nlohmann::basic_json::empty¶
bool empty() const noexcept;
Checks if a JSON value has no elements (i.e., whether its size() is 0).
Return value¶
The return value depends on the different types and is defined as follows:
| Value type | return value |
|---|---|
| null | true |
| boolean | false |
| string | false |
| number | false |
| binary | false |
| object | result of function object_t::empty() |
| array | result of function array_t::empty() |
Exception safety¶
No-throw guarantee: this function never throws exceptions.
Complexity¶
Constant, as long as array_t and object_t satisfy the Container concept; that is, their empty() functions have constant complexity.
Possible implementation¶
bool empty() const noexcept
{
return size() == 0;
}
Notes¶
This function does not return whether a string stored as JSON value is empty -- it returns whether the JSON container itself is empty which is false in the case of a string.
Examples¶
Example
The following code uses empty() to check if a JSON object contains any elements.
#include <iostream>
#include <nlohmann/json.hpp>
using json = nlohmann::json;
int main()
{
// create JSON values
json j_null;
json j_boolean = true;
json j_number_integer = 17;
json j_number_float = 23.42;
json j_object = {{"one", 1}, {"two", 2}};
json j_object_empty(json::value_t::object);
json j_array = {1, 2, 4, 8, 16};
json j_array_empty(json::value_t::array);
json j_string = "Hello, world";
// call empty()
std::cout << std::boolalpha;
std::cout << j_null.empty() << '\n';
std::cout << j_boolean.empty() << '\n';
std::cout << j_number_integer.empty() << '\n';
std::cout << j_number_float.empty() << '\n';
std::cout << j_object.empty() << '\n';
std::cout << j_object_empty.empty() << '\n';
std::cout << j_array.empty() << '\n';
std::cout << j_array_empty.empty() << '\n';
std::cout << j_string.empty() << '\n';
}
Output:
true
false
false
false
false
true
false
true
false
Version history¶
- Added in version 1.0.0.
- Extended to return
falsefor binary types in version 3.8.0.