json
benchmarks
json | benchmarks | |
---|---|---|
11 | 40 | |
414 | 2,747 | |
1.0% | - | |
8.5 | 7.2 | |
22 days ago | 3 months ago | |
C++ | Makefile | |
Boost Software License 1.0 | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
json
- Upcoming talk by Bjarne Stroustrup "What is good C++ code?" Nov 15, 2022
-
New, fastest JSON library for C++20
Shouldn't your benchmark use a somewhat larger JSON? Something from https://github.com/boostorg/json/tree/develop/bench/data, for instance.
-
- Newbie: "I want to contribute to the Boost [...] It will be really helpful if any mentor can guide me [...]" - Boost Pro: "Well, the first thing you should do is STAR this repository"
The mascot for the library appears to be Jason Voorhees. Should I be concerned?
- Google Protobuf vs JSON vs [insert candidate here]
-
JSON for Modern C++ version 3.10.0
You should be able to build and include boost json as a standalone subproject in CMake if you are using C++17. (Or also possible to use as header only lib)
It gets far more complicated with C++11, since you also need a ton of other boost modules there.
For more Details you can read the Readme of it. https://github.com/boostorg/json
- Poifect: Perfect Hashing Library
-
Where had Singletons gone from game engines?
https://github.com/boostorg/json/blob/f55bd4b85edd9b9b9b2d27fb49d66a990aa89001/include/boost/json/impl/object.hpp#L39
-
Visual Studio's Natvis Debugging Framework Tutorial
I'm gonna throw this out there - Boost.JSON comes with .natvis visualizers for all of its data structures, so you can inspect all of its types in the debugger and get nice insights: https://github.com/boostorg/json/blob/932b97e5ce899f3faebb7b7ab5a68b023131b77f/include/boost/json/json.natvis
benchmarks
- Some Benchmarks of Different Languages
- Building a high performance JSON parser
- Top 5 Fastest Programming Languages
- Twitter (re)Releases Recommendation Algorithm on GitHub
-
How green or energy efficient is the Go programming language?
GitHub - kostya/benchmarks: Some benchmarks of different languages
- how to benchmark a programming language
-
Ruby 3.2.0 Is from Another Dimension
In all the language comparisons I've found over the years, Python consistently comes out slightly slower, for example:
https://github.com/kostya/benchmarks
Bearing in mind these are probably not even using YJIT, which makes Ruby considerably faster in some scenarios.
- I made a 88x88 version of the big display image command generator in Python! (will share github link if admins allow it)
-
The original computer languages benchmark is back
Also, here is another benchmark: https://github.com/kostya/benchmarks
- Why does Scala seem to be slow at benchmark results?
What are some alternatives?
simdjson - Parsing gigabytes of JSON per second : used by Facebook/Meta Velox, the Node.js runtime, ClickHouse, WatermelonDB, Apache Doris, Milvus, StarRocks
libuv - Cross-platform asynchronous I/O
json-schema-validator - JSON schema validator for JSON for Modern C++
lua-languages - Languages that compile to Lua
cereal - A C++11 library for serialization
julia - The Julia Programming Language
Cap'n Proto - Cap'n Proto serialization/RPC system - core tools and C++ library
beartype - Unbearably fast near-real-time hybrid runtime-static type-checking in pure Python.
slang - SystemVerilog compiler and language services
mypyc - Compile type annotated Python to fast C extensions
tiny-utf8 - Unicode (UTF-8) capable std::string
Cython - The most widely used Python to C compiler