TypeNBT
TypeNBT is a idiomatic, type safe NBT library for Scala. TypeNBT allows you to focus on the data in the code, not the NBT as most other libraries requires.
Add TypeNBT to your project by including this line in build.sbt
libraryDependencies += "net.katsstuff" %% "typenbt" % "0.5.1"
//Or this if you use Scala.js
libraryDependencies += "net.katsstuff" %%% "typenbt" % "0.5.1"
Why TypeNBT?
Why did I decide to write TypeNBT and not just use something that already existed.
- You can find TypeNBT on maven
- Everything in TypeNBT is immutable, this includes the collections
- TypeNBT is type safe. There are no surprises when running the code and getting an exception back because you expected the wrong data type. Even the list is type safe
- It includes the type information at runtime. How do serialize an empty list in other libraries, you can't really, but here you can do that
- Convert anything to NBT. TypeNBT defines typeclasses for encoding and decoding a value to NBT. This aspect of the library isn't hidden away either. Instead it's a core part of how it works
- Create a NBTCompound easily. TypeNBT easily allows you to create your entire NBTCompound in a single line using a HList like this
NBTCompound.fromHList("first" -> "hi" :: "second" -> 5 :: "third" -> false :: HNil)
. NOTE: Requires the use of the typenbt-extra
module - Easy conversion to and from common types not represented by raw NBT. Notice the boolean in the above line
- Full support for Mojangson parsing. NOTE: Requires the
typenbt-mojangson
module. - TypeNBT works for Scala.js
Using TypeNBT
Here is some information about how to use TypeNBT in practice.
For all of these, make sure you import net.katsstuff.typenbt._
.
Creating NBTTag, and the typeclasses that TypeNBT uses
Converting a value to nbt can be done like this:
import net.katsstuff.typenbt._
5.nbt //Int, return NBTInt
"hi".nbt //String, returns NBTString
false.nbt //Boolean, returns NBTByte
IndexedSeq(2, 5).nbt //IndexedSeq[Int], returns NBTIntArray
NBTInt(1) //You can also create the NBTTag more explicitly
NBTSerializer
This uses the typeclass NBTSerializer[Repr, NBT]
which takes to types, the type to convert from, and the type to convert to. This is analogous to the type Repr => NBT
.
NBTDeserializer
There is also NBTDeserializer[Repr, NBT]
which goes the other way around, except that it returns an Option
as the data might not be valid for a given type. This is analogous to the type NBT => Option[Repr]
.
SafeNBTDeserializer
For cases where a value can always be safely converted from an nbt value, there exists SafeNBTDeserializer
. This is analogous to the type NBT => Repr
.
NBTView
Next there is NBTView
which combines NBTSerializer
and NBTDeserializer
.
SafeNBTView
There is also SafeNBTView
which uses SafeNBTDeserializer
instead of NBTDeserializer
.
CaseLike
Then there is NBTViewCaseLike
and SafeNBTViewCaseLike
. Which adds apply and unapply methods to the view to make certain types behave like they are normal nbt types. For example, you can do NBTBoolean(false)
which will then convert the boolean to an nbt byte.
NBTType
Lastly there is NBTType
which corresponds to the base nbt types. This also contains the byte id for the type.
On multiple type parameter lists
For some methods like NBTCompount#getValue
, TypeNBT uses multiple parameter lists in the form of anonymous classes. Unless you really want to, you generally only have to fill in one of them.
If you want more fanciness, then there is also the module typenbt-extra
, which contains some more operations which uses shapeless under the hood.
First add the dependency to your build.
libraryDependencies += "net.katsstuff" %% "typenbt-extra" % "0.5.1"
//Or this if you use Scala.js
libraryDependencies += "net.katsstuff" %%% "typenbt-extra" % "0.5.1"
Now you can convert a HList
into a NBTCompound
or add a HList
to an existing NBTCompound
. First make sure you have your HList. The HList must consist of tuples from string to values that an NBTSerializer exists for. Then import net.katsstuff.typenbt.extra._
and call NBTCompound.fromHList(hList)
or do compound ++ hList
. TypeNBT takes care of the rest.
typenbt-mojangson
TypeNBT also has another module for both parsing and creating mojangson.
libraryDependencies += "net.katsstuff" %% "typenbt-mojangson" % "0.5.1"
//Or this if you use Scala.js
libraryDependencies += "net.katsstuff" %%% "typenbt-mojangson" % "0.5.1"
You can then use Mojangson.toMojangson
and Mojangson.fromMojangson
Examples
There exists more examples on how to use TypeNBT in the examples directory.