I have compared 37 C/C++ JSON libraries in nativejson-benchmark for standard conformance and performance.
However, I failed to integrate Boost.PropertyTree (1.60) in the benchmark, because it parses number, true, false, null types as strings.
Edit: To answer the question more directly, Boost....
dude likes his library
However, I failed to integrate Boost.PropertyTree (1.60) in the benchmark, because it parses number, true, false, null types as strings.
We have a lot of those and I can write a loop. "Application" is one of the elements it loops over, but sometimes it's capitalized and sometimes not. So I have to write a somewhat ugly const caseProp = prefix ? prefix + prop : prop[0].toLowerCase() + prop.slice(1); to fix the case.
To be fair writing a loop like that is already ugly, but still.
> However, Bill is a common nickname or shortened form of William. There are many, many people with the legal name of William who are commonly called Bill. Other examples are President Bill Clinton (William Jefferson Clinton), actor Bill Murray (William James Murray)
@StackedCrooked At a guess, this is something that happened in a translation between German and Russian, or something on that order. In German, Will would be pronounced about like "Vill" would be in English. Transliterate that to the Cryillic alphabet, and it ends up starting with B, because that's what makes the V sound in Cyrillic (though the rest would also change, so it'd probably be "Bил", which would be pronounced pretty much like "veal").
@StackedCrooked Okay so this is how it works. Basically in Shakespeare's time it was "cool" to generate rhyming nicknames. So William was normally Will, now the more friendly form was a rhyming name like Bill, but also others that didn't quiet stick like Gill, Mill. BTW know a 9 year old whose friend group did something similar with their names. Is it dumb? Yes.