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@@ -12,9 +12,9 @@ Here is a quick show off, for more complete report you can checkout the full [be
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-# 1 Minute Tutorial
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+# Bind-API is the best
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-Given this JSON document `[0,1,2,3]`
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+Bind-api should always be the first choice. Given this JSON document `[0,1,2,3]`
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Parse with Go bind-api
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@@ -26,27 +26,36 @@ iter.Read(&val)
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fmt.Println(val[3])
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```
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-Parse with Go any-api
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+# Iterator-API for quick extraction
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-```go
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-import "github.com/json-iterator/go"
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-iter := jsoniter.ParseString(`[0,1,2,3]`)
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-val := iter.ReadAny()
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-fmt.Println(val.Get(3))
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-```
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+When you do not need to get all the data back, just extract some.
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Parse with Go iterator-api
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```go
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import "github.com/json-iterator/go"
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-iter := ParseString(`[0,1,2,3]`)
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-total := 0
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+iter := ParseString(`[0, [1, 2], [3, 4], 5]`)
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+count := 0
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for iter.ReadArray() {
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- total += iter.ReadInt()
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+ iter.skip()
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+ count++
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}
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-fmt.Println(total)
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+fmt.Println(count) // 4
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```
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+# Any-API for maximum flexibility
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+
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+Parse with Go any-api
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+
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+```go
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+import "github.com/json-iterator/go"
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+iter := jsoniter.ParseString(`[{"field1":"11","field2":"12"},{"field1":"21","field2":"22"}]`)
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+val := iter.ReadAny()
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+fmt.Println(val.ToInt(1, "field2")) // 22
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+```
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+
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+Notice you can extract from nested data structure, and convert any type to the type to you want.
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+
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# How to get
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```
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