Description
§4.3.1 ends with:
An empty schema is a JSON Schema with no properties, or only unknown properties.
(emphasis mine)
while §4.3.2 ends with:
While the empty schema object is unambiguous, there are many possible equivalents to the "false" schema. Using the boolean values ensures that the intent is clear to both human readers and implementations.
(emphasis again mine)
But if schemas with unknown properties are also defined to be "empty", then they indeed aren't unambiguous, there are instead an infinite number of them.
I'm not sure why we define empty schemas to include those with unknown keywords, though it seems that has been there forever.
If we stick with that definition it seems we should remove the offhand remark in 4.3.2 and just treat them the same (i.e. say something like both true
and false
are intended to be "canonical ways" to express those notions).
But personally if there's not a good reason to I'd re-define empty schemas to refer simply to the schema {}
(n.b. or if there's some complication there due to $schema
being mandatory, perhaps be either {}
or {"$schema" : "..."}
though that seems hairy...)