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php - json_decode AND json_encode long integers without losing data

As noted in the PHP documentation, when json_decodeing a data structure containing long integers, they'll be converted to floats. The workaround is to use JSON_BIGINT_AS_STRING, which preserves them as strings instead. When json_encodeing such values, JSON_NUMERIC_CHECK will encode those numbers back into large integers:

$json  = '{"foo":283675428357628352}';
$obj   = json_decode($json, false, JSON_BIGINT_AS_STRING);
$json2 = json_encode($obj, JSON_NUMERIC_CHECK);
var_dump($json === $json2); // true

Using this method for a correct roundtrip of the data is prone to errors. If a property contains '123', a numeric string which should stay a string, it will be encoded to an integer.

I want to get an object from the server, modify one property and than put the entire data structure back. I need to preserve the original types. I don't want to maintain properties other than the one I'm manipulating.

Is there any real workaround for this? PHP does not have any issues with big ints anymore, but the json_decode routine seems to be outdated.

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As long as your PHP version can actually handle large integers, meaning if you're running a 64-bit version of PHP (on something other than Windows), json_decode has no problem with it:

$json  = '{"foo":9223372036854775807}';
$obj   = json_decode($json);
$json2 = json_encode($obj);

var_dump(PHP_INT_MAX, $obj, $json2);

int(9223372036854775807)
object(stdClass)#1 (1) {
  ["foo"]=>
  int(9223372036854775807)
}
string(27) "{"foo":9223372036854775807}"

If the integer values you need to handle do exceed PHP's PHP_INT_MAX, you simply cannot represent them in PHP native types. So there's no way around the conundrum you have; you cannot use native types to track the correct type, and you cannot substitute other types (e.g. strings instead of integers), because that's ambiguous when encoding back to JSON.

In this case you will have to invent your own mechanism of tracking the correct types for each property and handle such serialisation with a custom encoder/decoder. For example, you'd need to write a custom JSON decoder which can decode to a custom class like new JsonInteger('9223372036854775808'), and your custom encoder would recognise this type and encode it to a JSON 9223372036854775808 value.

There's no such thing built into PHP.


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