C++11 header-only toml parser depending only on C++ standard library.
compatible to the latest version of TOML v0.5.0 after version 2.0.0.
Are you looking for pre-C++11 compatible toml parser? Try Boost.toml! It has almost the same functionality as this library and works with C++98 & Boost.
Just include the file after adding it to the include path.
#include <toml11/toml.hpp> // that's all! now you can use it.
int main()
{
const auto data = toml::parse("example.toml");
const auto title = toml::get<std::string>(data.at("title"));
std::cout << "the title is " << title << std::endl;
}
The only thing you have to do is to pass a filename to the toml::parse
function.
const std::string fname("sample.toml");
const toml::table data = toml::parse(fname);
In the case of file open error, it will throw std::runtime_error
.
You can also pass a stream
to the toml::parse
function after checking the status.
Note that on Windows OS, stream that is opened as text-mode automatically converts
CRLF ("\r\n") into LF ("\n") and this leads inconsistency between file size and
the contents that would be read. This causes weird error. To use a file stream
with toml::parse
, don't forget to pass binary mode flag when you open the
stream.
std::ifstream ifs("sample.toml", std::ios_base::binary);
assert(ifs.good());
const auto data = toml::parse(ifs /*, "filename" (optional)*/);
To show a better error message, it is recommended to pass a filename with istream
.
See also in the case of syntax error
and passing invalid type to toml::get.
If there is a syntax error in a toml file, toml::parse
will throw toml::syntax_error
.
toml11 now has clean and informative error messages inspired by Rust and it looks like the following (comment after hash sign are actually not shown).
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'toml::syntax_error'
what(): [error] toml::parse_table: invalid line format # error description
--> example.toml # file name
3 | a = 42 = true # line num and content
| ^------ expected newline, but got '='. # error reason
If you (mistakenly) duplicate tables and got an error, you may want to see where the other is. toml11 shows both at the same time.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'toml::syntax_error'
what(): [error] toml::insert_value: table ("table") already exists.
--> duplicate-table.toml
1 | [table]
| ~~~~~~~ table already exists here
...
3 | [table]
| ~~~~~~~ table defined twice
Since the error message generation is generally a difficult task, the current status is not ideal. toml11 needs your help. If you encounter a weird error message, please let us know and contribute to improve the quality!
After parsing successfully, you can obtain the values from the result of
toml::parse
(here, data
) using toml::get
function.
answer = 42
pi = 3.14
numbers = [1,2,3]
time = 1979-05-27T07:32:00Z
[tab]
key = "value"
const auto answer = toml::get<std::int64_t >(data.at("answer"));
const auto pi = toml::get<double >(data.at("pi"));
const auto numbers = toml::get<std::vector<int>>(data.at("numbers"));
const auto timepoint = toml::get<std::chrono::system_clock::time_point>(data.at("time"));
const auto tab = toml::get<toml::Table>(data.at("tab"));
const auto key = toml::get<std::string>( tab.at("key"));
When you pass an exact TOML type that does not require type conversion,
toml::get
returns also a reference through which you can modify the content.
toml::get<toml::integer>(data["answer"]) = 6 * 9;
std::cout << toml::get<int>(data.at("answer")) << std::endl; // 54
If the specified type requires conversion, you can't take a reference to the value. See also underlying types.
If you choose the invalid type, toml::type_error
will be thrown.
Similar to the syntax_error
, toml11 also displays informative error messages.
The error message when you choose int
to get string
value would be like this.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'toml::type_error'
what(): [error] toml::value bad_cast to integer
--> example.toml
3 | title = "TOML Example"
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the actual type is string
NOTE: In order to show this kind of error message, all the toml values have 1
shared_ptr
that points the corresponding byte sequence and 2 iterators that point the range.
It is recommended to destruct all the toml::value
classes after configuring your application to save memory resources.
You can set any kind of container
class to obtain a toml::array
except for map
-like classes.
const auto vc = toml::get<std::vector<int> >(data.at("numbers"));
const auto ls = toml::get<std::list<int> >(data.at("numbers"));
const auto dq = toml::get<std::deque<int> >(data.at("numbers"));
const auto ar = toml::get<std::array<int, 3>>(data.at("numbers"));
// if the size of data.at("numbers") is larger than that of std::array,
// it will throw toml::type_error because std::array is not resizable.
Surprisingly, you can also get a toml::array
as std::pair
and std::tuple.
const auto tp = toml::get<std::tuple<short, int, unsigned int>>(data.at("numbers"));
The case when you need this functionality is to get an array of arrays.
aofa = [[1,2,3], ["foo", "bar", "baz"]] # toml allows this
What is the corresponding C++ type? Obviously, it is a std::pair
of std::vector
s.
const auto aofa = toml::get<
std::pair<std::vector<int>, std::vector<std::string>>
>(data.at("aofa"));
If you don't know what the type is inside the array, you can use toml::array
,
which is a std::vector
of toml::value
, instead.
const auto aofa = toml::get<toml::array>(data.at("aofa"));
const auto first = toml::get<toml::array>(aofa.at(0));
See also expecting conversion and checking-value-type.
toml::table
is a key component of this library, which is an alias of
a std::unordered_map
from toml::key (a.k.a. std::string)
to toml::value
.
toml::parse
returns this.
Since it is just an alias of std::unordered_map
, it has all the functionalities
that std::unordered_map
has, e.g. operator[]
, count
, and find
.
toml::table data = toml::parse("example.toml");
if(data.count("title") != 0)
{
data["title"] = std::string("TOML example");
}
When all the values of the table have the same type, toml11 allows you to
convert a toml::table
to a map
that contains the convertible type.
[tab]
key1 = "foo" # all the values are
key2 = "bar" # toml String
const auto tab = toml::get<std::map<std::string, std::string>>(data.at("tab"));
std::cout << tab["key1"] << std::endl; // foo
std::cout << tab["key2"] << std::endl; // bar
TOML v0.5.0 has a new feature named "dotted keys". You can chain keys to represent the structure of the data.
physical.color = "orange"
physical.shape = "round"
This is equivalent to the following.
[physical]
color = "orange"
shape = "round"
You can get both of the above formats with the same c++ code.
const auto physical = toml::get<toml::table>(data.at("physical"));
const auto color = toml::get<std::string>(physical.at("color"));
An array of tables is just an array of tables. You can get it completely in the same way as the other arrays and tables.
array_of_inline_table = [{key = "value1"}, {key = "value2"}, {key = "value3"}]
[[array_of_table]]
key = "value4"
[[array_of_table]]
key = "value5"
[[array_of_table]]
key = "value6"
const auto aot1 = toml::get<std::vector<toml::table>>(data.at("array_of_inline_table"));
const auto aot2 = toml::get<std::vector<toml::table>>(data.at("array_of_table"));
Although toml::get
is convenient, it has additional copy-cost because
it copies data contained in toml::value
to the user-specified type.
Of course in some case this overhead is not ignorable.
By passing the exact types, toml::get
returns reference that has nealy zero overhead.
const auto& tab = toml::get<toml::array>(data.at("tab"));
const auto& numbers = toml::get<toml::table>(data.at("numbers"));
Unfortunately, in this case you need to call toml::get
each time you access to
the element of toml::array
because toml::array
is an array of toml::value
.
const auto& num0 = toml::get<toml::integer>(numbers.at(0));
const auto& num1 = toml::get<toml::integer>(numbers.at(1));
const auto& num2 = toml::get<toml::integer>(numbers.at(2));
TOML v0.5.0 has 4 different datetime objects, local_date
, local_time
,
local_datetime
, and offset_datetime
. With toml11, you can convert local_time
to your favorite std::chrono::duration
and others to std::chrono::system_clock::time_point
.
time = 12:30:00
date = 2018-12-23
const auto dur = toml::get<std::chrono::minutes>(data.at("time")); // 12 * 60 + 30 min
const auto tp = toml::get<std::chrono::system_clock::time_point>(data.at("date"));
toml::get_or
returns a default value if toml::get<T>
failed.
toml::table data; // empty table!
const auto value = toml::get_or(data, "key", 42); // value => int 42.
toml::get_or
automatically deduces what type you want to get from the default value you passed.
By using toml::expect
, you will get your expected value or an error message
without throwing toml::type_error
.
const auto value = toml::expect<std::string>(data.at("title"));
if(value.is_ok()) {
std::cout << value.unwrap() << std::endl;
} else {
std::cout << value.unwrap_err() << std::endl;
}
Also, you can pass a function object to modify the expected value.
const auto value = toml::expect<int>(data.at("number"))
.map(// function that receives expected type (here, int)
[](const int number) -> double {
return number * 1.5 + 1.0;
}).unwrap_or(/*default value =*/ 3.14);
toml11 provides utility function to find a value from toml::table
.
Of course, you can do this in your own way with toml::get
because
it just searches an unordered_map
and returns a value if it exists.
const auto data = toml::parse("example.toml");
const auto num = toml::find<int>(data, "num", /*for err msg*/"example.toml");
If the value does not exist, it throws std::out_of_range
with informative error message.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'std::out_of_range'
what(): [error] key "num" not found in example.toml
You can use this with a toml::value
that is expected to be a toml::table
.
It automatically casts the value to table.
const auto data = toml::parse("example.toml");
const auto num = toml::find<int>(data.at("table"), "num");
// expecting the following example.toml
// [table]
// num = 42
In this case, because the value data.at("table")
knows the locatoin of itself,
you don't need to pass where you find the value. toml::find
will show you a great error message.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'std::out_of_range'
what(): [error] key "num" not found
--> example.toml
3 | [table]
| ~~~~~~~ in this table
If it's not a toml::table
, the same error as "invalid type" would be thrown.
When you don't know the exact type of toml-value, you can get enum
type from toml::value
.
switch(data.at("something").type())
{
case toml::value_t::Integer: /* do some stuff */; break;
case toml::value_t::Float : /* do some stuff */; break;
case toml::value_t::String : /* do some stuff */; break;
default : throw std::runtime_error(
"unexpected type : " + toml::stringize(data.at("something").type()));
}
The more sophisticated way is using toml::from_toml
and std::tie
.
toml::table data{{"something", toml::value("foo")}};
int i = 0;
double d = 0.;
std::string s;
toml::from_toml(std::tie(i, d, s), data.at("something"));
std::cout << i << ", " << d << ", " << s << std::endl; // 0, 0, foo
Here, only matched value will be filled. The others are left intact after calling from_toml
.
It should be noted that toml::from_toml
returns as usual even if there are no matched type.
from_toml
can be used also for single type.
int i = 0;
toml::from_toml(i, data.at("something"));
TOML v2.1.0+ provides toml::visit
to apply a function to toml::value
in the
same way as std::variant
.
const toml::value v(3.14);
toml::visit([](const auto& val) -> void {
std::cout << val << std::endl;
}, v);
The function object that would be passed to toml::visit
must be able to
recieve all the possible TOML types. Also, the result types should be the same
each other.
toml11 shows warning if a value of an escape sequence used to represent unicode character exceeds the unicode range.
[warning] input codepoint (0011FFFF) is too large to decode as a unicode character. The result may not be able to render to your screen.
--> example.toml
3 | exceeds_unicode = "\U0011FFFF example"
| ~~~~~~~~~ should be in [0x00..0x10FFFF]
Also, toml11 throws std::domain_error
if the code point exceeds the range that can be represented by utf-8.
terminate called after throwing an instance of 'std::range_error'
what(): [error] input codepoint (0020FFFF) is too large to encode as utf-8.
--> example.toml
3 | exceeds_utf8 = "\U0020FFFF example"
| ~~~~~~~~~ should be in [0x00..0x10FFFF]
When you encounter an error after you read the toml value, you may want to show the error with the value.
toml11 provides you a function that formats user-defined error message with related values. With a code like the following,
const auto value = toml::find<int>(data, "num");
if(value < 0)
{
std::cerr << toml::format_error("[error] value should be positive",
data.at("num"), "positive number required")
<< std::endl;
}
you will get an error message like this.
[error] value should be positive
--> example.toml
3 | num = -42
| ~~~ positive number required
When you pass two values to toml::format_error
,
const auto min = toml::find<int>(range, "min");
const auto max = toml::find<int>(range, "max");
if(max < min)
{
std::cerr << toml::format_error("[error] max should be larger than min",
data.at("min"), "minimum number here",
data.at("max"), "maximum number here");
<< std::endl;
}
you will get an error message like this.
[error] max should be larger than min
--> example.toml
3 | min = 54
| ~~ minimum number here
...
4 | max = 42
| ~~ maximum number here
toml11 v2.1.0 enables you to serialize data into toml format.
const auto data = toml::table{{"foo", 42}, {"bar", "baz"}};
const std::string serial = toml::format(data);
// serial == "{bar=\"baz\",foo=42}"
std::cout << data << std::endl;
// bar = "baz"
// foo = 42
toml11 automatically makes a tiny table and array inline.
You can specify the width to make them inline by std::setw
for streams.
const auto data = toml::table{
{"qux", toml::table{{"foo", 42}, {"bar", "baz"}}},
{"quux", toml::array{"small", "array", "of", "strings"}},
{"foobar", toml::array{"this", "array", "of", "strings", "is", "too", "long",
"to", "print", "into", "single", "line", "isn't", "it?"}},
};
// the threshold becomes 80.
std::cout << std::setw(80) << data << std::endl;
// foobar = [
// "this","array","of","strings","is","too","long","to","print","into",
// "single","line","isn't","it?",
// ]
// quux = ["small","array","of","strings"]
// qux = {bar="baz",foo=42}
// the width is 0. nothing become inline.
std::cout << std::setw(0) << data << std::endl;
// foobar = [
// "this",
// ... (snip)
// "it?",
// ]
// quux = [
// "small",
// "array",
// "of",
// "strings",
// ]
// [qux]
// bar = "baz"
// foo = 42
It is recommended to set width before printing data. Some I/O functions changes
width to 0, and it makes all the stuff (including toml::array
) multiline.
The resulting files becomes too long.
toml::format
receives optional second argument to set the width.
By default, it is 80.
const auto data = toml::table{
{"qux", toml::table{{"foo", 42}, {"bar", "baz"}}}
};
const std::string serial = toml::format(data, /*width = */ 0);
// [qux]
// bar = "baz"
// foo = 42
To control the precision of floating point numbers, you need to pass
std::setprecision
to stream or pass int
to the optional third argument of
toml::format
(by default, it is std::numeric_limits<double>::max_digit10
).
const auto data = toml::table{
{"pi", 3.141592653589793},
{"e", 2.718281828459045}
};
std::cout << std::setprecision(17) << data << std::endl;
// e = 2.7182818284590451
// pi = 3.1415926535897931
std::cout << std::setprecision( 7) << data << std::endl;
// e = 2.718282
// pi = 3.141593
const std::string serial = toml::format(data, /*width = */ 0, /*prec = */ 17);
The toml types (can be used as toml::*
in this library) and corresponding enum
names are listed in the table below.
toml::type | underlying c++ type | enum |
---|---|---|
Boolean | bool |
toml::value_t::Boolean |
Integer | std::int64_t |
toml::value_t::Integer |
Float | double |
toml::value_t::Float |
String | toml::string |
toml::value_t::String |
LocalDate | toml::local_date |
toml::value_t::LocalDate |
LocalTime | toml::local_time |
toml::value_t::LocalTime |
LocalDatetime | toml::local_datetime |
toml::value_t::LocalDatetime |
OffsetDatetime | toml::offset_datetime |
toml::value_t::offsetDatetime |
Array | std::vector<toml::value> |
toml::value_t::Array |
Table | std::unordered_map<toml::key, toml::value> |
toml::value_t::Table |
toml::string
is effectively the same as std::string
but has an additional
flag that represents a kind of a string, string_t::basic
and string_t::literal
.
Although std::string
is not an exact toml type, still you can get a reference
that points to internal std::string
by using toml::get<std::string>()
for convenience.
Datetime
variants are struct
that are defined in this library.
Because std::chrono::system_clock::time_point
is a time point,
not capable of representing a Local Time independent from a specific day.
It is recommended to get Datetime
s as std::chrono
classes through toml::get
.
I thank the contributor for providing great feature to this repository.
- Guillaume Fraux (@Luthaf)
- Windows support and CI on Appvayor
- Intel Compiler support
- Quentin Khan (@xaxousis)
- Found & Fixed a bug around ODR
This product is licensed under the terms of the MIT License.
- Copyright (c) 2017 Toru Niina
All rights reserved.