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)
}
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