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@ -137,9 +137,14 @@ All job is done by `jsmn_parser` object. You can initialize a new parser using:
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This will create a parser, that can parse up to 10 JSON tokens from `js` string.
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Later, you can use `jsmn_parse(&parser)` function to process JSON string with the parser.
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A non-negative value is the number of tokens actually used by the parser.
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Passing NULL instead of the tokens array would not store parsing results, but
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instead the function will return the value of tokens needed to parse the given
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string. This can be useful if you don't know yet how many tokens to allocate.
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If something goes wrong, you will get an error. Error will be one of these:
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* `JSMN_SUCCESS` - everything went fine. String was parsed
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* `JSMN_ERROR_INVAL` - bad token, JSON string is corrupted
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* `JSMN_ERROR_NOMEM` - not enough tokens, JSON string is too large
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* `JSMN_ERROR_PART` - JSON string is too short, expecting more JSON data
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