~azzar1/unity/add-show-desktop-key

111 by drtomc
Checkpoint work on the console.
1
/*
2
    json2.js
3
    2007-12-02
4
5
    Public Domain
6
7
    No warranty expressed or implied. Use at your own risk.
8
9
    See http://www.JSON.org/js.html
10
11
    This file creates a global JSON object containing two methods:
12
13
        JSON.stringify(value, whitelist)
14
            value       any JavaScript value, usually an object or array.
15
16
            whitelist   an optional array prameter that determines how object
17
                        values are stringified.
18
19
            This method produces a JSON text from a JavaScript value.
20
            There are three possible ways to stringify an object, depending
21
            on the optional whitelist parameter.
22
23
            If an object has a toJSON method, then the toJSON() method will be
24
            called. The value returned from the toJSON method will be
25
            stringified.
26
27
            Otherwise, if the optional whitelist parameter is an array, then
28
            the elements of the array will be used to select members of the
29
            object for stringification.
30
31
            Otherwise, if there is no whitelist parameter, then all of the
32
            members of the object will be stringified.
33
34
            Values that do not have JSON representaions, such as undefined or
35
            functions, will not be serialized. Such values in objects will be
36
            dropped; in arrays will be replaced with null.
37
            JSON.stringify(undefined) returns undefined. Dates will be
38
            stringified as quoted ISO dates.
39
40
            Example:
41
42
            var text = JSON.stringify(['e', {pluribus: 'unum'}]);
43
            // text is '["e",{"pluribus":"unum"}]'
44
45
        JSON.parse(text, filter)
46
            This method parses a JSON text to produce an object or
47
            array. It can throw a SyntaxError exception.
48
49
            The optional filter parameter is a function that can filter and
50
            transform the results. It receives each of the keys and values, and
51
            its return value is used instead of the original value. If it
52
            returns what it received, then structure is not modified. If it
53
            returns undefined then the member is deleted.
54
55
            Example:
56
57
            // Parse the text. If a key contains the string 'date' then
58
            // convert the value to a date.
59
60
            myData = JSON.parse(text, function (key, value) {
61
                return key.indexOf('date') >= 0 ? new Date(value) : value;
62
            });
63
64
    This is a reference implementation. You are free to copy, modify, or
65
    redistribute.
66
67
    Use your own copy. It is extremely unwise to load third party
68
    code into your pages.
69
*/
70
71
/*jslint evil: true */
72
73
/*global JSON */
74
75
/*members "\b", "\t", "\n", "\f", "\r", "\"", JSON, "\\", apply,
76
    charCodeAt, floor, getUTCDate, getUTCFullYear, getUTCHours,
77
    getUTCMinutes, getUTCMonth, getUTCSeconds, hasOwnProperty, join, length,
78
    parse, propertyIsEnumerable, prototype, push, replace, stringify, test,
79
    toJSON, toString
80
*/
81
82
if (!this.JSON) {
83
84
    JSON = function () {
85
86
        function f(n) {    // Format integers to have at least two digits.
87
            return n < 10 ? '0' + n : n;
88
        }
89
90
        Date.prototype.toJSON = function () {
91
92
// Eventually, this method will be based on the date.toISOString method.
93
94
            return this.getUTCFullYear()   + '-' +
95
                 f(this.getUTCMonth() + 1) + '-' +
96
                 f(this.getUTCDate())      + 'T' +
97
                 f(this.getUTCHours())     + ':' +
98
                 f(this.getUTCMinutes())   + ':' +
99
                 f(this.getUTCSeconds())   + 'Z';
100
        };
101
102
103
        var m = {    // table of character substitutions
104
            '\b': '\\b',
105
            '\t': '\\t',
106
            '\n': '\\n',
107
            '\f': '\\f',
108
            '\r': '\\r',
109
            '"' : '\\"',
110
            '\\': '\\\\'
111
        };
112
113
        function stringify(value, whitelist) {
114
            var a,          // The array holding the partial texts.
115
                i,          // The loop counter.
116
                k,          // The member key.
117
                l,          // Length.
118
                r = /["\\\x00-\x1f\x7f-\x9f]/g,
119
                v;          // The member value.
120
121
            switch (typeof value) {
122
            case 'string':
123
124
// If the string contains no control characters, no quote characters, and no
125
// backslash characters, then we can safely slap some quotes around it.
126
// Otherwise we must also replace the offending characters with safe sequences.
127
128
                return r.test(value) ?
129
                    '"' + value.replace(r, function (a) {
130
                        var c = m[a];
131
                        if (c) {
132
                            return c;
133
                        }
134
                        c = a.charCodeAt();
135
                        return '\\u00' + Math.floor(c / 16).toString(16) +
136
                                                   (c % 16).toString(16);
137
                    }) + '"' :
138
                    '"' + value + '"';
139
140
            case 'number':
141
142
// JSON numbers must be finite. Encode non-finite numbers as null.
143
144
                return isFinite(value) ? String(value) : 'null';
145
146
            case 'boolean':
147
            case 'null':
148
                return String(value);
149
150
            case 'object':
151
152
// Due to a specification blunder in ECMAScript,
153
// typeof null is 'object', so watch out for that case.
154
155
                if (!value) {
156
                    return 'null';
157
                }
158
159
// If the object has a toJSON method, call it, and stringify the result.
160
161
                if (typeof value.toJSON === 'function') {
162
                    return stringify(value.toJSON());
163
                }
164
                a = [];
165
                if (typeof value.length === 'number' &&
166
                        !(value.propertyIsEnumerable('length'))) {
167
168
// The object is an array. Stringify every element. Use null as a placeholder
169
// for non-JSON values.
170
171
                    l = value.length;
172
                    for (i = 0; i < l; i += 1) {
173
                        a.push(stringify(value[i], whitelist) || 'null');
174
                    }
175
176
// Join all of the elements together and wrap them in brackets.
177
178
                    return '[' + a.join(',') + ']';
179
                }
180
                if (whitelist) {
181
182
// If a whitelist (array of keys) is provided, use it to select the components
183
// of the object.
184
185
                    l = whitelist.length;
186
                    for (i = 0; i < l; i += 1) {
187
                        k = whitelist[i];
188
                        if (typeof k === 'string') {
189
                            v = stringify(value[k], whitelist);
190
                            if (v) {
191
                                a.push(stringify(k) + ':' + v);
192
                            }
193
                        }
194
                    }
195
                } else {
196
197
// Otherwise, iterate through all of the keys in the object.
198
199
                    for (k in value) {
200
                        if (typeof k === 'string') {
201
                            v = stringify(value[k], whitelist);
202
                            if (v) {
203
                                a.push(stringify(k) + ':' + v);
204
                            }
205
                        }
206
                    }
207
                }
208
209
// Join all of the member texts together and wrap them in braces.
210
211
                return '{' + a.join(',') + '}';
212
            }
213
        }
214
215
        return {
216
            stringify: stringify,
217
            parse: function (text, filter) {
218
                var j;
219
220
                function walk(k, v) {
221
                    var i, n;
222
                    if (v && typeof v === 'object') {
223
                        for (i in v) {
224
                            if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.apply(v, [i])) {
225
                                n = walk(i, v[i]);
226
                                if (n !== undefined) {
227
                                    v[i] = n;
228
                                }
229
                            }
230
                        }
231
                    }
232
                    return filter(k, v);
233
                }
234
235
236
// Parsing happens in three stages. In the first stage, we run the text against
237
// regular expressions that look for non-JSON patterns. We are especially
238
// concerned with '()' and 'new' because they can cause invocation, and '='
239
// because it can cause mutation. But just to be safe, we want to reject all
240
// unexpected forms.
241
242
// We split the first stage into 4 regexp operations in order to work around
243
// crippling inefficiencies in IE's and Safari's regexp engines. First we
244
// replace all backslash pairs with '@' (a non-JSON character). Second, we
245
// replace all simple value tokens with ']' characters. Third, we delete all
246
// open brackets that follow a colon or comma or that begin the text. Finally,
247
// we look to see that the remaining characters are only whitespace or ']' or
248
// ',' or ':' or '{' or '}'. If that is so, then the text is safe for eval.
249
250
                if (/^[\],:{}\s]*$/.test(text.replace(/\\./g, '@').
251
replace(/"[^"\\\n\r]*"|true|false|null|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(:?[eE][+\-]?\d+)?/g, ']').
252
replace(/(?:^|:|,)(?:\s*\[)+/g, ''))) {
253
254
// In the second stage we use the eval function to compile the text into a
255
// JavaScript structure. The '{' operator is subject to a syntactic ambiguity
256
// in JavaScript: it can begin a block or an object literal. We wrap the text
257
// in parens to eliminate the ambiguity.
258
259
                    j = eval('(' + text + ')');
260
261
// In the optional third stage, we recursively walk the new structure, passing
262
// each name/value pair to a filter function for possible transformation.
263
264
                    return typeof filter === 'function' ? walk('', j) : j;
265
                }
266
267
// If the text is not JSON parseable, then a SyntaxError is thrown.
268
269
                throw new SyntaxError('parseJSON');
270
            }
271
        };
272
    }();
273
}