Unicode C++
Unicode C++
Demonstrates how to Handle Large Integers in JSON
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Demonstrates how to handle large integers in JSON. (Integers larger than what can fit in a 32-bit signed integer.)Chilkat Unicode C++ Downloads
#include <CkJsonObjectW.h>
void ChilkatSample(void)
{
bool success = false;
// Let's say your JSON has this:
// {
// "id": 20000000001234567
// }
CkJsonObjectW json;
success = json.LoadFile(L"qa_data/json/large_int.json");
if (success == false) {
wprintf(L"%s\n",json.lastErrorText());
return;
}
// The integer is too large for a 32-bit signed integer that is returned by IntOf.
// The result will be something that wrapped around and could be negative.
// In this case it would be: -543893881
int id = json.IntOf(L"id");
wprintf(L"id: %d\n",id);
// The solution is to read the integer value as a string, and then use the features in your programming language
// to convert from a string to a 64-bit integer.
//
// Alternatively, you may wish to simply hold the value as a string. If, for example, the integer simply references
// an order ID, an account ID, etc., then there's no need to convert to an integer value. You're not going to be doing
// mathematical operations on it anyway. This is usually the case for large integers -- they typically exist
// in JSON as an account ID.
// You can get any JSON value as a string:
const wchar_t *accountId = json.stringOf(L"id");
wprintf(L"accountId: %s\n",accountId);
// Sample output:
// id: -543893881
// accountId: 20000000001234567
}