From 6906dea7d0356f1b3112ab8a116977eabc6e2cb1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "moandji.ezana" Date: Thu, 15 Jan 2015 01:32:51 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] Improved display of TOML code blocks --- README.md | 44 ++++++++++++++++++++++---------------------- 1 file changed, 22 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index aabc02a..a147178 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -10,32 +10,32 @@ For the bleeding-edge version integrating the latest specs, see the [work-in-pro Add the following dependency to your POM (or equivalent for other dependency managers): -````xml +```xml com.moandjiezana.toml toml4j 0.3.1 -```` +``` Requires Java 1.6. ## Quick start -````java +```java Toml toml = new Toml().parse(getTomlFile()); String someValue = toml.getString("someKey"); Date someDate = toml.getDate("someTable.someDate"); MyClass myClass = toml.to(MyClass.class); -```` +``` ## Usage A `com.moandjiezana.toml.Toml` instance is populated by calling one of `parse(File)`, `parse(InputStream)`, `parse(Reader)` or `parse(String)`. -````java +```java Toml toml = new Toml().parse("a=1"); -```` +``` An exception is thrown if the source is not valid TOML. @@ -45,15 +45,15 @@ The data can then be accessed either by converting the Toml instance to your own `Toml#to(Class)` maps a Toml instance to the given class. -```` +```toml name = "Mwanji Ezana" [address] street = "123 A Street" city = "AnyVille" -```` +``` -````java +```java class Address { String street; String city; @@ -63,14 +63,14 @@ class User { String name; Address address; } -```` +``` -````java +```java User user = new Toml().parse(tomlFile).to(User.class); assert user.name.equals("Mwanji Ezana"); assert user.address.street.equals("123 A Street"); -```` +``` Any keys not found in both the TOML and the class are ignored. Fields may be private. @@ -102,7 +102,7 @@ You can also navigate values within a table with a compound key of the form `tab Non-existent keys return null. -```` +```toml title = "TOML Example" [database] @@ -130,9 +130,9 @@ title = "TOML Example" location = "Geneva" [[networks.operators]] location = "Paris" -```` +``` -````java +```java Toml toml = new Toml().parse(getTomlFile()); String title = toml.getString("title"); @@ -148,13 +148,13 @@ Toml network1 = toml.getTable("networks[0]"); String network2Name = toml.getString("networks[1].name"); // "Level 2" List network3Operators = toml.getTables("networks[2].operators"); String network3Operator2Location = toml.getString("networks[2].operators[1].location"); // "Paris" -```` +``` ### Defaults The constructor can be given a set of default values that will be used as fallbacks. For tables and table arrays, a shallow merge is performed. -```` +```toml # defaults a = 2 b = 3 @@ -162,9 +162,9 @@ b = 3 [table] c = 4 d = 5 -```` +``` -```` +```toml a = 1 [table] @@ -172,9 +172,9 @@ a = 1 [[array]] d = 3 -```` +``` -````java +```java Toml defaults = new Toml().parse(getDefaultsFile()); Toml toml = new Toml(defaults).parse(getTomlFile()); @@ -184,7 +184,7 @@ Long c = toml.getLong("c"); // returns null Long tableC = toml.getLong("table.c"); // returns 2, not 4 Long tableD = toml.getLong("table.d"); // returns null, not 5 Long arrayD = toml.getLong("array[0].d"); // returns 3 -```` +``` ### Limitations