/*
 * Copyright (C) 2008 Google Inc.
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */
package cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson;
import java.io.EOFException;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.Reader;
import java.io.StringReader;
import java.io.StringWriter;
import java.io.Writer;
import java.lang.reflect.Type;
import java.math.BigDecimal;
import java.math.BigInteger;
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicLong;
import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicLongArray;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.ConstructorConstructor;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.Excluder;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.Primitives;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.Streams;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.ArrayTypeAdapter;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.CollectionTypeAdapterFactory;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.DateTypeAdapter;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.JsonAdapterAnnotationTypeAdapterFactory;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.JsonTreeReader;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.JsonTreeWriter;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.MapTypeAdapterFactory;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.ObjectTypeAdapter;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.ReflectiveTypeAdapterFactory;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.SqlDateTypeAdapter;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.TimeTypeAdapter;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.internal.bind.TypeAdapters;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.reflect.TypeToken;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.stream.JsonReader;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.stream.JsonToken;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.stream.JsonWriter;
import cn.emay.sdk.util.json.gson.stream.MalformedJsonException;
/**
 * This is the main class for using Gson. Gson is typically used by first
 * constructing a Gson instance and then invoking {@link #toJson(Object)} or
 * {@link #fromJson(String, Class)} methods on it. Gson instances are
 * Thread-safe so you can reuse them freely across multiple threads.
 *
 * 
 * You can create a Gson instance by invoking {@code new Gson()} if the default
 * configuration is all you need. You can also use {@link GsonBuilder} to build
 * a Gson instance with various configuration options such as versioning
 * support, pretty printing, custom {@link JsonSerializer}s,
 * {@link JsonDeserializer}s, and {@link InstanceCreator}s.
 * 
 *
 * 
 * Here is an example of how Gson is used for a simple Class:
 *
 * 
 * Gson gson = new Gson(); // Or use new GsonBuilder().create();
 * MyType target = new MyType();
 * String json = gson.toJson(target); // serializes target to Json
 * MyType target2 = gson.fromJson(json, MyType.class); // deserializes json into target2
 *  
 * 
 *
 * 
 * If the object that your are serializing/deserializing is a
 * {@code ParameterizedType} (i.e. contains at least one type parameter and may
 * be an array) then you must use the {@link #toJson(Object, Type)} or
 * {@link #fromJson(String, Type)} method. Here is an example for serializing
 * and deserializing a {@code ParameterizedType}:
 *
 * 
 * Type listType = new TypeToken<List<String>>() {
 * }.getType();
 * List<String> target = new LinkedList<String>();
 * target.add("blah");
 *
 * Gson gson = new Gson();
 * String json = gson.toJson(target, listType);
 * List<String> target2 = gson.fromJson(json, listType);
 *  
 * 
 *
 * 
 * See the Gson
 * User Guide  for a more complete set of examples.
 * 
 *
 * @see com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken
 *
 * @author Inderjeet Singh
 * @author Joel Leitch
 * @author Jesse Wilson
 */
public final class Gson {
	static final boolean DEFAULT_JSON_NON_EXECUTABLE = false;
	static final boolean DEFAULT_LENIENT = false;
	static final boolean DEFAULT_PRETTY_PRINT = false;
	static final boolean DEFAULT_ESCAPE_HTML = true;
	static final boolean DEFAULT_SERIALIZE_NULLS = false;
	static final boolean DEFAULT_COMPLEX_MAP_KEYS = false;
	static final boolean DEFAULT_SPECIALIZE_FLOAT_VALUES = false;
	private static final String JSON_NON_EXECUTABLE_PREFIX = ")]}'\n";
	/**
	 * This thread local guards against reentrant calls to getAdapter(). In certain
	 * object graphs, creating an adapter for a type may recursively require an
	 * adapter for the same type! Without intervention, the recursive lookup would
	 * stack overflow. We cheat by returning a proxy type adapter. The proxy is
	 * wired up once the initial adapter has been created.
	 */
	private final ThreadLocal, FutureTypeAdapter>>> calls = new ThreadLocal, FutureTypeAdapter>>>();
	private final Map, TypeAdapter>> typeTokenCache = Collections.synchronizedMap(new HashMap, TypeAdapter>>());
	private final List factories;
	private final ConstructorConstructor constructorConstructor;
	private final boolean serializeNulls;
	private final boolean htmlSafe;
	private final boolean generateNonExecutableJson;
	private final boolean prettyPrinting;
	private final boolean lenient;
	final JsonDeserializationContext deserializationContext = new JsonDeserializationContext() {
		@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
		@Override
		public  T deserialize(JsonElement json, Type typeOfT) throws JsonParseException {
			return (T) fromJson(json, typeOfT);
		}
	};
	final JsonSerializationContext serializationContext = new JsonSerializationContext() {
		@Override
		public JsonElement serialize(Object src) {
			return toJsonTree(src);
		}
		@Override
		public JsonElement serialize(Object src, Type typeOfSrc) {
			return toJsonTree(src, typeOfSrc);
		}
	};
	/**
	 * Constructs a Gson object with default configuration. The default
	 * configuration has the following settings:
	 * 
	 * The JSON generated by toJson methods is in compact
	 * representation. This means that all the unneeded white-space is removed. You
	 * can change this behavior with {@link GsonBuilder#setPrettyPrinting()}. 
	 * The generated JSON omits all the fields that are null. Note that nulls in
	 * arrays are kept as is since an array is an ordered list. Moreover, if a field
	 * is not null, but its generated JSON is empty, the field is kept. You can
	 * configure Gson to serialize null values by setting
	 * {@link GsonBuilder#serializeNulls()}. 
	 * Gson provides default serialization and deserialization for Enums,
	 * {@link Map}, {@link java.net.URL}, {@link java.net.URI},
	 * {@link java.util.Locale}, {@link java.util.Date},
	 * {@link java.math.BigDecimal}, and {@link java.math.BigInteger} classes. If
	 * you would prefer to change the default representation, you can do so by
	 * registering a type adapter through
	 * {@link GsonBuilder#registerTypeAdapter(Type, Object)}. 
	 * The default Date format is same as {@link java.text.DateFormat#DEFAULT}.
	 * This format ignores the millisecond portion of the date during serialization.
	 * You can change this by invoking {@link GsonBuilder#setDateFormat(int)} or
	 * {@link GsonBuilder#setDateFormat(String)}. 
	 * By default, Gson ignores the {@link com.google.gson.annotations.Expose}
	 * annotation. You can enable Gson to serialize/deserialize only those fields
	 * marked with this annotation through
	 * {@link GsonBuilder#excludeFieldsWithoutExposeAnnotation()}. 
	 * By default, Gson ignores the {@link com.google.gson.annotations.Since}
	 * annotation. You can enable Gson to use this annotation through
	 * {@link GsonBuilder#setVersion(double)}. 
	 * The default field naming policy for the output Json is same as in Java.
	 * So, a Java class field versionNumber will be output as
	 * "versionNumber" in Json. The same rules are applied
	 * for mapping incoming Json to the Java classes. You can change this policy
	 * through {@link GsonBuilder#setFieldNamingPolicy(FieldNamingPolicy)}. 
	 * By default, Gson excludes transient or static
	 * fields from consideration for serialization and deserialization. You can
	 * change this behavior through
	 * {@link GsonBuilder#excludeFieldsWithModifiers(int...)}. 
	 *  
	 */
	public Gson() {
		this(Excluder.DEFAULT, FieldNamingPolicy.IDENTITY, Collections.>emptyMap(), DEFAULT_SERIALIZE_NULLS, DEFAULT_COMPLEX_MAP_KEYS, DEFAULT_JSON_NON_EXECUTABLE,
				DEFAULT_ESCAPE_HTML, DEFAULT_PRETTY_PRINT, DEFAULT_LENIENT, DEFAULT_SPECIALIZE_FLOAT_VALUES, LongSerializationPolicy.DEFAULT, Collections.emptyList());
	}
	Gson(final Excluder excluder, final FieldNamingStrategy fieldNamingPolicy, final Map> instanceCreators, boolean serializeNulls, boolean complexMapKeySerialization,
			boolean generateNonExecutableGson, boolean htmlSafe, boolean prettyPrinting, boolean lenient, boolean serializeSpecialFloatingPointValues, LongSerializationPolicy longSerializationPolicy,
			List typeAdapterFactories) {
		this.constructorConstructor = new ConstructorConstructor(instanceCreators);
		this.serializeNulls = serializeNulls;
		this.generateNonExecutableJson = generateNonExecutableGson;
		this.htmlSafe = htmlSafe;
		this.prettyPrinting = prettyPrinting;
		this.lenient = lenient;
		List factories = new ArrayList();
		// built-in type adapters that cannot be overridden
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.JSON_ELEMENT_FACTORY);
		factories.add(ObjectTypeAdapter.FACTORY);
		// the excluder must precede all adapters that handle user-defined types
		factories.add(excluder);
		// user's type adapters
		factories.addAll(typeAdapterFactories);
		// type adapters for basic platform types
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.STRING_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.INTEGER_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.BOOLEAN_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.BYTE_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.SHORT_FACTORY);
		TypeAdapter longAdapter = longAdapter(longSerializationPolicy);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.newFactory(long.class, Long.class, longAdapter));
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.newFactory(double.class, Double.class, doubleAdapter(serializeSpecialFloatingPointValues)));
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.newFactory(float.class, Float.class, floatAdapter(serializeSpecialFloatingPointValues)));
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.NUMBER_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.ATOMIC_INTEGER_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.ATOMIC_BOOLEAN_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.newFactory(AtomicLong.class, atomicLongAdapter(longAdapter)));
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.newFactory(AtomicLongArray.class, atomicLongArrayAdapter(longAdapter)));
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.ATOMIC_INTEGER_ARRAY_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.CHARACTER_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.STRING_BUILDER_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.STRING_BUFFER_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.newFactory(BigDecimal.class, TypeAdapters.BIG_DECIMAL));
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.newFactory(BigInteger.class, TypeAdapters.BIG_INTEGER));
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.URL_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.URI_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.UUID_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.CURRENCY_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.LOCALE_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.INET_ADDRESS_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.BIT_SET_FACTORY);
		factories.add(DateTypeAdapter.FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.CALENDAR_FACTORY);
		factories.add(TimeTypeAdapter.FACTORY);
		factories.add(SqlDateTypeAdapter.FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.TIMESTAMP_FACTORY);
		factories.add(ArrayTypeAdapter.FACTORY);
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.CLASS_FACTORY);
		// type adapters for composite and user-defined types
		factories.add(new CollectionTypeAdapterFactory(constructorConstructor));
		factories.add(new MapTypeAdapterFactory(constructorConstructor, complexMapKeySerialization));
		factories.add(new JsonAdapterAnnotationTypeAdapterFactory(constructorConstructor));
		factories.add(TypeAdapters.ENUM_FACTORY);
		factories.add(new ReflectiveTypeAdapterFactory(constructorConstructor, fieldNamingPolicy, excluder));
		this.factories = Collections.unmodifiableList(factories);
	}
	private TypeAdapter doubleAdapter(boolean serializeSpecialFloatingPointValues) {
		if (serializeSpecialFloatingPointValues) {
			return TypeAdapters.DOUBLE;
		}
		return new TypeAdapter() {
			@Override
			public Double read(JsonReader in) throws IOException {
				if (in.peek() == JsonToken.NULL) {
					in.nextNull();
					return null;
				}
				return in.nextDouble();
			}
			@Override
			public void write(JsonWriter out, Number value) throws IOException {
				if (value == null) {
					out.nullValue();
					return;
				}
				double doubleValue = value.doubleValue();
				checkValidFloatingPoint(doubleValue);
				out.value(value);
			}
		};
	}
	private TypeAdapter floatAdapter(boolean serializeSpecialFloatingPointValues) {
		if (serializeSpecialFloatingPointValues) {
			return TypeAdapters.FLOAT;
		}
		return new TypeAdapter() {
			@Override
			public Float read(JsonReader in) throws IOException {
				if (in.peek() == JsonToken.NULL) {
					in.nextNull();
					return null;
				}
				return (float) in.nextDouble();
			}
			@Override
			public void write(JsonWriter out, Number value) throws IOException {
				if (value == null) {
					out.nullValue();
					return;
				}
				float floatValue = value.floatValue();
				checkValidFloatingPoint(floatValue);
				out.value(value);
			}
		};
	}
	static void checkValidFloatingPoint(double value) {
		if (Double.isNaN(value) || Double.isInfinite(value)) {
			throw new IllegalArgumentException(
					value + " is not a valid double value as per JSON specification. To override this" + " behavior, use GsonBuilder.serializeSpecialFloatingPointValues() method.");
		}
	}
	private static TypeAdapter longAdapter(LongSerializationPolicy longSerializationPolicy) {
		if (longSerializationPolicy == LongSerializationPolicy.DEFAULT) {
			return TypeAdapters.LONG;
		}
		return new TypeAdapter() {
			@Override
			public Number read(JsonReader in) throws IOException {
				if (in.peek() == JsonToken.NULL) {
					in.nextNull();
					return null;
				}
				return in.nextLong();
			}
			@Override
			public void write(JsonWriter out, Number value) throws IOException {
				if (value == null) {
					out.nullValue();
					return;
				}
				out.value(value.toString());
			}
		};
	}
	private static TypeAdapter atomicLongAdapter(final TypeAdapter longAdapter) {
		return new TypeAdapter() {
			@Override
			public void write(JsonWriter out, AtomicLong value) throws IOException {
				longAdapter.write(out, value.get());
			}
			@Override
			public AtomicLong read(JsonReader in) throws IOException {
				Number value = longAdapter.read(in);
				return new AtomicLong(value.longValue());
			}
		}.nullSafe();
	}
	private static TypeAdapter atomicLongArrayAdapter(final TypeAdapter longAdapter) {
		return new TypeAdapter() {
			@Override
			public void write(JsonWriter out, AtomicLongArray value) throws IOException {
				out.beginArray();
				for (int i = 0, length = value.length(); i < length; i++) {
					longAdapter.write(out, value.get(i));
				}
				out.endArray();
			}
			@Override
			public AtomicLongArray read(JsonReader in) throws IOException {
				List list = new ArrayList();
				in.beginArray();
				while (in.hasNext()) {
					long value = longAdapter.read(in).longValue();
					list.add(value);
				}
				in.endArray();
				int length = list.size();
				AtomicLongArray array = new AtomicLongArray(length);
				for (int i = 0; i < length; ++i) {
					array.set(i, list.get(i));
				}
				return array;
			}
		}.nullSafe();
	}
	/**
	 * Returns the type adapter for {@code} type.
	 *
	 * @throws IllegalArgumentException
	 *             if this GSON cannot serialize and deserialize {@code type}.
	 */
	@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
	public  TypeAdapter getAdapter(TypeToken type) {
		TypeAdapter> cached = typeTokenCache.get(type);
		if (cached != null) {
			return (TypeAdapter) cached;
		}
		Map, FutureTypeAdapter>> threadCalls = calls.get();
		boolean requiresThreadLocalCleanup = false;
		if (threadCalls == null) {
			threadCalls = new HashMap, FutureTypeAdapter>>();
			calls.set(threadCalls);
			requiresThreadLocalCleanup = true;
		}
		// the key and value type parameters always agree
		FutureTypeAdapter ongoingCall = (FutureTypeAdapter) threadCalls.get(type);
		if (ongoingCall != null) {
			return ongoingCall;
		}
		try {
			FutureTypeAdapter call = new FutureTypeAdapter();
			threadCalls.put(type, call);
			for (TypeAdapterFactory factory : factories) {
				TypeAdapter candidate = factory.create(this, type);
				if (candidate != null) {
					call.setDelegate(candidate);
					typeTokenCache.put(type, candidate);
					return candidate;
				}
			}
			throw new IllegalArgumentException("GSON cannot handle " + type);
		} finally {
			threadCalls.remove(type);
			if (requiresThreadLocalCleanup) {
				calls.remove();
			}
		}
	}
	/**
	 * This method is used to get an alternate type adapter for the specified type.
	 * This is used to access a type adapter that is overridden by a
	 * {@link TypeAdapterFactory} that you may have registered. This features is
	 * typically used when you want to register a type adapter that does a little
	 * bit of work but then delegates further processing to the Gson default type
	 * adapter. Here is an example:
	 * 
	 * Let's say we want to write a type adapter that counts the number of objects
	 * being read from or written to JSON. We can achieve this by writing a type
	 * adapter factory that uses the getDelegateAdapter method:
	 * 
	 * 
	 * {
	 * 	@code
	 * 	class StatsTypeAdapterFactory implements TypeAdapterFactory {
	 * 		public int numReads = 0;
	 * 		public int numWrites = 0;
	 * 
	 * 		public <T> TypeAdapter<T> create(Gson gson, TypeToken<T> type) {
	 * 			final TypeAdapter<T> delegate = gson.getDelegateAdapter(this, type);
	 * 			return new TypeAdapter<T>() {
	 * 				public void write(JsonWriter out, T value) throws IOException {
	 * 					++numWrites;
	 * 					delegate.write(out, value);
	 * 				}
	 * 
	 * 				public T read(JsonReader in) throws IOException {
	 * 					++numReads;
	 * 					return delegate.read(in);
	 * 				}
	 * 			};
	 * 		}
	 * 	}
	 * }
	 *  
	 * 
	 * This factory can now be used like this:
	 * 
	 * 
	 * {
	 * 	@code
	 * 	StatsTypeAdapterFactory stats = new StatsTypeAdapterFactory();
	 * 	Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().registerTypeAdapterFactory(stats).create();
	 * 	// Call gson.toJson() and fromJson methods on objects
	 * 	System.out.println("Num JSON reads" + stats.numReads);
	 * 	System.out.println("Num JSON writes" + stats.numWrites);
	 * }
	 *  
	 * 
	 * Note that this call will skip all factories registered before
	 * {@code skipPast}. In case of multiple TypeAdapterFactories registered it is
	 * up to the caller of this function to insure that the order of registration
	 * does not prevent this method from reaching a factory they would expect to
	 * reply from this call. Note that since you can not override type adapter
	 * factories for String and Java primitive types, our stats factory will not
	 * count the number of String or primitives that will be read or written.
	 * 
	 * @param skipPast
	 *            The type adapter factory that needs to be skipped while searching
	 *            for a matching type adapter. In most cases, you should just pass
	 *            this  (the type adapter factory from where
	 *            {@link #getDelegateAdapter} method is being invoked).
	 * @param type
	 *            Type for which the delegate adapter is being searched for.
	 *
	 * @since 2.2
	 */
	public  TypeAdapter getDelegateAdapter(TypeAdapterFactory skipPast, TypeToken type) {
		boolean skipPastFound = false;
		// Skip past if and only if the specified factory is present in the factories.
		// This is useful because the factories created through JsonAdapter annotations
		// are not
		// registered in this list.
		if (!factories.contains(skipPast))
			skipPastFound = true;
		for (TypeAdapterFactory factory : factories) {
			if (!skipPastFound) {
				if (factory == skipPast) {
					skipPastFound = true;
				}
				continue;
			}
			TypeAdapter candidate = factory.create(this, type);
			if (candidate != null) {
				return candidate;
			}
		}
		throw new IllegalArgumentException("GSON cannot serialize " + type);
	}
	/**
	 * Returns the type adapter for {@code} type.
	 *
	 * @throws IllegalArgumentException
	 *             if this GSON cannot serialize and deserialize {@code type}.
	 */
	public  TypeAdapter getAdapter(Class type) {
		return getAdapter(TypeToken.get(type));
	}
	/**
	 * This method serializes the specified object into its equivalent
	 * representation as a tree of {@link JsonElement}s. This method should be used
	 * when the specified object is not a generic type. This method uses
	 * {@link Class#getClass()} to get the type for the specified object, but the
	 * {@code getClass()} loses the generic type information because of the Type
	 * Erasure feature of Java. Note that this method works fine if the any of the
	 * object fields are of generic type, just the object itself should not be of a
	 * generic type. If the object is of generic type, use
	 * {@link #toJsonTree(Object, Type)} instead.
	 *
	 * @param src
	 *            the object for which Json representation is to be created setting
	 *            for Gson
	 * @return Json representation of {@code src}.
	 * @since 1.4
	 */
	public JsonElement toJsonTree(Object src) {
		if (src == null) {
			return JsonNull.INSTANCE;
		}
		return toJsonTree(src, src.getClass());
	}
	/**
	 * This method serializes the specified object, including those of generic
	 * types, into its equivalent representation as a tree of {@link JsonElement}s.
	 * This method must be used if the specified object is a generic type. For
	 * non-generic objects, use {@link #toJsonTree(Object)} instead.
	 *
	 * @param src
	 *            the object for which JSON representation is to be created
	 * @param typeOfSrc
	 *            The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this type by
	 *            using the {@link com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken} class. For
	 *            example, to get the type for {@code Collection}, you should
	 *            use:
	 * 
	 *            
	 *            Type typeOfSrc = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() {
	 *            }.getType();
	 *             
	 * 
	 * @return Json representation of {@code src}
	 * @since 1.4
	 */
	public JsonElement toJsonTree(Object src, Type typeOfSrc) {
		JsonTreeWriter writer = new JsonTreeWriter();
		toJson(src, typeOfSrc, writer);
		return writer.get();
	}
	/**
	 * This method serializes the specified object into its equivalent Json
	 * representation. This method should be used when the specified object is not a
	 * generic type. This method uses {@link Class#getClass()} to get the type for
	 * the specified object, but the {@code getClass()} loses the generic type
	 * information because of the Type Erasure feature of Java. Note that this
	 * method works fine if the any of the object fields are of generic type, just
	 * the object itself should not be of a generic type. If the object is of
	 * generic type, use {@link #toJson(Object, Type)} instead. If you want to write
	 * out the object to a {@link Writer}, use {@link #toJson(Object, Appendable)}
	 * instead.
	 *
	 * @param src
	 *            the object for which Json representation is to be created setting
	 *            for Gson
	 * @return Json representation of {@code src}.
	 */
	public String toJson(Object src) {
		if (src == null) {
			return toJson(JsonNull.INSTANCE);
		}
		return toJson(src, src.getClass());
	}
	/**
	 * This method serializes the specified object, including those of generic
	 * types, into its equivalent Json representation. This method must be used if
	 * the specified object is a generic type. For non-generic objects, use
	 * {@link #toJson(Object)} instead. If you want to write out the object to a
	 * {@link Appendable}, use {@link #toJson(Object, Type, Appendable)} instead.
	 *
	 * @param src
	 *            the object for which JSON representation is to be created
	 * @param typeOfSrc
	 *            The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this type by
	 *            using the {@link com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken} class. For
	 *            example, to get the type for {@code Collection}, you should
	 *            use:
	 * 
	 *            
	 *            Type typeOfSrc = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() {
	 *            }.getType();
	 *             
	 * 
	 * @return Json representation of {@code src}
	 */
	public String toJson(Object src, Type typeOfSrc) {
		StringWriter writer = new StringWriter();
		toJson(src, typeOfSrc, writer);
		return writer.toString();
	}
	/**
	 * This method serializes the specified object into its equivalent Json
	 * representation. This method should be used when the specified object is not a
	 * generic type. This method uses {@link Class#getClass()} to get the type for
	 * the specified object, but the {@code getClass()} loses the generic type
	 * information because of the Type Erasure feature of Java. Note that this
	 * method works fine if the any of the object fields are of generic type, just
	 * the object itself should not be of a generic type. If the object is of
	 * generic type, use {@link #toJson(Object, Type, Appendable)} instead.
	 *
	 * @param src
	 *            the object for which Json representation is to be created setting
	 *            for Gson
	 * @param writer
	 *            Writer to which the Json representation needs to be written
	 * @throws JsonIOException
	 *             if there was a problem writing to the writer
	 * @since 1.2
	 */
	public void toJson(Object src, Appendable writer) throws JsonIOException {
		if (src != null) {
			toJson(src, src.getClass(), writer);
		} else {
			toJson(JsonNull.INSTANCE, writer);
		}
	}
	/**
	 * This method serializes the specified object, including those of generic
	 * types, into its equivalent Json representation. This method must be used if
	 * the specified object is a generic type. For non-generic objects, use
	 * {@link #toJson(Object, Appendable)} instead.
	 *
	 * @param src
	 *            the object for which JSON representation is to be created
	 * @param typeOfSrc
	 *            The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this type by
	 *            using the {@link com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken} class. For
	 *            example, to get the type for {@code Collection}, you should
	 *            use:
	 * 
	 *            
	 *            Type typeOfSrc = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() {
	 *            }.getType();
	 *             
	 * 
	 * @param writer
	 *            Writer to which the Json representation of src needs to be
	 *            written.
	 * @throws JsonIOException
	 *             if there was a problem writing to the writer
	 * @since 1.2
	 */
	public void toJson(Object src, Type typeOfSrc, Appendable writer) throws JsonIOException {
		try {
			JsonWriter jsonWriter = newJsonWriter(Streams.writerForAppendable(writer));
			toJson(src, typeOfSrc, jsonWriter);
		} catch (IOException e) {
			throw new JsonIOException(e);
		}
	}
	/**
	 * Writes the JSON representation of {@code src} of type {@code typeOfSrc} to
	 * {@code writer}.
	 * 
	 * @throws JsonIOException
	 *             if there was a problem writing to the writer
	 */
	@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
	public void toJson(Object src, Type typeOfSrc, JsonWriter writer) throws JsonIOException {
		TypeAdapter> adapter = getAdapter(TypeToken.get(typeOfSrc));
		boolean oldLenient = writer.isLenient();
		writer.setLenient(true);
		boolean oldHtmlSafe = writer.isHtmlSafe();
		writer.setHtmlSafe(htmlSafe);
		boolean oldSerializeNulls = writer.getSerializeNulls();
		writer.setSerializeNulls(serializeNulls);
		try {
			((TypeAdapter) adapter).write(writer, src);
		} catch (IOException e) {
			throw new JsonIOException(e);
		} finally {
			writer.setLenient(oldLenient);
			writer.setHtmlSafe(oldHtmlSafe);
			writer.setSerializeNulls(oldSerializeNulls);
		}
	}
	/**
	 * Converts a tree of {@link JsonElement}s into its equivalent JSON
	 * representation.
	 *
	 * @param jsonElement
	 *            root of a tree of {@link JsonElement}s
	 * @return JSON String representation of the tree
	 * @since 1.4
	 */
	public String toJson(JsonElement jsonElement) {
		StringWriter writer = new StringWriter();
		toJson(jsonElement, writer);
		return writer.toString();
	}
	/**
	 * Writes out the equivalent JSON for a tree of {@link JsonElement}s.
	 *
	 * @param jsonElement
	 *            root of a tree of {@link JsonElement}s
	 * @param writer
	 *            Writer to which the Json representation needs to be written
	 * @throws JsonIOException
	 *             if there was a problem writing to the writer
	 * @since 1.4
	 */
	public void toJson(JsonElement jsonElement, Appendable writer) throws JsonIOException {
		try {
			JsonWriter jsonWriter = newJsonWriter(Streams.writerForAppendable(writer));
			toJson(jsonElement, jsonWriter);
		} catch (IOException e) {
			throw new RuntimeException(e);
		}
	}
	/**
	 * Returns a new JSON writer configured for the settings on this Gson instance.
	 */
	public JsonWriter newJsonWriter(Writer writer) throws IOException {
		if (generateNonExecutableJson) {
			writer.write(JSON_NON_EXECUTABLE_PREFIX);
		}
		JsonWriter jsonWriter = new JsonWriter(writer);
		if (prettyPrinting) {
			jsonWriter.setIndent("  ");
		}
		jsonWriter.setSerializeNulls(serializeNulls);
		return jsonWriter;
	}
	/**
	 * Returns a new JSON writer configured for the settings on this Gson instance.
	 */
	public JsonReader newJsonReader(Reader reader) {
		JsonReader jsonReader = new JsonReader(reader);
		jsonReader.setLenient(lenient);
		return jsonReader;
	}
	/**
	 * Writes the JSON for {@code jsonElement} to {@code writer}.
	 * 
	 * @throws JsonIOException
	 *             if there was a problem writing to the writer
	 */
	public void toJson(JsonElement jsonElement, JsonWriter writer) throws JsonIOException {
		boolean oldLenient = writer.isLenient();
		writer.setLenient(true);
		boolean oldHtmlSafe = writer.isHtmlSafe();
		writer.setHtmlSafe(htmlSafe);
		boolean oldSerializeNulls = writer.getSerializeNulls();
		writer.setSerializeNulls(serializeNulls);
		try {
			Streams.write(jsonElement, writer);
		} catch (IOException e) {
			throw new JsonIOException(e);
		} finally {
			writer.setLenient(oldLenient);
			writer.setHtmlSafe(oldHtmlSafe);
			writer.setSerializeNulls(oldSerializeNulls);
		}
	}
	/**
	 * This method deserializes the specified Json into an object of the specified
	 * class. It is not suitable to use if the specified class is a generic type
	 * since it will not have the generic type information because of the Type
	 * Erasure feature of Java. Therefore, this method should not be used if the
	 * desired type is a generic type. Note that this method works fine if the any
	 * of the fields of the specified object are generics, just the object itself
	 * should not be a generic type. For the cases when the object is of generic
	 * type, invoke {@link #fromJson(String, Type)}. If you have the Json in a
	 * {@link Reader} instead of a String, use {@link #fromJson(Reader, Class)}
	 * instead.
	 *
	 * @param 
	 *            the type of the desired object
	 * @param json
	 *            the string from which the object is to be deserialized
	 * @param classOfT
	 *            the class of T
	 * @return an object of type T from the string. Returns {@code null} if
	 *         {@code json} is {@code null}.
	 * @throws JsonSyntaxException
	 *             if json is not a valid representation for an object of type
	 *             classOfT
	 */
	public  T fromJson(String json, Class classOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException {
		Object object = fromJson(json, (Type) classOfT);
		return Primitives.wrap(classOfT).cast(object);
	}
	/**
	 * This method deserializes the specified Json into an object of the specified
	 * type. This method is useful if the specified object is a generic type. For
	 * non-generic objects, use {@link #fromJson(String, Class)} instead. If you
	 * have the Json in a {@link Reader} instead of a String, use
	 * {@link #fromJson(Reader, Type)} instead.
	 *
	 * @param 
	 *            the type of the desired object
	 * @param json
	 *            the string from which the object is to be deserialized
	 * @param typeOfT
	 *            The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this type by
	 *            using the {@link com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken} class. For
	 *            example, to get the type for {@code Collection}, you should
	 *            use:
	 * 
	 *            
	 *            Type typeOfT = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() {
	 *            }.getType();
	 *             
	 * 
	 * @return an object of type T from the string. Returns {@code null} if
	 *         {@code json} is {@code null}.
	 * @throws JsonParseException
	 *             if json is not a valid representation for an object of type
	 *             typeOfT
	 * @throws JsonSyntaxException
	 *             if json is not a valid representation for an object of type
	 */
	@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
	public  T fromJson(String json, Type typeOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException {
		if (json == null) {
			return null;
		}
		StringReader reader = new StringReader(json);
		T target = (T) fromJson(reader, typeOfT);
		return target;
	}
	/**
	 * This method deserializes the Json read from the specified reader into an
	 * object of the specified class. It is not suitable to use if the specified
	 * class is a generic type since it will not have the generic type information
	 * because of the Type Erasure feature of Java. Therefore, this method should
	 * not be used if the desired type is a generic type. Note that this method
	 * works fine if the any of the fields of the specified object are generics,
	 * just the object itself should not be a generic type. For the cases when the
	 * object is of generic type, invoke {@link #fromJson(Reader, Type)}. If you
	 * have the Json in a String form instead of a {@link Reader}, use
	 * {@link #fromJson(String, Class)} instead.
	 *
	 * @param 
	 *            the type of the desired object
	 * @param json
	 *            the reader producing the Json from which the object is to be
	 *            deserialized.
	 * @param classOfT
	 *            the class of T
	 * @return an object of type T from the string. Returns {@code null} if
	 *         {@code json} is at EOF.
	 * @throws JsonIOException
	 *             if there was a problem reading from the Reader
	 * @throws JsonSyntaxException
	 *             if json is not a valid representation for an object of type
	 * @since 1.2
	 */
	public  T fromJson(Reader json, Class classOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException, JsonIOException {
		JsonReader jsonReader = newJsonReader(json);
		Object object = fromJson(jsonReader, classOfT);
		assertFullConsumption(object, jsonReader);
		return Primitives.wrap(classOfT).cast(object);
	}
	/**
	 * This method deserializes the Json read from the specified reader into an
	 * object of the specified type. This method is useful if the specified object
	 * is a generic type. For non-generic objects, use
	 * {@link #fromJson(Reader, Class)} instead. If you have the Json in a String
	 * form instead of a {@link Reader}, use {@link #fromJson(String, Type)}
	 * instead.
	 *
	 * @param 
	 *            the type of the desired object
	 * @param json
	 *            the reader producing Json from which the object is to be
	 *            deserialized
	 * @param typeOfT
	 *            The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this type by
	 *            using the {@link com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken} class. For
	 *            example, to get the type for {@code Collection}, you should
	 *            use:
	 * 
	 *            
	 *            Type typeOfT = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() {
	 *            }.getType();
	 *             
	 * 
	 * @return an object of type T from the json. Returns {@code null} if
	 *         {@code json} is at EOF.
	 * @throws JsonIOException
	 *             if there was a problem reading from the Reader
	 * @throws JsonSyntaxException
	 *             if json is not a valid representation for an object of type
	 * @since 1.2
	 */
	@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
	public  T fromJson(Reader json, Type typeOfT) throws JsonIOException, JsonSyntaxException {
		JsonReader jsonReader = newJsonReader(json);
		T object = (T) fromJson(jsonReader, typeOfT);
		assertFullConsumption(object, jsonReader);
		return object;
	}
	private static void assertFullConsumption(Object obj, JsonReader reader) {
		try {
			if (obj != null && reader.peek() != JsonToken.END_DOCUMENT) {
				throw new JsonIOException("JSON document was not fully consumed.");
			}
		} catch (MalformedJsonException e) {
			throw new JsonSyntaxException(e);
		} catch (IOException e) {
			throw new JsonIOException(e);
		}
	}
	/**
	 * Reads the next JSON value from {@code reader} and convert it to an object of
	 * type {@code typeOfT}. Returns {@code null}, if the {@code reader} is at EOF.
	 * Since Type is not parameterized by T, this method is type unsafe and should
	 * be used carefully
	 *
	 * @throws JsonIOException
	 *             if there was a problem writing to the Reader
	 * @throws JsonSyntaxException
	 *             if json is not a valid representation for an object of type
	 */
	@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
	public  T fromJson(JsonReader reader, Type typeOfT) throws JsonIOException, JsonSyntaxException {
		boolean isEmpty = true;
		boolean oldLenient = reader.isLenient();
		reader.setLenient(true);
		try {
			reader.peek();
			isEmpty = false;
			TypeToken typeToken = (TypeToken) TypeToken.get(typeOfT);
			TypeAdapter typeAdapter = getAdapter(typeToken);
			T object = typeAdapter.read(reader);
			return object;
		} catch (EOFException e) {
			/*
			 * For compatibility with JSON 1.5 and earlier, we return null for empty
			 * documents instead of throwing.
			 */
			if (isEmpty) {
				return null;
			}
			throw new JsonSyntaxException(e);
		} catch (IllegalStateException e) {
			throw new JsonSyntaxException(e);
		} catch (IOException e) {
			// TODO(inder): Figure out whether it is indeed right to rethrow this as
			// JsonSyntaxException
			throw new JsonSyntaxException(e);
		} finally {
			reader.setLenient(oldLenient);
		}
	}
	/**
	 * This method deserializes the Json read from the specified parse tree into an
	 * object of the specified type. It is not suitable to use if the specified
	 * class is a generic type since it will not have the generic type information
	 * because of the Type Erasure feature of Java. Therefore, this method should
	 * not be used if the desired type is a generic type. Note that this method
	 * works fine if the any of the fields of the specified object are generics,
	 * just the object itself should not be a generic type. For the cases when the
	 * object is of generic type, invoke {@link #fromJson(JsonElement, Type)}.
	 * 
	 * @param 
	 *            the type of the desired object
	 * @param json
	 *            the root of the parse tree of {@link JsonElement}s from which the
	 *            object is to be deserialized
	 * @param classOfT
	 *            The class of T
	 * @return an object of type T from the json. Returns {@code null} if
	 *         {@code json} is {@code null}.
	 * @throws JsonSyntaxException
	 *             if json is not a valid representation for an object of type
	 *             typeOfT
	 * @since 1.3
	 */
	public  T fromJson(JsonElement json, Class classOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException {
		Object object = fromJson(json, (Type) classOfT);
		return Primitives.wrap(classOfT).cast(object);
	}
	/**
	 * This method deserializes the Json read from the specified parse tree into an
	 * object of the specified type. This method is useful if the specified object
	 * is a generic type. For non-generic objects, use
	 * {@link #fromJson(JsonElement, Class)} instead.
	 *
	 * @param 
	 *            the type of the desired object
	 * @param json
	 *            the root of the parse tree of {@link JsonElement}s from which the
	 *            object is to be deserialized
	 * @param typeOfT
	 *            The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this type by
	 *            using the {@link com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken} class. For
	 *            example, to get the type for {@code Collection}, you should
	 *            use:
	 * 
	 *            
	 *            Type typeOfT = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() {
	 *            }.getType();
	 *             
	 * 
	 * @return an object of type T from the json. Returns {@code null} if
	 *         {@code json} is {@code null}.
	 * @throws JsonSyntaxException
	 *             if json is not a valid representation for an object of type
	 *             typeOfT
	 * @since 1.3
	 */
	@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
	public  T fromJson(JsonElement json, Type typeOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException {
		if (json == null) {
			return null;
		}
		return (T) fromJson(new JsonTreeReader(json), typeOfT);
	}
	static class FutureTypeAdapter extends TypeAdapter {
		private TypeAdapter delegate;
		public void setDelegate(TypeAdapter typeAdapter) {
			if (delegate != null) {
				throw new AssertionError();
			}
			delegate = typeAdapter;
		}
		@Override
		public T read(JsonReader in) throws IOException {
			if (delegate == null) {
				throw new IllegalStateException();
			}
			return delegate.read(in);
		}
		@Override
		public void write(JsonWriter out, T value) throws IOException {
			if (delegate == null) {
				throw new IllegalStateException();
			}
			delegate.write(out, value);
		}
	}
	@Override
	public String toString() {
		return new StringBuilder("{serializeNulls:").append(serializeNulls).append("factories:").append(factories).append(",instanceCreators:").append(constructorConstructor).append("}").toString();
	}
}