CBOR uses variable-sized length prefixes. Strings zero to 23 bytes long require just one byte of overhead, after that it becomes two bytes for strings up to length 255, and 3 bytes of overhead for strings up to 65535. Above that, it requires 5 bytes of overhead, which is probably enough for strings up to at least a few hundred GB, though I didn’t test that far.
click to see how i empirically determined those numbers
Struct containing length + buffer? Or are you after a library?
No, I am interested in only implementations. I’ve come across a few such, for example:
Are there any other custom data structures that are faster and also at the same time safer than the default? What about ropes?
CBOR uses variable-sized length prefixes. Strings zero to 23 bytes long require just one byte of overhead, after that it becomes two bytes for strings up to length 255, and 3 bytes of overhead for strings up to 65535. Above that, it requires 5 bytes of overhead, which is probably enough for strings up to at least a few hundred GB, though I didn’t test that far.
click to see how i empirically determined those numbers
$ python -c 'import cbor; overhead=0; print({ length:overhead for length in range(65537) if overhead < (overhead:=len(cbor.dumps("a"*length))-length) })'
{0: 1, 24: 2, 256: 3, 65536: 5}