Skip to main content
13 events
when toggle format what by license comment
Oct 24, 2023 at 23:45 vote accept InSync
Oct 23, 2023 at 9:42 comment added Stephen C The classic example is when the software that generates the JSON is not escaping quotes properly. Then you don't know for sure where strings start and end.
Oct 23, 2023 at 9:38 comment added Stephen C It is worse than that. An unknown grammar can be reverse engineered / inferred from examples. The problem arises when some "valid" input for the grammar can be parsed in two (or more) different ways with different meanings. Then you can't tell which is the correct. Even determining that there >are< multiple parses for the same input makes your parser a lot more complicated.
Oct 23, 2023 at 9:34 comment added VLAZ @StephenC "Very often there is no real way to know what the grammar is, if the source is a closed system." although even if it's not a closed system it's probably hard. But might be reverse engineered easier. Still wouldn't recommend this approach for unknown ad-hoc formats.
Oct 23, 2023 at 9:31 comment added Stephen C The problem with "... derive the grammar of whatever not-well-defined format is..." is that said grammar is often ambiguous, in theory if not in practice. Parsers for ambiguous grammars are difficult.
Oct 22, 2023 at 13:34 comment added dumbass Ah, missed that while skimming.
Oct 22, 2023 at 13:21 comment added VLAZ @user3840170 "The other somewhat reasonable way to handle the situation is to derive the grammar of whatever not-well-defined format is, then write a parser for it"
Oct 22, 2023 at 13:17 comment added dumbass “the only sane way to deal with not-JSON is to fix the source to make it JSON” – or just parse it from first principles: define a formal grammar, write a tokenizer and parser.
Oct 21, 2023 at 17:28 comment added Roddy of the Frozen Peas I like the "recipe for not-apples" analogy. A single canonical q would be closed as too broad because the problem space is too large to have a single generic one-size-fits-all q&a -- even restricting the problem space to a single language.
Oct 21, 2023 at 12:36 comment added Karl Knechtel We should IMO have a canonical that a) lays out the sort of information presented here; b) explains how to check whether the input is valid JSON (both with tools and by visual inspection); c) mentions JSON-like and related formats that the data might actually have (for example, people very often want to throw a normal JSON parser at JSONL). Or possibly split that across questions, but I don't know how that would look. My (unified) attempt was stackoverflow.com/questions/75188362 but it didn't go very well.
Oct 21, 2023 at 8:33 comment added VLAZ @RyanM that would be true. There could be a canonical that tackles one or more of the "deviations". Although, I think discoverability of "what exact not-JSON I have" might become an issue
Oct 21, 2023 at 2:36 comment added Ryan M Mod There could, however, be language- or library-specific canonicals.
Oct 20, 2023 at 22:48 history answered VLAZ CC BY-SA 4.0