JStreamAsyncNet 0.0.6
Easy way to serialize/desirialize objects to/from an async stream
There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
See the version list below for details.
Install-Package JStreamAsyncNet -Version 0.0.6
dotnet add package JStreamAsyncNet --version 0.0.6
<PackageReference Include="JStreamAsyncNet" Version="0.0.6" />
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add JStreamAsyncNet --version 0.0.6
The NuGet Team does not provide support for this client. Please contact its maintainers for support.
JStreamAsyncNet
Easy way to serialize/desirialize objects to/from an async stream
How to use
Install-Package JStreamAsyncNet -Version 0.0.6
Using with HttpResponseMessage
MyObject @object = await client.GetAsync(uriObject).ToObject<MyObject>();
MyObject[] array = await client.GetAsync(uriArray).ToArray<MyObject>();
or if you want to manage the response(here's implementation of methods used above)
HttpResponseMessage responseObject = await client.GetAsync(uriObject);
responseObject.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();
MyObject @object = await responseObject.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync().ToObject<MyObject>();
HttpResponseMessage responseArray = await client.GetAsync(uriArray);
responseArray.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();
MyObject[] array = await responseArray.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync().ToArray<MyObject>();
Using with FileStream
MyObject @object = await Task.Run(() => (Stream)File.OpenRead(filePath)).ToObject<MyObject>();
//some act for @object
await Task.Run(() => (Stream)File.OpenWrite(filePath)).FromObject(@object);
MyObject[] array = await Task.Run(() => (Stream)File.OpenRead(filePath)).ToArray<MyObject>();
//some act for array
await Task.Run(() => (Stream)File.OpenWrite(filePath)).FromArray(array);
JStreamAsyncNet
Easy way to serialize/desirialize objects to/from an async stream
How to use
Install-Package JStreamAsyncNet -Version 0.0.6
Using with HttpResponseMessage
MyObject @object = await client.GetAsync(uriObject).ToObject<MyObject>();
MyObject[] array = await client.GetAsync(uriArray).ToArray<MyObject>();
or if you want to manage the response(here's implementation of methods used above)
HttpResponseMessage responseObject = await client.GetAsync(uriObject);
responseObject.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();
MyObject @object = await responseObject.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync().ToObject<MyObject>();
HttpResponseMessage responseArray = await client.GetAsync(uriArray);
responseArray.EnsureSuccessStatusCode();
MyObject[] array = await responseArray.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync().ToArray<MyObject>();
Using with FileStream
MyObject @object = await Task.Run(() => (Stream)File.OpenRead(filePath)).ToObject<MyObject>();
//some act for @object
await Task.Run(() => (Stream)File.OpenWrite(filePath)).FromObject(@object);
MyObject[] array = await Task.Run(() => (Stream)File.OpenRead(filePath)).ToArray<MyObject>();
//some act for array
await Task.Run(() => (Stream)File.OpenWrite(filePath)).FromArray(array);
Dependencies
-
.NETStandard 2.0
- Newtonsoft.Json (>= 11.0.2)
Used By
NuGet packages (2)
Showing the top 2 NuGet packages that depend on JStreamAsyncNet:
Package | Downloads |
---|---|
IOptionsWriter
appsettings.json writer
|
|
ch1seL.FileRepository
Package Description
|
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.