Add simplejson library to app folder.
authorPawel Solyga <Pawel.Solyga@gmail.com>
Sun, 25 Jan 2009 11:31:15 +0000
changeset 975 295d67509412
parent 974 2f86cbc90b65
child 976 d1a9c7179bbb
Add simplejson library to app folder. Patch by: Pawel Solyga Reviewed by: to-be-reviewed
app/simplejson/LICENSE.txt
app/simplejson/__init__.py
app/simplejson/decoder.py
app/simplejson/encoder.py
app/simplejson/scanner.py
app/simplejson/tool.py
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/app/simplejson/LICENSE.txt	Sun Jan 25 11:31:15 2009 +0000
@@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
+Copyright (c) 2006 Bob Ippolito
+
+Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of
+this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in
+the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to
+use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies
+of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do
+so, subject to the following conditions:
+
+The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all
+copies or substantial portions of the Software.
+
+THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
+IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
+FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
+AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
+LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
+OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE
+SOFTWARE.
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/app/simplejson/__init__.py	Sun Jan 25 11:31:15 2009 +0000
@@ -0,0 +1,316 @@
+r"""JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) <http://json.org> is a subset of
+JavaScript syntax (ECMA-262 3rd edition) used as a lightweight data
+interchange format.
+
+:mod:`simplejson` exposes an API familiar to users of the standard library
+:mod:`marshal` and :mod:`pickle` modules. It is the externally maintained
+version of the :mod:`json` library contained in Python 2.6, but maintains
+compatibility with Python 2.4 and Python 2.5 and (currently) has
+significant performance advantages, even without using the optional C
+extension for speedups.
+
+Encoding basic Python object hierarchies::
+
+    >>> import simplejson as json
+    >>> json.dumps(['foo', {'bar': ('baz', None, 1.0, 2)}])
+    '["foo", {"bar": ["baz", null, 1.0, 2]}]'
+    >>> print json.dumps("\"foo\bar")
+    "\"foo\bar"
+    >>> print json.dumps(u'\u1234')
+    "\u1234"
+    >>> print json.dumps('\\')
+    "\\"
+    >>> print json.dumps({"c": 0, "b": 0, "a": 0}, sort_keys=True)
+    {"a": 0, "b": 0, "c": 0}
+    >>> from StringIO import StringIO
+    >>> io = StringIO()
+    >>> json.dump(['streaming API'], io)
+    >>> io.getvalue()
+    '["streaming API"]'
+
+Compact encoding::
+
+    >>> import simplejson as json
+    >>> json.dumps([1,2,3,{'4': 5, '6': 7}], separators=(',',':'))
+    '[1,2,3,{"4":5,"6":7}]'
+
+Pretty printing::
+
+    >>> import simplejson as json
+    >>> s = json.dumps({'4': 5, '6': 7}, sort_keys=True, indent=4)
+    >>> print '\n'.join([l.rstrip() for l in  s.splitlines()])
+    {
+        "4": 5,
+        "6": 7
+    }
+
+Decoding JSON::
+
+    >>> import simplejson as json
+    >>> obj = [u'foo', {u'bar': [u'baz', None, 1.0, 2]}]
+    >>> json.loads('["foo", {"bar":["baz", null, 1.0, 2]}]') == obj
+    True
+    >>> json.loads('"\\"foo\\bar"') == u'"foo\x08ar'
+    True
+    >>> from StringIO import StringIO
+    >>> io = StringIO('["streaming API"]')
+    >>> json.load(io)[0] == 'streaming API'
+    True
+
+Specializing JSON object decoding::
+
+    >>> import simplejson as json
+    >>> def as_complex(dct):
+    ...     if '__complex__' in dct:
+    ...         return complex(dct['real'], dct['imag'])
+    ...     return dct
+    ...
+    >>> json.loads('{"__complex__": true, "real": 1, "imag": 2}',
+    ...     object_hook=as_complex)
+    (1+2j)
+    >>> import decimal
+    >>> json.loads('1.1', parse_float=decimal.Decimal) == decimal.Decimal('1.1')
+    True
+
+Specializing JSON object encoding::
+
+    >>> import simplejson as json
+    >>> def encode_complex(obj):
+    ...     if isinstance(obj, complex):
+    ...         return [obj.real, obj.imag]
+    ...     raise TypeError("%r is not JSON serializable" % (o,))
+    ...
+    >>> json.dumps(2 + 1j, default=encode_complex)
+    '[2.0, 1.0]'
+    >>> json.JSONEncoder(default=encode_complex).encode(2 + 1j)
+    '[2.0, 1.0]'
+    >>> ''.join(json.JSONEncoder(default=encode_complex).iterencode(2 + 1j))
+    '[2.0, 1.0]'
+
+
+Using simplejson.tool from the shell to validate and pretty-print::
+
+    $ echo '{"json":"obj"}' | python -msimplejson.tool
+    {
+        "json": "obj"
+    }
+    $ echo '{ 1.2:3.4}' | python -msimplejson.tool
+    Expecting property name: line 1 column 2 (char 2)
+"""
+__version__ = '2.0.7'
+__all__ = [
+    'dump', 'dumps', 'load', 'loads',
+    'JSONDecoder', 'JSONEncoder',
+]
+
+from decoder import JSONDecoder
+from encoder import JSONEncoder
+
+_default_encoder = JSONEncoder(
+    skipkeys=False,
+    ensure_ascii=True,
+    check_circular=True,
+    allow_nan=True,
+    indent=None,
+    separators=None,
+    encoding='utf-8',
+    default=None,
+)
+
+def dump(obj, fp, skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True, check_circular=True,
+        allow_nan=True, cls=None, indent=None, separators=None,
+        encoding='utf-8', default=None, **kw):
+    """Serialize ``obj`` as a JSON formatted stream to ``fp`` (a
+    ``.write()``-supporting file-like object).
+
+    If ``skipkeys`` is ``True`` then ``dict`` keys that are not basic types
+    (``str``, ``unicode``, ``int``, ``long``, ``float``, ``bool``, ``None``)
+    will be skipped instead of raising a ``TypeError``.
+
+    If ``ensure_ascii`` is ``False``, then the some chunks written to ``fp``
+    may be ``unicode`` instances, subject to normal Python ``str`` to
+    ``unicode`` coercion rules. Unless ``fp.write()`` explicitly
+    understands ``unicode`` (as in ``codecs.getwriter()``) this is likely
+    to cause an error.
+
+    If ``check_circular`` is ``False``, then the circular reference check
+    for container types will be skipped and a circular reference will
+    result in an ``OverflowError`` (or worse).
+
+    If ``allow_nan`` is ``False``, then it will be a ``ValueError`` to
+    serialize out of range ``float`` values (``nan``, ``inf``, ``-inf``)
+    in strict compliance of the JSON specification, instead of using the
+    JavaScript equivalents (``NaN``, ``Infinity``, ``-Infinity``).
+
+    If ``indent`` is a non-negative integer, then JSON array elements and object
+    members will be pretty-printed with that indent level. An indent level
+    of 0 will only insert newlines. ``None`` is the most compact representation.
+
+    If ``separators`` is an ``(item_separator, dict_separator)`` tuple
+    then it will be used instead of the default ``(', ', ': ')`` separators.
+    ``(',', ':')`` is the most compact JSON representation.
+
+    ``encoding`` is the character encoding for str instances, default is UTF-8.
+
+    ``default(obj)`` is a function that should return a serializable version
+    of obj or raise TypeError. The default simply raises TypeError.
+
+    To use a custom ``JSONEncoder`` subclass (e.g. one that overrides the
+    ``.default()`` method to serialize additional types), specify it with
+    the ``cls`` kwarg.
+
+    """
+    # cached encoder
+    if (skipkeys is False and ensure_ascii is True and
+        check_circular is True and allow_nan is True and
+        cls is None and indent is None and separators is None and
+        encoding == 'utf-8' and default is None and not kw):
+        iterable = _default_encoder.iterencode(obj)
+    else:
+        if cls is None:
+            cls = JSONEncoder
+        iterable = cls(skipkeys=skipkeys, ensure_ascii=ensure_ascii,
+            check_circular=check_circular, allow_nan=allow_nan, indent=indent,
+            separators=separators, encoding=encoding,
+            default=default, **kw).iterencode(obj)
+    # could accelerate with writelines in some versions of Python, at
+    # a debuggability cost
+    for chunk in iterable:
+        fp.write(chunk)
+
+
+def dumps(obj, skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True, check_circular=True,
+        allow_nan=True, cls=None, indent=None, separators=None,
+        encoding='utf-8', default=None, **kw):
+    """Serialize ``obj`` to a JSON formatted ``str``.
+
+    If ``skipkeys`` is ``True`` then ``dict`` keys that are not basic types
+    (``str``, ``unicode``, ``int``, ``long``, ``float``, ``bool``, ``None``)
+    will be skipped instead of raising a ``TypeError``.
+
+    If ``ensure_ascii`` is ``False``, then the return value will be a
+    ``unicode`` instance subject to normal Python ``str`` to ``unicode``
+    coercion rules instead of being escaped to an ASCII ``str``.
+
+    If ``check_circular`` is ``False``, then the circular reference check
+    for container types will be skipped and a circular reference will
+    result in an ``OverflowError`` (or worse).
+
+    If ``allow_nan`` is ``False``, then it will be a ``ValueError`` to
+    serialize out of range ``float`` values (``nan``, ``inf``, ``-inf``) in
+    strict compliance of the JSON specification, instead of using the
+    JavaScript equivalents (``NaN``, ``Infinity``, ``-Infinity``).
+
+    If ``indent`` is a non-negative integer, then JSON array elements and
+    object members will be pretty-printed with that indent level. An indent
+    level of 0 will only insert newlines. ``None`` is the most compact
+    representation.
+
+    If ``separators`` is an ``(item_separator, dict_separator)`` tuple
+    then it will be used instead of the default ``(', ', ': ')`` separators.
+    ``(',', ':')`` is the most compact JSON representation.
+
+    ``encoding`` is the character encoding for str instances, default is UTF-8.
+
+    ``default(obj)`` is a function that should return a serializable version
+    of obj or raise TypeError. The default simply raises TypeError.
+
+    To use a custom ``JSONEncoder`` subclass (e.g. one that overrides the
+    ``.default()`` method to serialize additional types), specify it with
+    the ``cls`` kwarg.
+
+    """
+    # cached encoder
+    if (skipkeys is False and ensure_ascii is True and
+        check_circular is True and allow_nan is True and
+        cls is None and indent is None and separators is None and
+        encoding == 'utf-8' and default is None and not kw):
+        return _default_encoder.encode(obj)
+    if cls is None:
+        cls = JSONEncoder
+    return cls(
+        skipkeys=skipkeys, ensure_ascii=ensure_ascii,
+        check_circular=check_circular, allow_nan=allow_nan, indent=indent,
+        separators=separators, encoding=encoding, default=default,
+        **kw).encode(obj)
+
+
+_default_decoder = JSONDecoder(encoding=None, object_hook=None)
+
+
+def load(fp, encoding=None, cls=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None,
+        parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, **kw):
+    """Deserialize ``fp`` (a ``.read()``-supporting file-like object containing
+    a JSON document) to a Python object.
+
+    If the contents of ``fp`` is encoded with an ASCII based encoding other
+    than utf-8 (e.g. latin-1), then an appropriate ``encoding`` name must
+    be specified. Encodings that are not ASCII based (such as UCS-2) are
+    not allowed, and should be wrapped with
+    ``codecs.getreader(fp)(encoding)``, or simply decoded to a ``unicode``
+    object and passed to ``loads()``
+
+    ``object_hook`` is an optional function that will be called with the
+    result of any object literal decode (a ``dict``). The return value of
+    ``object_hook`` will be used instead of the ``dict``. This feature
+    can be used to implement custom decoders (e.g. JSON-RPC class hinting).
+
+    To use a custom ``JSONDecoder`` subclass, specify it with the ``cls``
+    kwarg.
+
+    """
+    return loads(fp.read(),
+        encoding=encoding, cls=cls, object_hook=object_hook,
+        parse_float=parse_float, parse_int=parse_int,
+        parse_constant=parse_constant, **kw)
+
+
+def loads(s, encoding=None, cls=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None,
+        parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, **kw):
+    """Deserialize ``s`` (a ``str`` or ``unicode`` instance containing a JSON
+    document) to a Python object.
+
+    If ``s`` is a ``str`` instance and is encoded with an ASCII based encoding
+    other than utf-8 (e.g. latin-1) then an appropriate ``encoding`` name
+    must be specified. Encodings that are not ASCII based (such as UCS-2)
+    are not allowed and should be decoded to ``unicode`` first.
+
+    ``object_hook`` is an optional function that will be called with the
+    result of any object literal decode (a ``dict``). The return value of
+    ``object_hook`` will be used instead of the ``dict``. This feature
+    can be used to implement custom decoders (e.g. JSON-RPC class hinting).
+
+    ``parse_float``, if specified, will be called with the string
+    of every JSON float to be decoded. By default this is equivalent to
+    float(num_str). This can be used to use another datatype or parser
+    for JSON floats (e.g. decimal.Decimal).
+
+    ``parse_int``, if specified, will be called with the string
+    of every JSON int to be decoded. By default this is equivalent to
+    int(num_str). This can be used to use another datatype or parser
+    for JSON integers (e.g. float).
+
+    ``parse_constant``, if specified, will be called with one of the
+    following strings: -Infinity, Infinity, NaN, null, true, false.
+    This can be used to raise an exception if invalid JSON numbers
+    are encountered.
+
+    To use a custom ``JSONDecoder`` subclass, specify it with the ``cls``
+    kwarg.
+
+    """
+    if (cls is None and encoding is None and object_hook is None and
+            parse_int is None and parse_float is None and
+            parse_constant is None and not kw):
+        return _default_decoder.decode(s)
+    if cls is None:
+        cls = JSONDecoder
+    if object_hook is not None:
+        kw['object_hook'] = object_hook
+    if parse_float is not None:
+        kw['parse_float'] = parse_float
+    if parse_int is not None:
+        kw['parse_int'] = parse_int
+    if parse_constant is not None:
+        kw['parse_constant'] = parse_constant
+    return cls(encoding=encoding, **kw).decode(s)
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/app/simplejson/decoder.py	Sun Jan 25 11:31:15 2009 +0000
@@ -0,0 +1,348 @@
+"""Implementation of JSONDecoder
+"""
+import re
+import sys
+import struct
+
+from simplejson.scanner import make_scanner
+try:
+    from simplejson._speedups import scanstring as c_scanstring
+except ImportError:
+    c_scanstring = None
+
+__all__ = ['JSONDecoder']
+
+FLAGS = re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL
+
+def _floatconstants():
+    _BYTES = '7FF80000000000007FF0000000000000'.decode('hex')
+    if sys.byteorder != 'big':
+        _BYTES = _BYTES[:8][::-1] + _BYTES[8:][::-1]
+    nan, inf = struct.unpack('dd', _BYTES)
+    return nan, inf, -inf
+
+NaN, PosInf, NegInf = _floatconstants()
+
+
+def linecol(doc, pos):
+    lineno = doc.count('\n', 0, pos) + 1
+    if lineno == 1:
+        colno = pos
+    else:
+        colno = pos - doc.rindex('\n', 0, pos)
+    return lineno, colno
+
+
+def errmsg(msg, doc, pos, end=None):
+    # Note that this function is called from _speedups
+    lineno, colno = linecol(doc, pos)
+    if end is None:
+        return '%s: line %d column %d (char %d)' % (msg, lineno, colno, pos)
+    endlineno, endcolno = linecol(doc, end)
+    return '%s: line %d column %d - line %d column %d (char %d - %d)' % (
+        msg, lineno, colno, endlineno, endcolno, pos, end)
+
+
+_CONSTANTS = {
+    '-Infinity': NegInf,
+    'Infinity': PosInf,
+    'NaN': NaN,
+}
+
+STRINGCHUNK = re.compile(r'(.*?)(["\\\x00-\x1f])', FLAGS)
+BACKSLASH = {
+    '"': u'"', '\\': u'\\', '/': u'/',
+    'b': u'\b', 'f': u'\f', 'n': u'\n', 'r': u'\r', 't': u'\t',
+}
+
+DEFAULT_ENCODING = "utf-8"
+
+def py_scanstring(s, end, encoding=None, strict=True, _b=BACKSLASH, _m=STRINGCHUNK.match):
+    """Scan the string s for a JSON string. End is the index of the
+    character in s after the quote that started the JSON string.
+    Unescapes all valid JSON string escape sequences and raises ValueError
+    on attempt to decode an invalid string. If strict is False then literal
+    control characters are allowed in the string.
+    
+    Returns a tuple of the decoded string and the index of the character in s
+    after the end quote."""
+    if encoding is None:
+        encoding = DEFAULT_ENCODING
+    chunks = []
+    _append = chunks.append
+    begin = end - 1
+    while 1:
+        chunk = _m(s, end)
+        if chunk is None:
+            raise ValueError(
+                errmsg("Unterminated string starting at", s, begin))
+        end = chunk.end()
+        content, terminator = chunk.groups()
+        # Content is contains zero or more unescaped string characters
+        if content:
+            if not isinstance(content, unicode):
+                content = unicode(content, encoding)
+            _append(content)
+        # Terminator is the end of string, a literal control character,
+        # or a backslash denoting that an escape sequence follows
+        if terminator == '"':
+            break
+        elif terminator != '\\':
+            if strict:
+                msg = "Invalid control character %r at" % (terminator,)
+                raise ValueError(msg, s, end)
+            else:
+                _append(terminator)
+                continue
+        try:
+            esc = s[end]
+        except IndexError:
+            raise ValueError(
+                errmsg("Unterminated string starting at", s, begin))
+        # If not a unicode escape sequence, must be in the lookup table
+        if esc != 'u':
+            try:
+                char = _b[esc]
+            except KeyError:
+                raise ValueError(
+                    errmsg("Invalid \\escape: %r" % (esc,), s, end))
+            end += 1
+        else:
+            # Unicode escape sequence
+            esc = s[end + 1:end + 5]
+            next_end = end + 5
+            if len(esc) != 4:
+                msg = "Invalid \\uXXXX escape"
+                raise ValueError(errmsg(msg, s, end))
+            uni = int(esc, 16)
+            # Check for surrogate pair on UCS-4 systems
+            if 0xd800 <= uni <= 0xdbff and sys.maxunicode > 65535:
+                msg = "Invalid \\uXXXX\\uXXXX surrogate pair"
+                if not s[end + 5:end + 7] == '\\u':
+                    raise ValueError(errmsg(msg, s, end))
+                esc2 = s[end + 7:end + 11]
+                if len(esc2) != 4:
+                    raise ValueError(errmsg(msg, s, end))
+                uni2 = int(esc2, 16)
+                uni = 0x10000 + (((uni - 0xd800) << 10) | (uni2 - 0xdc00))
+                next_end += 6
+            char = unichr(uni)
+            end = next_end
+        # Append the unescaped character
+        _append(char)
+    return u''.join(chunks), end
+
+
+# Use speedup if available
+scanstring = c_scanstring or py_scanstring
+
+WHITESPACE = re.compile(r'[ \t\n\r]*', FLAGS)
+WHITESPACE_STR = ' \t\n\r'
+
+def JSONObject((s, end), encoding, strict, scan_once, object_hook, _w=WHITESPACE.match, _ws=WHITESPACE_STR):
+    pairs = {}
+    # Use a slice to prevent IndexError from being raised, the following
+    # check will raise a more specific ValueError if the string is empty
+    nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
+    # Normally we expect nextchar == '"'
+    if nextchar != '"':
+        if nextchar in _ws:
+            end = _w(s, end).end()
+            nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
+        # Trivial empty object
+        if nextchar == '}':
+            return pairs, end + 1
+        elif nextchar != '"':
+            raise ValueError(errmsg("Expecting property name", s, end))
+    end += 1
+    while True:
+        key, end = scanstring(s, end, encoding, strict)
+
+        # To skip some function call overhead we optimize the fast paths where
+        # the JSON key separator is ": " or just ":".
+        if s[end:end + 1] != ':':
+            end = _w(s, end).end()
+            if s[end:end + 1] != ':':
+                raise ValueError(errmsg("Expecting : delimiter", s, end))
+
+        end += 1
+
+        try:
+            if s[end] in _ws:
+                end += 1
+                if s[end] in _ws:
+                    end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
+        except IndexError:
+            pass
+
+        try:
+            value, end = scan_once(s, end)
+        except StopIteration:
+            raise ValueError(errmsg("Expecting object", s, end))
+        pairs[key] = value
+
+        try:
+            nextchar = s[end]
+            if nextchar in _ws:
+                end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
+                nextchar = s[end]
+        except IndexError:
+            nextchar = ''
+        end += 1
+
+        if nextchar == '}':
+            break
+        elif nextchar != ',':
+            raise ValueError(errmsg("Expecting , delimiter", s, end - 1))
+
+        try:
+            nextchar = s[end]
+            if nextchar in _ws:
+                end += 1
+                nextchar = s[end]
+                if nextchar in _ws:
+                    end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
+                    nextchar = s[end]
+        except IndexError:
+            nextchar = ''
+
+        end += 1
+        if nextchar != '"':
+            raise ValueError(errmsg("Expecting property name", s, end - 1))
+
+    if object_hook is not None:
+        pairs = object_hook(pairs)
+    return pairs, end
+
+def JSONArray((s, end), scan_once, _w=WHITESPACE.match, _ws=WHITESPACE_STR):
+    values = []
+    nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
+    if nextchar in _ws:
+        end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
+        nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
+    # Look-ahead for trivial empty array
+    if nextchar == ']':
+        return values, end + 1
+    _append = values.append
+    while True:
+        try:
+            value, end = scan_once(s, end)
+        except StopIteration:
+            raise ValueError(errmsg("Expecting object", s, end))
+        _append(value)
+        nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
+        if nextchar in _ws:
+            end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
+            nextchar = s[end:end + 1]
+        end += 1
+        if nextchar == ']':
+            break
+        elif nextchar != ',':
+            raise ValueError(errmsg("Expecting , delimiter", s, end))
+
+        try:
+            if s[end] in _ws:
+                end += 1
+                if s[end] in _ws:
+                    end = _w(s, end + 1).end()
+        except IndexError:
+            pass
+
+    return values, end
+
+class JSONDecoder(object):
+    """Simple JSON <http://json.org> decoder
+
+    Performs the following translations in decoding by default:
+
+    +---------------+-------------------+
+    | JSON          | Python            |
+    +===============+===================+
+    | object        | dict              |
+    +---------------+-------------------+
+    | array         | list              |
+    +---------------+-------------------+
+    | string        | unicode           |
+    +---------------+-------------------+
+    | number (int)  | int, long         |
+    +---------------+-------------------+
+    | number (real) | float             |
+    +---------------+-------------------+
+    | true          | True              |
+    +---------------+-------------------+
+    | false         | False             |
+    +---------------+-------------------+
+    | null          | None              |
+    +---------------+-------------------+
+
+    It also understands ``NaN``, ``Infinity``, and ``-Infinity`` as
+    their corresponding ``float`` values, which is outside the JSON spec.
+
+    """
+
+    def __init__(self, encoding=None, object_hook=None, parse_float=None,
+            parse_int=None, parse_constant=None, strict=True):
+        """``encoding`` determines the encoding used to interpret any ``str``
+        objects decoded by this instance (utf-8 by default).  It has no
+        effect when decoding ``unicode`` objects.
+
+        Note that currently only encodings that are a superset of ASCII work,
+        strings of other encodings should be passed in as ``unicode``.
+
+        ``object_hook``, if specified, will be called with the result
+        of every JSON object decoded and its return value will be used in
+        place of the given ``dict``.  This can be used to provide custom
+        deserializations (e.g. to support JSON-RPC class hinting).
+
+        ``parse_float``, if specified, will be called with the string
+        of every JSON float to be decoded. By default this is equivalent to
+        float(num_str). This can be used to use another datatype or parser
+        for JSON floats (e.g. decimal.Decimal).
+
+        ``parse_int``, if specified, will be called with the string
+        of every JSON int to be decoded. By default this is equivalent to
+        int(num_str). This can be used to use another datatype or parser
+        for JSON integers (e.g. float).
+
+        ``parse_constant``, if specified, will be called with one of the
+        following strings: -Infinity, Infinity, NaN.
+        This can be used to raise an exception if invalid JSON numbers
+        are encountered.
+
+        """
+        self.encoding = encoding
+        self.object_hook = object_hook
+        self.parse_float = parse_float or float
+        self.parse_int = parse_int or int
+        self.parse_constant = parse_constant or _CONSTANTS.__getitem__
+        self.strict = strict
+        self.parse_object = JSONObject
+        self.parse_array = JSONArray
+        self.parse_string = scanstring
+        self.scan_once = make_scanner(self)
+
+    def decode(self, s, _w=WHITESPACE.match):
+        """Return the Python representation of ``s`` (a ``str`` or ``unicode``
+        instance containing a JSON document)
+
+        """
+        obj, end = self.raw_decode(s, idx=_w(s, 0).end())
+        end = _w(s, end).end()
+        if end != len(s):
+            raise ValueError(errmsg("Extra data", s, end, len(s)))
+        return obj
+
+    def raw_decode(self, s, idx=0):
+        """Decode a JSON document from ``s`` (a ``str`` or ``unicode`` beginning
+        with a JSON document) and return a 2-tuple of the Python
+        representation and the index in ``s`` where the document ended.
+
+        This can be used to decode a JSON document from a string that may
+        have extraneous data at the end.
+
+        """
+        try:
+            obj, end = self.scan_once(s, idx)
+        except StopIteration:
+            raise ValueError("No JSON object could be decoded")
+        return obj, end
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/app/simplejson/encoder.py	Sun Jan 25 11:31:15 2009 +0000
@@ -0,0 +1,436 @@
+"""Implementation of JSONEncoder
+"""
+import re
+
+try:
+    from simplejson._speedups import encode_basestring_ascii as c_encode_basestring_ascii
+except ImportError:
+    c_encode_basestring_ascii = None
+try:
+    from simplejson._speedups import make_encoder as c_make_encoder
+except ImportError:
+    c_make_encoder = None
+
+ESCAPE = re.compile(r'[\x00-\x1f\\"\b\f\n\r\t]')
+ESCAPE_ASCII = re.compile(r'([\\"]|[^\ -~])')
+HAS_UTF8 = re.compile(r'[\x80-\xff]')
+ESCAPE_DCT = {
+    '\\': '\\\\',
+    '"': '\\"',
+    '\b': '\\b',
+    '\f': '\\f',
+    '\n': '\\n',
+    '\r': '\\r',
+    '\t': '\\t',
+}
+for i in range(0x20):
+    ESCAPE_DCT.setdefault(chr(i), '\\u%04x' % (i,))
+
+# Assume this produces an infinity on all machines (probably not guaranteed)
+INFINITY = float('1e66666')
+FLOAT_REPR = repr
+
+def encode_basestring(s):
+    """Return a JSON representation of a Python string
+
+    """
+    def replace(match):
+        return ESCAPE_DCT[match.group(0)]
+    return '"' + ESCAPE.sub(replace, s) + '"'
+
+
+def py_encode_basestring_ascii(s):
+    """Return an ASCII-only JSON representation of a Python string
+
+    """
+    if isinstance(s, str) and HAS_UTF8.search(s) is not None:
+        s = s.decode('utf-8')
+    def replace(match):
+        s = match.group(0)
+        try:
+            return ESCAPE_DCT[s]
+        except KeyError:
+            n = ord(s)
+            if n < 0x10000:
+                return '\\u%04x' % (n,)
+            else:
+                # surrogate pair
+                n -= 0x10000
+                s1 = 0xd800 | ((n >> 10) & 0x3ff)
+                s2 = 0xdc00 | (n & 0x3ff)
+                return '\\u%04x\\u%04x' % (s1, s2)
+    return '"' + str(ESCAPE_ASCII.sub(replace, s)) + '"'
+
+
+encode_basestring_ascii = c_encode_basestring_ascii or py_encode_basestring_ascii
+
+class JSONEncoder(object):
+    """Extensible JSON <http://json.org> encoder for Python data structures.
+
+    Supports the following objects and types by default:
+
+    +-------------------+---------------+
+    | Python            | JSON          |
+    +===================+===============+
+    | dict              | object        |
+    +-------------------+---------------+
+    | list, tuple       | array         |
+    +-------------------+---------------+
+    | str, unicode      | string        |
+    +-------------------+---------------+
+    | int, long, float  | number        |
+    +-------------------+---------------+
+    | True              | true          |
+    +-------------------+---------------+
+    | False             | false         |
+    +-------------------+---------------+
+    | None              | null          |
+    +-------------------+---------------+
+
+    To extend this to recognize other objects, subclass and implement a
+    ``.default()`` method with another method that returns a serializable
+    object for ``o`` if possible, otherwise it should call the superclass
+    implementation (to raise ``TypeError``).
+
+    """
+    item_separator = ', '
+    key_separator = ': '
+    def __init__(self, skipkeys=False, ensure_ascii=True,
+            check_circular=True, allow_nan=True, sort_keys=False,
+            indent=None, separators=None, encoding='utf-8', default=None):
+        """Constructor for JSONEncoder, with sensible defaults.
+
+        If skipkeys is False, then it is a TypeError to attempt
+        encoding of keys that are not str, int, long, float or None.  If
+        skipkeys is True, such items are simply skipped.
+
+        If ensure_ascii is True, the output is guaranteed to be str
+        objects with all incoming unicode characters escaped.  If
+        ensure_ascii is false, the output will be unicode object.
+
+        If check_circular is True, then lists, dicts, and custom encoded
+        objects will be checked for circular references during encoding to
+        prevent an infinite recursion (which would cause an OverflowError).
+        Otherwise, no such check takes place.
+
+        If allow_nan is True, then NaN, Infinity, and -Infinity will be
+        encoded as such.  This behavior is not JSON specification compliant,
+        but is consistent with most JavaScript based encoders and decoders.
+        Otherwise, it will be a ValueError to encode such floats.
+
+        If sort_keys is True, then the output of dictionaries will be
+        sorted by key; this is useful for regression tests to ensure
+        that JSON serializations can be compared on a day-to-day basis.
+
+        If indent is a non-negative integer, then JSON array
+        elements and object members will be pretty-printed with that
+        indent level.  An indent level of 0 will only insert newlines.
+        None is the most compact representation.
+
+        If specified, separators should be a (item_separator, key_separator)
+        tuple.  The default is (', ', ': ').  To get the most compact JSON
+        representation you should specify (',', ':') to eliminate whitespace.
+
+        If specified, default is a function that gets called for objects
+        that can't otherwise be serialized.  It should return a JSON encodable
+        version of the object or raise a ``TypeError``.
+
+        If encoding is not None, then all input strings will be
+        transformed into unicode using that encoding prior to JSON-encoding.
+        The default is UTF-8.
+
+        """
+
+        self.skipkeys = skipkeys
+        self.ensure_ascii = ensure_ascii
+        self.check_circular = check_circular
+        self.allow_nan = allow_nan
+        self.sort_keys = sort_keys
+        self.indent = indent
+        if separators is not None:
+            self.item_separator, self.key_separator = separators
+        if default is not None:
+            self.default = default
+        self.encoding = encoding
+
+    def default(self, o):
+        """Implement this method in a subclass such that it returns
+        a serializable object for ``o``, or calls the base implementation
+        (to raise a ``TypeError``).
+
+        For example, to support arbitrary iterators, you could
+        implement default like this::
+
+            def default(self, o):
+                try:
+                    iterable = iter(o)
+                except TypeError:
+                    pass
+                else:
+                    return list(iterable)
+                return JSONEncoder.default(self, o)
+
+        """
+        raise TypeError("%r is not JSON serializable" % (o,))
+
+    def encode(self, o):
+        """Return a JSON string representation of a Python data structure.
+
+        >>> JSONEncoder().encode({"foo": ["bar", "baz"]})
+        '{"foo": ["bar", "baz"]}'
+
+        """
+        # This is for extremely simple cases and benchmarks.
+        if isinstance(o, basestring):
+            if isinstance(o, str):
+                _encoding = self.encoding
+                if (_encoding is not None
+                        and not (_encoding == 'utf-8')):
+                    o = o.decode(_encoding)
+            if self.ensure_ascii:
+                return encode_basestring_ascii(o)
+            else:
+                return encode_basestring(o)
+        # This doesn't pass the iterator directly to ''.join() because the
+        # exceptions aren't as detailed.  The list call should be roughly
+        # equivalent to the PySequence_Fast that ''.join() would do.
+        chunks = self.iterencode(o, _one_shot=True)
+        if not isinstance(chunks, (list, tuple)):
+            chunks = list(chunks)
+        return ''.join(chunks)
+
+    def iterencode(self, o, _one_shot=False):
+        """Encode the given object and yield each string
+        representation as available.
+
+        For example::
+
+            for chunk in JSONEncoder().iterencode(bigobject):
+                mysocket.write(chunk)
+
+        """
+        if self.check_circular:
+            markers = {}
+        else:
+            markers = None
+        if self.ensure_ascii:
+            _encoder = encode_basestring_ascii
+        else:
+            _encoder = encode_basestring
+        if self.encoding != 'utf-8':
+            def _encoder(o, _orig_encoder=_encoder, _encoding=self.encoding):
+                if isinstance(o, str):
+                    o = o.decode(_encoding)
+                return _orig_encoder(o)
+
+        def floatstr(o, allow_nan=self.allow_nan, _repr=FLOAT_REPR, _inf=INFINITY, _neginf=-INFINITY):
+            # Check for specials.  Note that this type of test is processor- and/or
+            # platform-specific, so do tests which don't depend on the internals.
+
+            if o != o:
+                text = 'NaN'
+            elif o == _inf:
+                text = 'Infinity'
+            elif o == _neginf:
+                text = '-Infinity'
+            else:
+                return _repr(o)
+
+            if not allow_nan:
+                raise ValueError("Out of range float values are not JSON compliant: %r"
+                    % (o,))
+
+            return text
+
+
+        if _one_shot and c_make_encoder is not None and not self.indent and not self.sort_keys:
+            _iterencode = c_make_encoder(
+                markers, self.default, _encoder, self.indent,
+                self.key_separator, self.item_separator, self.sort_keys,
+                self.skipkeys, self.allow_nan)
+        else:
+            _iterencode = _make_iterencode(
+                markers, self.default, _encoder, self.indent, floatstr,
+                self.key_separator, self.item_separator, self.sort_keys,
+                self.skipkeys, _one_shot)
+        return _iterencode(o, 0)
+
+def _make_iterencode(markers, _default, _encoder, _indent, _floatstr, _key_separator, _item_separator, _sort_keys, _skipkeys, _one_shot,
+        ## HACK: hand-optimized bytecode; turn globals into locals
+        False=False,
+        True=True,
+        ValueError=ValueError,
+        basestring=basestring,
+        dict=dict,
+        float=float,
+        id=id,
+        int=int,
+        isinstance=isinstance,
+        list=list,
+        long=long,
+        str=str,
+        tuple=tuple,
+    ):
+
+    def _iterencode_list(lst, _current_indent_level):
+        if not lst:
+            yield '[]'
+            return
+        if markers is not None:
+            markerid = id(lst)
+            if markerid in markers:
+                raise ValueError("Circular reference detected")
+            markers[markerid] = lst
+        buf = '['
+        if _indent is not None:
+            _current_indent_level += 1
+            newline_indent = '\n' + (' ' * (_indent * _current_indent_level))
+            separator = _item_separator + newline_indent
+            buf += newline_indent
+        else:
+            newline_indent = None
+            separator = _item_separator
+        first = True
+        for value in lst:
+            if first:
+                first = False
+            else:
+                buf = separator
+            if isinstance(value, basestring):
+                yield buf + _encoder(value)
+            elif value is None:
+                yield buf + 'null'
+            elif value is True:
+                yield buf + 'true'
+            elif value is False:
+                yield buf + 'false'
+            elif isinstance(value, (int, long)):
+                yield buf + str(value)
+            elif isinstance(value, float):
+                yield buf + _floatstr(value)
+            else:
+                yield buf
+                if isinstance(value, (list, tuple)):
+                    chunks = _iterencode_list(value, _current_indent_level)
+                elif isinstance(value, dict):
+                    chunks = _iterencode_dict(value, _current_indent_level)
+                else:
+                    chunks = _iterencode(value, _current_indent_level)
+                for chunk in chunks:
+                    yield chunk
+        if newline_indent is not None:
+            _current_indent_level -= 1
+            yield '\n' + (' ' * (_indent * _current_indent_level))
+        yield ']'
+        if markers is not None:
+            del markers[markerid]
+
+    def _iterencode_dict(dct, _current_indent_level):
+        if not dct:
+            yield '{}'
+            return
+        if markers is not None:
+            markerid = id(dct)
+            if markerid in markers:
+                raise ValueError("Circular reference detected")
+            markers[markerid] = dct
+        yield '{'
+        if _indent is not None:
+            _current_indent_level += 1
+            newline_indent = '\n' + (' ' * (_indent * _current_indent_level))
+            item_separator = _item_separator + newline_indent
+            yield newline_indent
+        else:
+            newline_indent = None
+            item_separator = _item_separator
+        first = True
+        if _sort_keys:
+            items = dct.items()
+            items.sort(key=lambda kv: kv[0])
+        else:
+            items = dct.iteritems()
+        for key, value in items:
+            if isinstance(key, basestring):
+                pass
+            # JavaScript is weakly typed for these, so it makes sense to
+            # also allow them.  Many encoders seem to do something like this.
+            elif isinstance(key, float):
+                key = _floatstr(key)
+            elif isinstance(key, (int, long)):
+                key = str(key)
+            elif key is True:
+                key = 'true'
+            elif key is False:
+                key = 'false'
+            elif key is None:
+                key = 'null'
+            elif _skipkeys:
+                continue
+            else:
+                raise TypeError("key %r is not a string" % (key,))
+            if first:
+                first = False
+            else:
+                yield item_separator
+            yield _encoder(key)
+            yield _key_separator
+            if isinstance(value, basestring):
+                yield _encoder(value)
+            elif value is None:
+                yield 'null'
+            elif value is True:
+                yield 'true'
+            elif value is False:
+                yield 'false'
+            elif isinstance(value, (int, long)):
+                yield str(value)
+            elif isinstance(value, float):
+                yield _floatstr(value)
+            else:
+                if isinstance(value, (list, tuple)):
+                    chunks = _iterencode_list(value, _current_indent_level)
+                elif isinstance(value, dict):
+                    chunks = _iterencode_dict(value, _current_indent_level)
+                else:
+                    chunks = _iterencode(value, _current_indent_level)
+                for chunk in chunks:
+                    yield chunk
+        if newline_indent is not None:
+            _current_indent_level -= 1
+            yield '\n' + (' ' * (_indent * _current_indent_level))
+        yield '}'
+        if markers is not None:
+            del markers[markerid]
+
+    def _iterencode(o, _current_indent_level):
+        if isinstance(o, basestring):
+            yield _encoder(o)
+        elif o is None:
+            yield 'null'
+        elif o is True:
+            yield 'true'
+        elif o is False:
+            yield 'false'
+        elif isinstance(o, (int, long)):
+            yield str(o)
+        elif isinstance(o, float):
+            yield _floatstr(o)
+        elif isinstance(o, (list, tuple)):
+            for chunk in _iterencode_list(o, _current_indent_level):
+                yield chunk
+        elif isinstance(o, dict):
+            for chunk in _iterencode_dict(o, _current_indent_level):
+                yield chunk
+        else:
+            if markers is not None:
+                markerid = id(o)
+                if markerid in markers:
+                    raise ValueError("Circular reference detected")
+                markers[markerid] = o
+            o = _default(o)
+            for chunk in _iterencode(o, _current_indent_level):
+                yield chunk
+            if markers is not None:
+                del markers[markerid]
+
+    return _iterencode
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/app/simplejson/scanner.py	Sun Jan 25 11:31:15 2009 +0000
@@ -0,0 +1,65 @@
+"""JSON token scanner
+"""
+import re
+try:
+    from simplejson._speedups import make_scanner as c_make_scanner
+except ImportError:
+    c_make_scanner = None
+
+__all__ = ['make_scanner']
+
+NUMBER_RE = re.compile(
+    r'(-?(?:0|[1-9]\d*))(\.\d+)?([eE][-+]?\d+)?',
+    (re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL))
+
+def py_make_scanner(context):
+    parse_object = context.parse_object
+    parse_array = context.parse_array
+    parse_string = context.parse_string
+    match_number = NUMBER_RE.match
+    encoding = context.encoding
+    strict = context.strict
+    parse_float = context.parse_float
+    parse_int = context.parse_int
+    parse_constant = context.parse_constant
+    object_hook = context.object_hook
+
+    def _scan_once(string, idx):
+        try:
+            nextchar = string[idx]
+        except IndexError:
+            raise StopIteration
+
+        if nextchar == '"':
+            return parse_string(string, idx + 1, encoding, strict)
+        elif nextchar == '{':
+            return parse_object((string, idx + 1), encoding, strict, _scan_once, object_hook)
+        elif nextchar == '[':
+            return parse_array((string, idx + 1), _scan_once)
+        elif nextchar == 'n' and string[idx:idx + 4] == 'null':
+            return None, idx + 4
+        elif nextchar == 't' and string[idx:idx + 4] == 'true':
+            return True, idx + 4
+        elif nextchar == 'f' and string[idx:idx + 5] == 'false':
+            return False, idx + 5
+
+        m = match_number(string, idx)
+        if m is not None:
+            integer, frac, exp = m.groups()
+            if frac or exp:
+                res = parse_float(integer + (frac or '') + (exp or ''))
+            else:
+                res = parse_int(integer)
+            return res, m.end()
+        elif nextchar == 'N' and string[idx:idx + 3] == 'NaN':
+            return parse_constant('NaN'), idx + 3
+        elif nextchar == 'I' and string[idx:idx + 8] == 'Infinity':
+            return parse_constant('Infinity'), idx + 8
+        elif nextchar == '-' and string[idx:idx + 9] == '-Infinity':
+            return parse_constant('-Infinity'), idx + 9
+        else:
+            raise StopIteration
+
+    return _scan_once
+
+make_scanner = c_make_scanner or py_make_scanner
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/app/simplejson/tool.py	Sun Jan 25 11:31:15 2009 +0000
@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
+r"""Using simplejson from the shell to validate and
+pretty-print::
+
+    $ echo '{"json":"obj"}' | python -msimplejson.tool
+    {
+        "json": "obj"
+    }
+    $ echo '{ 1.2:3.4}' | python -msimplejson.tool
+    Expecting property name: line 1 column 2 (char 2)
+"""
+import simplejson
+
+def main():
+    import sys
+    if len(sys.argv) == 1:
+        infile = sys.stdin
+        outfile = sys.stdout
+    elif len(sys.argv) == 2:
+        infile = open(sys.argv[1], 'rb')
+        outfile = sys.stdout
+    elif len(sys.argv) == 3:
+        infile = open(sys.argv[1], 'rb')
+        outfile = open(sys.argv[2], 'wb')
+    else:
+        raise SystemExit("%s [infile [outfile]]" % (sys.argv[0],))
+    try:
+        obj = simplejson.load(infile)
+    except ValueError, e:
+        raise SystemExit(e)
+    simplejson.dump(obj, outfile, sort_keys=True, indent=4)
+    outfile.write('\n')
+
+
+if __name__ == '__main__':
+    main()