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ORPA-pyOpenRPA/Resources/WPy64-3720/python-3.7.2.amd64/Lib/site-packages/json5-0.9.5.dist-info/METADATA

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Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: json5
Version: 0.9.5
Summary: A Python implementation of the JSON5 data format.
Home-page: https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5
Author: Dirk Pranke
Author-email: dpranke@chromium.org
License: Apache
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
Provides-Extra: dev
Requires-Dist: hypothesis ; extra == 'dev'
# pyjson5
A Python implementation of the JSON5 data format.
[JSON5](https://json5.org) extends the
[JSON](http://www.json.org) data interchange format to make it
slightly more usable as a configuration language:
* JavaScript-style comments (both single and multi-line) are legal.
* Object keys may be unquoted if they are legal ECMAScript identifiers
* Objects and arrays may end with trailing commas.
* Strings can be single-quoted, and multi-line string literals are allowed.
There are a few other more minor extensions to JSON; see the above page for
the full details.
This project implements a reader and writer implementation for Python;
where possible, it mirrors the
[standard Python JSON API](https://docs.python.org/library/json.html)
package for ease of use.
There is one notable difference from the JSON api: the `load()` and
`loads()` methods support optionally checking for (and rejecting) duplicate
object keys; pass `allow_duplicate_keys=False` to do so (duplicates are
allowed by default).
This is an early release. It has been reasonably well-tested, but it is
**SLOW**. It can be 1000-6000x slower than the C-optimized JSON module,
and is 200x slower (or more) than the pure Python JSON module.
## Known issues
* Did I mention that it is **SLOW**?
* The implementation follows Python3's `json` implementation where
possible. This means that the `encoding` method to `dump()` is
ignored, and unicode strings are always returned.
* The `cls` keyword argument that `json.load()`/`json.loads()` accepts
to specify a custom subclass of ``JSONDecoder`` is not and will not be
supported, because this implementation uses a completely different
approach to parsing strings and doesn't have anything like the
`JSONDecoder` class.
* The `cls` keyword argument that `json.dump()`/`json.dumps()` accepts
is also not supported, for consistency with `json5.load()`. The `default`
keyword *is* supported, though, and might be able to serve as a
workaround.
## Running the tests
To run the tests, setup a venv and install the required dependencies with
`pip install -e '.[dev]'`, then run the tests with `python setup.py test`.
## Version History / Release Notes
* v0.9.5 (2020-05-26)
* Miscellaneous non-source cleanups in the repo, including setting
up GitHub Actions for a CI system. No changes to the library from
v0.9.4, other than updating the version.
* v0.9.4 (2020-03-26)
* [GitHub pull #38](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/pull/38)
Fix from fredrik@fornwall.net for dumps() crashing when passed
an empty string as a key in an object.
* v0.9.3 (2020-03-17)
* [GitHub pull #35](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/pull/35)
Fix from pastelmind@ for dump() not passing the right args to dumps().
* Fix from p.skouzos@novafutur.com to remove the tests directory from
the setup call, making the package a bit smaller.
* v0.9.2 (2020-03-02)
* [GitHub pull #34](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/pull/34)
Fix from roosephu@ for a badly formatted nested list.
* v0.9.1 (2020-02-09)
* [GitHub issue #33](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/issues/33):
Fix stray trailing comma when dumping an object with an invalid key.
* v0.9.0 (2020-01-30)
* [GitHub issue #29](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/issues/29):
Fix an issue where objects keys that started with a reserved
word were incorrectly quoted.
* [GitHub issue #30](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/issues/30):
Fix an issue where dumps() incorrectly thought a data structure
was cyclic in some cases.
* [GitHub issue #32](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/issues/32):
Allow for non-string keys in dicts passed to ``dump()``/``dumps()``.
Add an ``allow_duplicate_keys=False`` to prevent possible
ill-formed JSON that might result.
* v0.8.5 (2019-07-04)
* [GitHub issue #25](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/issues/25):
Add LICENSE and README.md to the dist.
* [GitHub issue #26](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/issues/26):
Fix printing of empty arrays and objects with indentation, fix
misreporting of the position on parse failures in some cases.
* v0.8.4 (2019-06-11)
* Updated the version history, too.
* v0.8.3 (2019-06-11)
* Tweaked the README, bumped the version, forgot to update the version
history :).
* v0.8.2 (2019-06-11)
* Actually bump the version properly, to 0.8.2.
* v0.8.1 (2019-06-11)
* Fix bug in setup.py that messed up the description. Unfortunately,
I forgot to bump the version for this, so this also identifies as 0.8.0.
* v0.8.0 (2019-06-11)
* Add `allow_duplicate_keys=True` as a default argument to
`json5.load()`/`json5.loads()`. If you set the key to `False`, duplicate
keys in a single dict will be rejected. The default is set to `True`
for compatibility with `json.load()`, earlier versions of json5, and
because it's simply not clear if people would want duplicate checking
enabled by default.
* v0.7 (2019-03-31)
* Changes dump()/dumps() to not quote object keys by default if they are
legal identifiers. Passing `quote_keys=True` will turn that off
and always quote object keys.
* Changes dump()/dumps() to insert trailing commas after the last item
in an array or an object if the object is printed across multiple lines
(i.e., if `indent` is not None). Passing `trailing_commas=False` will
turn that off.
* The `json5.tool` command line tool now supports the `--indent`,
`--[no-]quote-keys`, and `--[no-]trailing-commas` flags to allow
for more control over the output, in addition to the existing
`--as-json` flag.
* The `json5.tool` command line tool no longer supports reading from
multiple files, you can now only read from a single file or
from standard input.
* The implementation no longer relies on the standard `json` module
for anything. The output should still match the json module (except
as noted above) and discrepancies should be reported as bugs.
* v0.6.2 (2019-03-08)
* Fix [GitHub issue #23](https://github.com/dpranke/pyjson5/issues/23) and
pass through unrecognized escape sequences.
* v0.6.1 (2018-05-22)
* Cleaned up a couple minor nits in the package.
* v0.6.0 (2017-11-28)
* First implementation that attempted to implement 100% of the spec.
* v0.5.0 (2017-09-04)
* First implementation that supported the full set of kwargs that
the `json` module supports.