the exact location where parsing failed, making it easy to report errors to the API team.
final milestoneCreator = pick(json, 'milestone', 'creator', 'login').asStringOrThrow();
// Unhandled exception:
// PickException(
// Expected a non-null value but location "milestone" in pick(json, "milestone" (absent), "creator", "login") is absent.
// Use asStringOrNull() when the value may be null at some point (String?).
// )
Notice the distinction between "absent" and "null" when you see such errors.
"absent"
means the key isn't found in a Map or a List has no item at the requested index"null"
means the value at that position is actuallynull
Parsing objects from external systems isn't type-safe. API changes happen, and it is up to the consumer to decide how to handle them. Consumer always have to assume the worst, such as missing values.
It's so easy to accidentally cast a value to String
in the happy path, instead of String?
accounting for all possible cases.
Easy to write, easy to miss in code reviews.
Forgetting that null
could be a valid return type results in a type error:
json?['milestone']?['creator']?['login'] as String;
// ----^
// Unhandled exception:
// type 'Null' is not a subtype of type 'String' in type cast
With deep_pick
, all casting methods (.as*()
) have null
in mind.
For each type you have to choose between at least two ways to deal with null
.
pick(json, ...).asStringOrNull();
pick(json, ...).asStringOrThrow();
pick(json, ...).asBoolOrNull();
pick(json, ...).asBoolOrFalse();
pick(json, ...).asListOrNull(SomeClass.fromPick);
pick(json, ...).asListOrEmpty(SomeClass.fromPick);
Having "Throw" and "Null" in the method name, clearly indicates the possible outcome in case the values couldn't be picked. Throwing is not a bad habit, some properties are essential for the business logic and throwing an error the correct handling. But throwing should be done intentional, not accidental.
Even with the new ?[]
operator, mapping a value to a new Object (i.e. when wrapping it in a domain Object) can't be done in a single line.
final value = json?['id'] as String?;
final UserId id = value == null ? null : UserId(value);
deep_pick
borrows the let function from Kotlin creating a neat one-liner
final UserId id = pick(json, 'id').letOrNull((it) => UserId(it.asString()));
Copyright 2019 Pascal Welsch
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.