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Surely "1337" is the same as 1337, right?
(sopuli.xyz)
Post funny things about programming here! (Or just rant about your favourite programming language.)
The meme format is awesome, but JSON differentiates strings with
"
.{ "key": 1337 }
vs{ "key": "1337" }
.You might be thinking yaml? (Though it supports
'
and"
for explicit string types, technically)But integer vs float? Good luck.
The joke is that, regardless of how the type is declared in json, you are parsing a string. (your json blob is just a series of characters, not raw binary data)
Yes. And many people here doesn't seem to get that.
I'm not a dev of any kind. I occasionally write some bash and awk scriots to automate some things and if I need some kind of plain text (non-binary) data format I prefer tsv over json.
So why do I still get this? Is it just that many json advocates want to make sure others know json does support other data types than plain string?