The function read_toml()
reads TOML data from a file or a character vector,
and the function write_toml()
converts an R object to TOML.
read_toml(file, x = read_utf8(file), strict = TRUE)write_toml(x, output = NULL)
toml2yaml(file, output = NULL)
yaml2toml(file, output = NULL)
For read_toml()
, an R object. For write_toml()
, toml2yaml()
,
and yaml2toml()
, a character vector (marked by xfun::raw_string()
) of
the TOML/YAML data if output = NULL
, otherwise the TOML/YAML data is
written to the output file.
Path to an input (TOML or YAML) file.
For read_toml()
, the TOML data as a character vector (it is read
from file
by default; if provided, file
will be ignored). For
write_toml()
, an R object to be converted to TOML.
Whether to try RcppTOML and Hugo only (i.e., not to use
the naive parser). If FALSE
, only the naive parser is used (this is not
recommended, unless you are sure your TOML data is really simple).
Path to an output file. If NULL
, the TOML data is
returned, otherwise the data is written to the specified file.
For read_toml()
, it first tries to use the R package RcppTOML to read
the TOML data. If RcppTOML is not available, it uses Hugo to convert
the TOML data to YAML, and reads the YAML data via the R package yaml.
If Hugo is not available, it falls back to a naive parser, which is only able
to parse top-level fields in the TOML data, and it only supports character,
logical, and numeric (including integer) scalars.
For write_toml()
, it converts an R object to YAML via the R package
yaml, and uses Hugo to convert the YAML data to TOML.
if (FALSE) {
v = blogdown::read_toml(x = c("a = 1", "b = true", "c = \"Hello\"", "d = [1, 2]"))
v
blogdown::write_toml(v)
}
Run the code above in your browser using DataLab