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  2. Comparison of data-serialization formats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_data...

    ^ PHP will unserialize any floating-point number correctly, but will serialize them to their full decimal expansion. For example, 3.14 will be serialized to 3.140 000 000 000 000 124 344 978 758 017 532 527 446 746 826 171 875. ^ XML data bindings and SOAP serialization tools provide type-safe XML serialization of programming data structures ...

  3. CBOR - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CBOR

    RFC 8746 defines tags 64–87 to encode homogeneous arrays of fixed-size integer or floating-point values as byte strings. The tag 55799 is allocated to mean "CBOR data follows". This is a semantic no-op , but allows the corresponding tag bytes d9 d9 f7 to be prepended to a CBOR file without affecting its meaning.

  4. Ion (serialization format) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ion_(Serialization_format)

    Ion is a data serialization language developed by Amazon. It may be represented by either a human-readable text form or a compact binary form. The text form is a superset of JSON; thus, any valid JSON document is also a valid Ion document.

  5. Protocol Buffers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protocol_Buffers

    Protocol Buffers (Protobuf) is a free and open-source cross-platform data format used to serialize structured data. It is useful in developing programs that communicate with each other over a network or for storing data.

  6. XML data binding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XML_data_binding

    The reverse process, to serialize an object as XML, is called marshalling. Approaches to data binding can be distinguished as follows: XML schema based: Based on an existing XML schema, classes that correspond to the schema are generated. Class based: Based on a set of classes to be serialized, a corresponding XML schema is generated.

  7. ReactiveX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ReactiveX

    ReactiveX (Rx, also known as Reactive Extensions) is a software library originally created by Microsoft that allows imperative programming languages to operate on sequences of data regardless of whether the data is synchronous or asynchronous.

  8. MessagePack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MessagePack

    MessagePack is more compact than JSON, but imposes limitations on array and integer sizes.On the other hand, it allows binary data and non-UTF-8 encoded strings. In JSON, map keys have to be strings, but in MessagePack there is no such limitation and any type can be a map key, including types like maps and arrays, and, like YAML, numbers.

  9. Parallel Extensions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallel_Extensions

    Parallel Extensions was the development name for a managed concurrency library developed by a collaboration between Microsoft Research and the CLR team at Microsoft.The library was released in version 4.0 of the .NET Framework. [1]