A basic in-place parser takes an input string stored in a contiguous memory buffer, scans the string as a character stream, and creates the necessary tree structure. Upon encountering a string that is part of the data model, such as a tag name, the parser saves a pointer to the string and its length (/instead of saving the whole string).3
As such, this is a tradeoff between performance and memory usage. In-place parsing is usually faster compared to parsing with copying strings to the heap, but it can consume more memory. An in-place parser needs to hold the original stream in memory in ad…