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Right now, I'm using SuperObject to parse my JSON data (when receiving it from the server) and then dump it into a client dataset. There can be very large amounts of data coming from the server. Currently, I have to first parse that JSON data into an ISuperObject, and then iterate through that to populate the client dataset.

What I'm wondering is whether there's a way to bypass the double-loading, triggering events as the raw data is being parsed. For example, as soon as the parser detects the beginning of a new object, it would trigger an event that I would then prepare that corresponding object on the spot. Or when it parses an array, I can prepare a new dataset record.

The reason is because with very large datasets, it takes a few seconds some times, and I have to wait for it to finish being parsed before I can make use of it. If I get the data while it's being parsed, I can immediately make use of that data on the spot.

I'm already implementing pagination at between 200-500 records per page (on millions of records) with many columns. Pagination still doesn't solve the full needs when it comes to responsiveness.

How can I go about this, either using SuperObject, or any other known mechanism, without having to write my own complete parser?

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Writing your own parser is not that hard. I've written one for the mongodb connector I've written: https://github.com/stijnsanders/TMongoWire/blob/master/bsonUtils.pas You could easily adapt that one to fire the events you describe.

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