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Serialize a json string as object with Serde

I have the following struct

#[derive(Serialize)]
pub struct MyStruct {
    pub id: String,
    pub score: f32,
    pub json: String,
}

The json field always contains a valid JSON object already stringified.

Given an instance, I would like to serialize it with the JSON content. Something like:

let a = MyStruct {
    id: "my-id".to_owned(),
    score: 20.3,
    json: r#"{
       "ffo": 4
    }"#,
};
let r = to_string(&a).unwrap();
assert_eq!(r, r#"{
        "id": "my-id",
        "score": 20.3,
        "json": {
            "ffo": 4
        }
    }"#);

NB: I don't need to support different serialization formats, only JSON. NB2: I'm sure that json field always contains a valid JSON object. NB3: commonly I use serde but I'm open to using different libraries.

How can I do that?

Edit: I would like to avoid deserializing the string during the serialization if possible.

like image 418
allevo Avatar asked Oct 16 '25 09:10

allevo


1 Answers

serde_json has a raw_value feature for something like this:

Cargo.toml

# ...
[dependencies]
serde = { version = "1.0", features = ["derive"] }
serde_json = { version = "1.0", features = ["raw_value"] }

lib.rs

use serde::{Serializer, Serialize};
use serde_json::{self, value::RawValue};

#[derive(Serialize)]
pub struct MyStruct {
    pub id: String,
    pub score: f32,
    #[serde(serialize_with = "serialize_raw_json")]
    pub json: String,
}

fn serialize_raw_json<S>(json: &str, s: S) -> Result<S::Ok, S::Error>
where
    S: Serializer,
{
    // This should be pretty efficient: it just checks that the string is valid;
    // it doesn't parse it into a new data structure.
    let v: &RawValue = serde_json::from_str(json).expect("invalid json");
    v.serialize(s)
}

#[test]
fn test_serialize() {
    let a = MyStruct {
        id: "my-id".to_owned(),
        score: 20.3,
        json: r#"{
           "ffo": 4
        }"#
        .to_string(),
    };

    let r = serde_json::to_string(&a).unwrap();
    assert_eq!(
        r,
        r#"{"id":"my-id","score":20.3,"json":{
           "ffo": 4
        }}"#
    );
}

But the simplest (and most error-prone and least extensible) solution is simple string manipulation:

#[derive(Serialize)]
pub struct MyStruct {
    pub id: String,
    pub score: f32,
    // IMPORTANT: don't serialize this field at all
    #[serde(skip)]
    pub json: String,
}

fn serialize(a: &MyStruct) -> String {
    let mut r = serde_json::to_string(&a).unwrap();

    // get rid of trailing '}'
    r.pop();
    // push the key
    r.push_str(r#","json":"#);
    // push the value
    r.push_str(&a.json);
    // push the closing brace
    r.push('}');
    
    r
}

#[test]
fn test_serialize() {
    let a = MyStruct {
        id: "my-id".to_owned(),
        score: 20.3,
        json: r#"{
           "ffo": 4
        }"#
        .to_string(),
    };

    let r = serialize(&a);
    assert_eq!(
        r,
        r#"{"id":"my-id","score":20.3,"json":{
           "ffo": 4
        }}"#
    );
}
like image 182
isaactfa Avatar answered Oct 18 '25 03:10

isaactfa



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