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Direct parsing

For large inputs parsing into the library's containers followed by conversion via value_to might be prohibitively expensive. For this cases the library provides components that allow parsing directly into user-provided objects.

The drawback of this approach is that fully custom type representations are not supported, only the library-provided conversions are. Also all objects that should be populated by parsing have to be default constructible types. This includes not only the top-level object, but e.g. elements of containers, members of described structs, and alternatives of variants.

That being said, if your types are default-constructible and you don't need the customisability allowed by value_to, then you can get a significant performance boost with direct parsing.

Direct parsing is performed by the parse_into family of functions. The library provides overloads that take either string_view or std::istream, and can report errors either via throwing exceptions or setting an error code.

std::map< std::string, std::vector<int> > vectors;
string_view input = R"( { "even": [2,4,6], "odd": [1,3,5] } )";
parse_into(vectors, input);

Finally, if you need to combine incremental parsing with direct parsing, you can resort to parser_for. parser_for<T> is an instantiation of basic_parser that parses into an object of type T, and is what parse_into uses under the hood.


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