Trait serde::Serializer
[−]
[src]
pub trait Serializer: Sized { type Ok; type Error: Error; type SerializeSeq: SerializeSeq<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>; type SerializeTuple: SerializeTuple<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>; type SerializeTupleStruct: SerializeTupleStruct<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>; type SerializeTupleVariant: SerializeTupleVariant<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>; type SerializeMap: SerializeMap<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>; type SerializeStruct: SerializeStruct<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>; type SerializeStructVariant: SerializeStructVariant<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>; fn serialize_bool(self, v: bool) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_i8(self, v: i8) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_i16(self, v: i16) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_i32(self, v: i32) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_i64(self, v: i64) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_u8(self, v: u8) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_u16(self, v: u16) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_u32(self, v: u32) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_u64(self, v: u64) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_f32(self, v: f32) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_f64(self, v: f64) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_char(self, v: char) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_str(self, value: &str) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_bytes(self, value: &[u8]) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_none(self) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_some<T: ?Sized + Serialize>(
self,
value: &T
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_unit(self) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_unit_struct(
self,
name: &'static str
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_unit_variant(
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_newtype_struct<T: ?Sized + Serialize>(
self,
name: &'static str,
value: &T
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_newtype_variant<T: ?Sized + Serialize>(
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str,
value: &T
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>; fn serialize_seq(
self,
len: Option<usize>
) -> Result<Self::SerializeSeq, Self::Error>; fn serialize_seq_fixed_size(
self,
size: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeSeq, Self::Error>; fn serialize_tuple(
self,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeTuple, Self::Error>; fn serialize_tuple_struct(
self,
name: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeTupleStruct, Self::Error>; fn serialize_tuple_variant(
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeTupleVariant, Self::Error>; fn serialize_map(
self,
len: Option<usize>
) -> Result<Self::SerializeMap, Self::Error>; fn serialize_struct(
self,
name: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeStruct, Self::Error>; fn serialize_struct_variant(
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeStructVariant, Self::Error>; fn collect_seq<I>(self, iter: I) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
where
I: IntoIterator,
<I as IntoIterator>::Item: Serialize, { ... } fn collect_map<K, V, I>(self, iter: I) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
where
K: Serialize,
V: Serialize,
I: IntoIterator<Item = (K, V)>, { ... } fn collect_str<T: ?Sized>(self, value: &T) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
where
T: Display, { ... } }
A data format that can serialize any data structure supported by Serde.
The role of this trait is to define the serialization half of the Serde data
model, which is a way to categorize every Rust data structure into one of 28
possible types. Each method of the Serializer
trait corresponds to one of
the types of the data model.
Implementations of Serialize
map themselves into this data model by
invoking exactly one of the Serializer
methods.
The types that make up the Serde data model are:
- 12 primitive types:
- bool
- i8, i16, i32, i64
- u8, u16, u32, u64
- f32, f64
- char
- string
- byte array - [u8]
- option
- either none or some value
- unit
- unit is the type of () in Rust
- unit_struct
- for example
struct Unit
orPhantomData<T>
- for example
- unit_variant
- the
E::A
andE::B
inenum E { A, B }
- the
- newtype_struct
- for example
struct Millimeters(u8)
- for example
- newtype_variant
- the
E::N
inenum E { N(u8) }
- the
- seq
- a dynamically sized sequence of values, for example
Vec<T>
orHashSet<T>
- a dynamically sized sequence of values, for example
- seq_fixed_size
- a statically sized sequence of values for which the size will be known
at deserialization time without looking at the serialized data, for
example
[u64; 10]
- a statically sized sequence of values for which the size will be known
at deserialization time without looking at the serialized data, for
example
- tuple
- for example
(u8,)
or(String, u64, Vec<T>)
- for example
- tuple_struct
- for example
struct Rgb(u8, u8, u8)
- for example
- tuple_variant
- the
E::T
inenum E { T(u8, u8) }
- the
- map
- for example
BTreeMap<K, V>
- for example
- struct
- a key-value pairing in which the keys will be known at deserialization
time without looking at the serialized data, for example
struct S { r: u8, g: u8, b: u8 }
- a key-value pairing in which the keys will be known at deserialization
time without looking at the serialized data, for example
- struct_variant
- the
E::S
inenum E { S { r: u8, g: u8, b: u8 } }
- the
Many Serde serializers produce text or binary data as output, for example
JSON or Bincode. This is not a requirement of the Serializer
trait, and
there are serializers that do not produce text or binary output. One example
is the serde_json::value::Serializer
(distinct from the main serde_json
serializer) that produces a serde_json::Value
data structure in memory as
output.
Associated Types
type Ok
The output type produced by this Serializer
during successful
serialization. Most serializers that produce text or binary output
should set Ok = ()
and serialize into an io::Write
or buffer
contained within the Serializer
instance. Serializers that build
in-memory data structures may be simplified by using Ok
to propagate
the data structure around.
type Error: Error
The error type when some error occurs during serialization.
type SerializeSeq: SerializeSeq<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>
Type returned from serialize_seq
and serialize_seq_fixed_size
for
serializing the content of the sequence.
type SerializeTuple: SerializeTuple<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>
Type returned from serialize_tuple
for serializing the content of the
tuple.
type SerializeTupleStruct: SerializeTupleStruct<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>
Type returned from serialize_tuple_struct
for serializing the content
of the tuple struct.
type SerializeTupleVariant: SerializeTupleVariant<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>
Type returned from serialize_tuple_variant
for serializing the content
of the tuple variant.
type SerializeMap: SerializeMap<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>
Type returned from serialize_map
for serializing the content of the
map.
type SerializeStruct: SerializeStruct<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>
Type returned from serialize_struct
for serializing the content of the
struct.
type SerializeStructVariant: SerializeStructVariant<Ok = Self::Ok, Error = Self::Error>
Type returned from serialize_struct_variant
for serializing the
content of the struct variant.
Required Methods
fn serialize_bool(self, v: bool) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a bool
value.
fn serialize_i8(self, v: i8) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize an i8
value.
If the format does not differentiate between i8
and i64
, a
reasonable implementation would be to cast the value to i64
and
forward to serialize_i64
.
fn serialize_i16(self, v: i16) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize an i16
value.
If the format does not differentiate between i16
and i64
, a
reasonable implementation would be to cast the value to i64
and
forward to serialize_i64
.
fn serialize_i32(self, v: i32) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize an i32
value.
If the format does not differentiate between i32
and i64
, a
reasonable implementation would be to cast the value to i64
and
forward to serialize_i64
.
fn serialize_i64(self, v: i64) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize an i64
value.
fn serialize_u8(self, v: u8) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a u8
value.
If the format does not differentiate between u8
and u64
, a
reasonable implementation would be to cast the value to u64
and
forward to serialize_u64
.
fn serialize_u16(self, v: u16) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a u16
value.
If the format does not differentiate between u16
and u64
, a
reasonable implementation would be to cast the value to u64
and
forward to serialize_u64
.
fn serialize_u32(self, v: u32) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a u32
value.
If the format does not differentiate between u32
and u64
, a
reasonable implementation would be to cast the value to u64
and
forward to serialize_u64
.
fn serialize_u64(self, v: u64) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a u64
value.
fn serialize_f32(self, v: f32) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize an f32
value.
If the format does not differentiate between f32
and f64
, a
reasonable implementation would be to cast the value to f64
and
forward to serialize_f64
.
fn serialize_f64(self, v: f64) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize an f64
value.
fn serialize_char(self, v: char) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a character.
If the format does not support characters, it is reasonable to serialize
it as a single element str
or a u32
.
fn serialize_str(self, value: &str) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a &str
.
fn serialize_bytes(self, value: &[u8]) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a chunk of raw byte data.
Enables serializers to serialize byte slices more compactly or more
efficiently than other types of slices. If no efficient implementation
is available, a reasonable implementation would be to forward to
serialize_seq
. If forwarded, the implementation looks usually just
like this:
let mut seq = self.serialize_seq(Some(value.len()))?; for b in value { seq.serialize_element(b)?; } seq.end()
fn serialize_none(self) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a None
value.
fn serialize_some<T: ?Sized + Serialize>(
self,
value: &T
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
self,
value: &T
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a Some(T)
value.
fn serialize_unit(self) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a ()
value.
fn serialize_unit_struct(
self,
name: &'static str
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
self,
name: &'static str
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a unit struct like struct Unit
or PhantomData<T>
.
A reasonable implementation would be to forward to serialize_unit
.
fn serialize_unit_variant(
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a unit variant like E::A
in enum E { A, B }
.
The name
is the name of the enum, the variant_index
is the index of
this variant within the enum, and the variant
is the name of the
variant.
A reasonable implementation would be to forward to serialize_unit
.
match *self { E::A => serializer.serialize_unit_variant("E", 0, "A"), E::B => serializer.serialize_unit_variant("E", 1, "B"), }
fn serialize_newtype_struct<T: ?Sized + Serialize>(
self,
name: &'static str,
value: &T
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
self,
name: &'static str,
value: &T
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a newtype struct like struct Millimeters(u8)
.
Serializers are encouraged to treat newtype structs as insignificant
wrappers around the data they contain. A reasonable implementation would
be to forward to value.serialize(self)
.
serializer.serialize_newtype_struct("Millimeters", &self.0)
fn serialize_newtype_variant<T: ?Sized + Serialize>(
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str,
value: &T
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str,
value: &T
) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error>
Serialize a newtype variant like E::N
in enum E { N(u8) }
.
The name
is the name of the enum, the variant_index
is the index of
this variant within the enum, and the variant
is the name of the
variant. The value
is the data contained within this newtype variant.
match *self { E::N(ref n) => serializer.serialize_newtype_variant("E", 0, "N", n), }
fn serialize_seq(
self,
len: Option<usize>
) -> Result<Self::SerializeSeq, Self::Error>
self,
len: Option<usize>
) -> Result<Self::SerializeSeq, Self::Error>
Begin to serialize a dynamically sized sequence. This call must be
followed by zero or more calls to serialize_element
, then a call to
end
.
The argument is the number of elements in the sequence, which may or may not be computable before the sequence is iterated. Some serializers only support sequences whose length is known up front.
let mut seq = serializer.serialize_seq(Some(self.len()))?; for element in self { seq.serialize_element(element)?; } seq.end()
fn serialize_seq_fixed_size(
self,
size: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeSeq, Self::Error>
self,
size: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeSeq, Self::Error>
Begin to serialize a statically sized sequence whose length will be
known at deserialization time without looking at the serialized data.
This call must be followed by zero or more calls to serialize_element
,
then a call to end
.
let mut seq = serializer.serialize_seq_fixed_size(self.len())?; for element in self { seq.serialize_element(element)?; } seq.end()
fn serialize_tuple(
self,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeTuple, Self::Error>
self,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeTuple, Self::Error>
Begin to serialize a tuple. This call must be followed by zero or more
calls to serialize_element
, then a call to end
.
let mut tup = serializer.serialize_tuple(3)?; tup.serialize_element(&self.0)?; tup.serialize_element(&self.1)?; tup.serialize_element(&self.2)?; tup.end()
fn serialize_tuple_struct(
self,
name: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeTupleStruct, Self::Error>
self,
name: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeTupleStruct, Self::Error>
Begin to serialize a tuple struct like struct Rgb(u8, u8, u8)
. This
call must be followed by zero or more calls to serialize_field
, then a
call to end
.
The name
is the name of the tuple struct and the len
is the number
of data fields that will be serialized.
let mut ts = serializer.serialize_tuple_struct("Rgb", 3)?; ts.serialize_field(&self.0)?; ts.serialize_field(&self.1)?; ts.serialize_field(&self.2)?; ts.end()
fn serialize_tuple_variant(
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeTupleVariant, Self::Error>
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeTupleVariant, Self::Error>
Begin to serialize a tuple variant like E::T
in enum E { T(u8, u8) }
. This call must be followed by zero or more calls to
serialize_field
, then a call to end
.
The name
is the name of the enum, the variant_index
is the index of
this variant within the enum, the variant
is the name of the variant,
and the len
is the number of data fields that will be serialized.
match *self { E::T(ref a, ref b) => { let mut tv = serializer.serialize_tuple_variant("E", 0, "T", 2)?; tv.serialize_field(a)?; tv.serialize_field(b)?; tv.end() } }
fn serialize_map(
self,
len: Option<usize>
) -> Result<Self::SerializeMap, Self::Error>
self,
len: Option<usize>
) -> Result<Self::SerializeMap, Self::Error>
Begin to serialize a map. This call must be followed by zero or more
calls to serialize_key
and serialize_value
, then a call to end
.
The argument is the number of elements in the map, which may or may not be computable before the map is iterated. Some serializers only support maps whose length is known up front.
let mut map = serializer.serialize_map(Some(self.len()))?; for (k, v) in self { map.serialize_entry(k, v)?; } map.end()
fn serialize_struct(
self,
name: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeStruct, Self::Error>
self,
name: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeStruct, Self::Error>
Begin to serialize a struct like struct Rgb { r: u8, g: u8, b: u8 }
.
This call must be followed by zero or more calls to serialize_field
,
then a call to end
.
The name
is the name of the struct and the len
is the number of
data fields that will be serialized.
let mut struc = serializer.serialize_struct("Rgb", 3)?; struc.serialize_field("r", &self.r)?; struc.serialize_field("g", &self.g)?; struc.serialize_field("b", &self.b)?; struc.end()
fn serialize_struct_variant(
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeStructVariant, Self::Error>
self,
name: &'static str,
variant_index: usize,
variant: &'static str,
len: usize
) -> Result<Self::SerializeStructVariant, Self::Error>
Begin to serialize a struct variant like E::S
in enum E { S { r: u8, g: u8, b: u8 } }
. This call must be followed by zero or more calls to
serialize_field
, then a call to end
.
The name
is the name of the enum, the variant_index
is the index of
this variant within the enum, the variant
is the name of the variant,
and the len
is the number of data fields that will be serialized.
match *self { E::S { ref r, ref g, ref b } => { let mut sv = serializer.serialize_struct_variant("E", 0, "S", 3)?; sv.serialize_field("r", r)?; sv.serialize_field("g", g)?; sv.serialize_field("b", b)?; sv.end() } }
Provided Methods
fn collect_seq<I>(self, iter: I) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error> where
I: IntoIterator,
<I as IntoIterator>::Item: Serialize,
I: IntoIterator,
<I as IntoIterator>::Item: Serialize,
Collect an iterator as a sequence.
The default implementation serializes each item yielded by the iterator
using Self::SerializeSeq
. Implementors should not need to override
this method.
fn collect_map<K, V, I>(self, iter: I) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error> where
K: Serialize,
V: Serialize,
I: IntoIterator<Item = (K, V)>,
K: Serialize,
V: Serialize,
I: IntoIterator<Item = (K, V)>,
Collect an iterator as a map.
The default implementation serializes each pair yielded by the iterator
using Self::SerializeMap
. Implementors should not need to override
this method.
fn collect_str<T: ?Sized>(self, value: &T) -> Result<Self::Ok, Self::Error> where
T: Display,
T: Display,
Serialize a string produced by an implementation of Display
.
The default implementation builds a heap-allocated String
and
delegates to serialize_str
. Serializers are encouraged to provide a
more efficient implementation if possible.
impl Serialize for DateTime { fn serialize<S>(&self, serializer: S) -> Result<S::Ok, S::Error> where S: Serializer { serializer.collect_str(&format_args!("{:?}{:?}", self.naive_local(), self.offset())) } }