This is a parser for Tom Preson-Werner's (@mojombo) TOML markup language, using Java.
jtoml is published in the sonatype nexus repository.
In order to use it, you may add this repository in your pom.xml
:
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>jtoml</id>
<url>https://raw.github.com/agrison/jtoml/mvn-repo/</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
Add the jtoml dependency:
<dependency>
<groupId>me.grison</groupId>
<artifactId>jtoml</artifactId>
<version>1.1.1</version>
</dependency>
Note: The library is hosted on GitHub.
Toml toml = Toml.parse("pi = 3.14\nfoo = \"bar\""); // parse a String
toml = Toml.parse(new File("foo.toml")); // or a file
The Toml
class support different types of getters so that you can retrieve a specific type or the underlying Object
without casting.
// get different types
toml.get("foo"); // Object
toml.getString("foo"); // String
toml.getBoolean("foo"); // Boolean
toml.getDate("foo"); // Calendar
toml.getDouble("foo"); // Double
toml.getLong("foo"); // Long
toml.getList("foo"); // List<Object>
toml.getMap("foo"); // Map<String, Object>
You can map a custom type from an entire TOML String or part of it.
Let's say you would like to map the following TOML to a Player
entity.
[player]
nickName = "foo"
score = 42
You could do it as simple as following:
// or Custom objects
public class Player {
String name;
Long score;
}
Toml toml = Toml.parse("[player]\nname = \"foo\"\nscore = 42");
Player player = toml.getAs("player", Player.class);
player.name; // "foo"
player.score; // 42L
Note: Supported types are Long
, String
, Double
, Boolean
, Calendar
, List
, Map
or Objects having the pre-cited types only.
JToml supports also serialization. Indeed, you can serialize a custom type to a String having the TOML format representing the original object. Imagine the following custom Objects:
public class Stats {
Long maxSpeed;
Double weight;
// Constructors
}
public class Car {
String brand;
String model;
Stats stats;
Boolean legendary;
Calendar date;
List<String> options;
// Constructors
}
Car f12Berlinetta = new Car("Ferrari", "F12 Berlinetta", true, "2012-02-29",
360, 1525.5, Arrays.asList("GPS", "Leather", "Nitro")
);
String toml = Toml.serialize("f12b", f12Berlinetta);
The call to Toml.serialize()
will produce the following TOML format:
[f12b]
brand = "Ferrari"
model = "F12 Berlinetta"
legendary = true
date = 2012-02-29T00:00:00Z
options = ["GPS", "Leather", "Nitro"]
[f12b.stats]
maxSpeed = 347
weight = 1525.5
You can also serialize the current instance of a Toml
object:
Toml toml = Toml.parse("[player]\nname = \"foo\"\nscore = 42");
toml.serialize();
Will produce the following TOML String
[player]
name = "foo"
score = 42
Note: Like for custom types above, supported types are Long
, String
, Double
, Boolean
, Calendar
, List
, Map
or Objects having the pre-cited types only.
Should normally support everything in the Toml Spec.
See the LICENSE
file.