57

First of all, I couldn't get clear definition of it from WikiPedia or even from serialize function in the PHP manual. I need to know some cases where we need the term serialization and how things are going without it? In other words, Where you need serialization and without it your code will be missing some important feature.

5
  • What do you mean by we need the term serialization? Serialization is a technique for describing a data structure with information about the structure itself embedded in the data. JSON is a lightweight type of serialization, e.g., {prop:{prop:1}}. Transfer that to another computer and minimally you can then work with that object's properties with the same basic relationship of prop.prop. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:17
  • 1
    I mean when we need it? simple!
    – user1350140
    Aug 5, 2012 at 16:20
  • When you need to take a data structure across some boundary in which you then need to have that same structure recoverable at some later point. You're minimally describing the data in a more verbose way than just any specific, singular key-variable mapping. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:21
  • @JaredFarrish so do you mean that I can serialize data in my own way and the word serialize came from making series. i.e. could we able to regard arrays as serialized data?
    – user1350140
    Aug 5, 2012 at 16:23
  • If you want to, sure I suppose you could make your own serialization method, but it's really not necessary in most cases. There's plenty of ways to do this, json_encode being one that's lightweight and handles arrays already. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:30

5 Answers 5

115

What is serialization?

Serialization encodes objects into another format.
For example you have an array in PHP like this:

$array = array("a" => 1, "b" => 2, "c" => array("a" => 1, "b" => 2));

And then you want to store it in file or send to other application.

There are several format choices, but the idea is the same: The array has to be encoded (or you could say "translated"), into text or bytes, that can be written to a file or sent via the network.
For example, in PHP, if you:

$data = serialize($array);

you will get this:

a:3:{s:1:"a";i:1;s:1:"b";i:2;s:1:"c";a:2:{s:1:"a";i:1;s:1:"b";i:2;}}

This is PHP's particular serializing format that PHP understands, and it works vice versa, so you are able to use it to deserialize objects.
For example, you stored a serialized array in a file, and you want it back in your code as an array:

$array = unserialize($data);

But you could choose a different serialization format, for example, JSON:

$json = json_encode($array);

will give you this:

{"a":1,"b":2,"c":{"a":1,"b":2}}

The result is not only easily saved, read by human eye, or sent via network, but is also understandable by almost every other language (JavaScript, Java, C#, C++, ...)

Conclusion
Serialization translate objects to another format, in case you want to store or share data.

Are there any situations, where you cannot do anything, but serialize it?

No. But serialization usually makes things easier.

Are JSON and PHP format the only possible formats?
No, no, no and one more time no. There are plenty of formats.

  • XML (e.g. using a schema like WSDL or XHTML)
  • Bytes, Protobuf, etc.
  • Yaml
  • ...
  • ...
  • Your own formats (you can create your own format for serialization and use it, but that is a big thing to do and is not worth it, most of the time)
8
  • 2
    How do you send in-memory object references to other computers or save to disk without serialization? In my mind it's not just harder, but impossible.
    – Esailija
    Aug 5, 2012 at 16:32
  • 5
    In many cases, I think a large part of the point of serialization it that it is language-agnostic. You're not picking a language when you choose a serialization method, you're picking representation that is supported between two points, which could be the same or different languages interpreting it from or into a language-native structure. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:37
  • XML which has predecessors like SOAP, WSDL - This statement is wrong. SOAP and WSDL are not predecessors to XML; WSDL is XML, and SOAP is a means to describe and call objects between systems. XML has been around for much longer than either of these, as well, and is a basic syntax for data description. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:39
  • 1
    To Esailija: sometimes it is not about how hard it is, but how efficient. For example, if you need to send only Name, Surname and Credentials of Person class object, until you send it once in a week - you won't feel it. But should you send it once a second... And what about security? If you serialize whole object and send it wirelessly without encryption, people may scan it and get Social Security numbers, bank info and so on... So in these kind of situations I do believe that serialization is not an option. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:42
  • To Jared Farrish: my bad. There should have been word successor, not predecessor. Edited already :) Aug 5, 2012 at 16:43
24

Serialization is the process of converting some in-memory object to another format that could be used to either store in a file or sent over the network. Deserialization is the inverse process meaning the actual object instance is restored from the given serialized representation of the object. This is very useful when communicating between various systems.

The serialization format could be either interoperable or non-interoperable. Interoperable formats (such as JSON, XML, ...) allow for serializing some object using a given platform and deserializing it using a different platform. For example with JSON you could use javascript to serialize the object and send it over the network to a PHP script that will deserialize the object and use it.

The serialize() PHP function uses an non-interoperable format. This means that only PHP could be used to both serialize and deserialize the object back.

You could use the json_encode and json_decode() functions in order to serialize/deserialize PHP objects using the JSON interoperable format.

7
  • This means that I could able to serialize data in any way I want but it should listed as a series of blocks, so we could call arrays as serialized data?!
    – user1350140
    Aug 5, 2012 at 16:28
  • 2
    No exactly. Arrays are not serialized data. Arrays live in memory. They are objects. Once you serialize them using some format they are converted to some representation of bytes that could be saved or sent over the wire. The exact representation will depend on the serialization format you choose. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:30
  • 1
    @DarinDimitrov Thank you for your comment, made me have a look at your answer and learn some things ;-)
    – aaaaaa
    Aug 5, 2012 at 16:36
  • 7
    This should be the accepted answer, the other one has unresolved controversy :P
    – Esailija
    Aug 5, 2012 at 16:36
  • It is good answer too, but I feel that the answer I chosen it more clear and direct.
    – user1350140
    Aug 5, 2012 at 16:43
6

Serialization is the process of turning data (e.g. variables) into a representation such as a string, that can easily be written and read back from for example a file or the database.

Use cases? There are many, but generally it revolves around the idea of taking a complex, nested array or object and turning it into a simple string that can be saved and read later to retrieve the same structure. For example, provided you have in php:

$blub = array();
$blub['a'] = 1;
$blub['a']['b'] = 4;
$blub['b'] = 27;
$blub['b']['b'] = 46;

Instead of going through every array member individually and writing it one could just:

$dataString = serialize($blub);

And the serialized array is ready to be written anywhere as a simple string, in such a way that retrieving this string again and doing unserialize() over it gets you the exact same array structure you had before. Yes, it's really that simple.

3

I need to know some cases we need the term serialization and how things are going without it?

Serialization can become handy if you need to store complete structures (like an invoice with all associated data like customer address, sender address, product positions, tax caclulcations etc) that are only valid at a certain point in time.

All these data will change in the future, new tax regulations might come, the address of a customer changes, products go out of life. But still the invoice needs to be valid and stored.

This is possible with serialization. Like a snapshot. The object in memory are serialized into a (often like in PHP) binary form that can be just stored. It can be brought back to live later on (and in a different context). Like with this invoice example: In ten years, the data can still be read and the invoice object is the same as it was ten years earlier.

In other word, Where you must need serialization and without it your code will be missing some important feature.

That was one example. It's not that you always needs that, but if things become more complex, serialization can be helpful.

1
  • I've done the same thing with a training exam result. I store the questions and answers in the row with the record, so that in case the question is later updated, the content of the exam as it was taken is still kept. Of course it could have been as descriptive and engineered more completely, but it really wasn't necessary, so serializing it was a perfect compromise, and has been for 5+ years. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:46
1

Since you've tagged it with javascript, one kind of serialization could be form serialization.

Here are the references for the jQuery and prototype.JS equivalents.

What they basically do is serialize form input values into comma-separated name-value pairs.

So considering an actual usage..

$.ajax({
   url : 'insert.php?a=10,b=15' //values serialized via .serialize()
   type: 'GET'
});

And you would probably do $GET["a"] to retrieve those values, I'm not familiar with PHP though.

2
  • I don't know if that's strictly serialization. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:19
  • @Said Bakr: More so for usage than language I would say. The definition is always the same. It all comes down to passing data from A to B such that it can be retrieved back and de-constructed. Aug 5, 2012 at 16:19

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.