-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 14
Serializing Cyclical Objects
To serialize objects that contains Cyclical References it would be needed to use the annotation @cyclical
. If this annotation is present and the depth
variable is not set then the non-primitive objects are not going to be parsed and only the id or hashmap is going to be present. Let's see next to objects:
library example;
import 'package:dson/dson.dart';
@MirrorsUsed(targets:const['example'],override:'*')
import 'dart:mirrors';
@cyclical
class Employee {
int id;
String firstName;
String lastName;
Address address;
Employee manager;
}
@cyclical
class Address {
int id;
String street;
String city;
String country;
String postalCode;
Employee owner;
}
void main() {
var manager = new Employee()
..id = 1
..firstName = 'Jhon'
..lastName = 'Doe';
manager.address = new Address()
..id = 1
..street = 'some street'
..city = 'Miami'
..country = 'USA'
..owner = manager;
var employee = new Employee()
..id = 2
..firstName = 'Luis'
..lastName = 'Vargas'
..manager = manager;
employee.address = new Address()
..id = 2
..street = 'some street'
..city = 'Miami'
..country = 'USA'
..owner = employee;
print(serialize(employee)); //will print: '{"id":2,"firstName":"Luis","lastName":"Vargas","address":{"id":2},"manager":{"id":1}}'
print(serialize(employee.address)); // will print: '{"id":2,"street":"some street","city":"Miami","country":"USA","owner":{"id":2}}'
// depth is a optional parameter that could be a list that should contains strings or Maps<String, Map>
print(serialize(employee, depth: ['address']));
/* will print:
'{"id":2,"firstName":"Luis","lastName":"Vargas",'
'"address":{"id":2,"street":"some street","city":"Miami","country":"USA","owner":{"id":2}},'
'"manager":{"id":1}}'
*/
print(serialize(employee, depth: [{'manager': ['address']}, 'address']));
/* will print:
'{"id":2,"firstName":"Luis","lastName":"Vargas",'
'"address":{"id":2,"street":"some street","city":"Miami","country":"USA",'
'"owner":{"id":2}},'
'"manager":{"id":1,"firstName":"Jhon","lastName":"Doe",'
'"address":{"id":1,"street":"some street","city":"Miami","country":"USA","owner":{"id":1}}}}');
*/
}
as you can see employee has an address and the address has the employee as owner. If the property id
is not present in the object then it is going to take the hashcode
value from the object as reference. And finally, the depth
parameter passed to serialize function tells serializer how deep you want to go throw the reference. This help us not only to avoid cyclical reference, but to determine what referenced objects should be serialized.
The same applies for lists:
library example;
import 'package:dson/dson.dart';
@MirrorsUsed(targets:const['example'],override:'*')
import 'dart:mirrors';
@cyclical
class Student {
int id;
String name;
List<Course> courses;
}
@cyclical
class Course {
int id;
DateTime beginDate;
List<Student> students;
}
void main() {
print(serialize(student1)); // will print: '{"id":1,"name":"student1","courses":[{"id":1},{"id":3}]}'
print(serialize(student1, depth: ['courses']));
/* will print:
'{'
'"id":1,'
'"name":"student1",'
'"courses":['
'{"id":1,"beginDate":"2015-01-01T00:00:00.000Z","students":[{"id":1},{"id":2}]},'
'{"id":3,"beginDate":"2015-01-03T00:00:00.000Z","students":[{"id":1},{"id":3}]}'
']'
'}');
*/
print(serialize(student1.courses));
/* will print:
'['
'{"id":1,"beginDate":"2015-01-01T00:00:00.000Z","students":[{"id":1},{"id":2}]},'
'{"id":3,"beginDate":"2015-01-03T00:00:00.000Z","students":[{"id":1},{"id":3}]}'
']');
*/
print(serialize(student2.courses, depth: ['students']));
/* will print:
'['
'{"id":1,"beginDate":"2015-01-01T00:00:00.000Z","students":['
'{"id":1,"name":"student1","courses":[{"id":1},{"id":3}]},'
'{"id":2,"name":"student2","courses":[{"id":1},{"id":2}]}'
']},'
'{"id":2,"beginDate":"2015-01-02T00:00:00.000Z","students":['
'{"id":2,"name":"student2","courses":[{"id":1},{"id":2}]},'
'{"id":3,"name":"student3","courses":[{"id":2},{"id":3}]}'
']}'
']'
*/
}
Without the annotation @cyclical
the program is going to throw a stack overflow error caused by the serializing of cyclical objects.
- Serialization
1.1. Serializing objects
1.2. Serializing Cyclical Objects
1.3. Excluding attributes from being serialized
- Deserialization