nlohmann::basic_json::count¶
// (1)
size_type count(const typename object_t::key_type& key) const;
// (2)
template<typename KeyType>
size_type count(KeyType&& key) const;
- Returns the number of elements with key
key
. IfObjectType
is the defaultstd::map
type, the return value will always be0
(key
was not found) or1
(key
was found). - See 1. This overload is only available if
KeyType
is comparable withtypename object_t::key_type
andtypename object_comparator_t::is_transparent
denotes a type.
Template parameters¶
KeyType
- A type for an object key other than
json_pointer
that is comparable withstring_t
usingobject_comparator_t
. This can also be a string view (C++17).
Parameters¶
key
(in)- key value of the element to count.
Return value¶
Number of elements with key key
. If the JSON value is not an object, the return value will be 0
.
Exception safety¶
Strong exception safety: if an exception occurs, the original value stays intact.
Complexity¶
Logarithmic in the size of the JSON object.
Notes¶
This method always returns 0
when executed on a JSON type that is not an object.
Examples¶
Example: (1) count number of elements
The example shows how count()
is used.
#include <iostream>
#include <nlohmann/json.hpp>
using json = nlohmann::json;
int main()
{
// create a JSON object
json j_object = {{"one", 1}, {"two", 2}};
// call count()
auto count_two = j_object.count("two");
auto count_three = j_object.count("three");
// print values
std::cout << "number of elements with key \"two\": " << count_two << '\n';
std::cout << "number of elements with key \"three\": " << count_three << '\n';
}
Output:
number of elements with key "two": 1
number of elements with key "three": 0
Example: (2) count number of elements using string_view
The example shows how count()
is used.
#include <iostream>
#include <string_view>
#include <nlohmann/json.hpp>
using namespace std::string_view_literals;
using json = nlohmann::json;
int main()
{
// create a JSON object
json j_object = {{"one", 1}, {"two", 2}};
// call count()
auto count_two = j_object.count("two"sv);
auto count_three = j_object.count("three"sv);
// print values
std::cout << "number of elements with key \"two\": " << count_two << '\n';
std::cout << "number of elements with key \"three\": " << count_three << '\n';
}
Output:
number of elements with key "two": 1
number of elements with key "three": 0
Version history¶
- Added in version 3.11.0.
- Added in version 1.0.0. Changed parameter
key
type toKeyType&&
in version 3.11.0.
Last update: July 31, 2022