i have this JSON object:
{"error":null,
"result":[{"id":"1234567890",
"count":1,
"recipients":
["u3848",
"u8958",
"u7477474"
],
"dateCreated":"2012-06-13T09:13:45.989Z"
}]
}
and I'm trying to find a way to correctly parse the recipients array into a String[] object.
is there an easy way to do this?
EDIT:
found this answer that has all the things needed for result: Sending and Parsing JSON Objects
the way to do what I wanted was this:
JSONArray temp = jsonObject.getJSONArray("name");
int length = temp.length();
if (length > 0) {
String [] recipients = new String [length];
for (int i = 0; i < length; i++) {
recipients[i] = temp.getString(i);
}
}
You can try to use xstream with json serializer. Take a look this link
I always suggest my favorite library json-lib to handle JSON stuffs.
You can use JSONArray to convert to Object[], although it's not String[], you can still use it because every Object has toString() method.
String sYourJsonString = "['u3848', 'u8958', 'u7477474']";
Object[] arrayReceipients = JSONArray.toArray (JSONArray.fromObject(sYourJsonString));
System.out.println (arrayReceipients [0]); // u3848
Related
I am trying to parse a JSON Array which looks something like this
"data":["data1","data2","data3"]
If I write JSONArray arr = obj1.getJSONArray("data");, this will provide me with the JSON array but since the key name from key-value pair is missing, how will I retrieve "data1", "data2" and "data3"?
JSON arrays allows for non json children. In this case, the children are of String value:
for(int i=0;i<arr.length();i++) {
String value = arr.getString(i);
}
My syntax might be inaccurate
Assuming this is your JSON,
{"data":["data1","data2","data3"]}
Use the following to retrieve the array,
JSONArray arrJson = jsonData.getJSONArray("data");
String[] arr = new String[arrJson.length()];
for(int i = 0; i < arrJson.length(); i++) {
arr[i] = arrJson.getString(i);
}
Is it possible to convert from the newer EJB JSON libraries to the older org.json ones without having to rely on org.json.simple or GSON?
In the case below, "buttons" is a populated JsonArray and I'm trying to copy it into a JSONArray for legacy code. But the initialization of JSONArray from a stringified value always fails with "A JSONObject text must begin with '{'" because a quote is seen as a first character rather than a curly brace.
JSONArray newButtons = new JSONArray();
for (int i = 0; i < buttons.size(); i++) {
JsonString button = buttons.getJsonString(i);
newButtons.put(new JSONArray(button.toString()));
}
return new JSONArray(newButtons);
It doesn't seem like there is any kind of org.json object that I can initialize from a string constructor with a toString() value from the javax.json library. I have managed to move data from org.json structures to javax.json ones, but not vice versa. Is the org.json library too inflexible to do this?
I haven't tried it, but I believe following should work.
JSONArray newButtons = new JSONArray();
for (int i = 0; i < buttons.size(); i++) {
JsonObject button = buttons.getJsonObject(i);
newButtons.put(new org.json.JSONObject(button.toString()));
}
return newButtons;
With the following line you get first the object with index 'i' and then make a JSON String out of it. Your original code rather returns the element 'i' as a value instead of an object.
JsonString button = buttons.getJsonObject(i).toString();
I have converted a json string into a java arraylist and I'm looking to access a specific element.
.get(0).get(2) for example doesn't work as I found on another question.
When I use .get(0) I get the following reposnse:
[{ID=d224fe6b2d35728bbb9c9132db015ba0, Name=dl, DisplayName=Sneakers,
MatchTypes=[object], Score=1.0,
PassParams=reqID=MjAxOC0wMy0wMSAxNTowNTo0MS40NTcwNzM4MTMgKzAwMDAgVVRDIG09Kzc2MzIwNi45ODYzODkxNDZfXzA0MTgyMWEyNDg5MjZhNTZiLTYwYjBjNzA0ZDQ0NF9KaWtLTQ==}
So it looks like the arraylist is a list of lists.
I'm looking to access the DisplayName value
The only code I have has been to convert the json string and the attempt at accesing arraylist:
public void setJson(String jsonString) {
Gson googleJson = new Gson();
ArrayList array = googleJson.fromJson(jsonString, ArrayList.class);
String keyword = array.get(0).get(2).toString();
}
Any help is much appreciated!
nested for loops to exhausted search is the easiest way for beginners; for example
for (int I = 0; I < array.length; I++)
{
for (int j = 0; j < array.length; j++)
{
}
}
then do an if else statement to return the statement you want; and give you the location.
I have several string each containing a JSON representation of an array of objects. Here's an example in code to illustrate, though this is not my actual code (the JSON strings are passed in):
String s1 = "[{name: "Bob", car: "Ford"},{name: "Mary", car: "Fiat"}]";
String s2 = "[{name: "Mack", car: "VW"},{name: "Steve", car: "Mercedes Benz"}]";
I need to combine those two JSON arrays into one large JSON array. I could treat this as a String manipulation problem and replace the inner end square brackets with commas but that's not particularly robust (though I am guaranteed to get valid JSON).
I'd rather treat these two Strings as JSON arrays and just add them together somehow. It's a great plan except I don't know the "somehow" part.
Does anyone know a solution in Java that doesn't require constructing Java Object representations of the JSON objects?
Thanks!
This code will take sourceArray (s2), and append it to the end of destinationArray (s1):
String s1 = "[{name: \"Bob\", car: \"Ford\"},{name: \"Mary\", car: \"Fiat\"}]";
String s2 = "[{name: \"Mack\", car: \"VW\"},{name: \"Steve\", car: \"Mercedes Benz\"}]";
JSONArray sourceArray = new JSONArray(s2);
JSONArray destinationArray = new JSONArray(s1);
for (int i = 0; i < sourceArray.length(); i++) {
destinationArray.put(sourceArray.getJSONObject(i));
}
String s3 = destinationArray.toString();
You really have only two choices: parse the JSON (which invariably would involve constructing the objects) or don't parse the JSON. Not parsing is going to be cheaper, of course.
At first glance your idea about treating it as a String-manipulation problem might sound fragile, but the more I think about it, the more it seems to make fine sense. For error detection you could easily confirm that you were really dealing with arrays by checking for the square brackets; after that, just stripping off the ending bracket, adding a comma, stripping off the beginning bracket, and adding the "tail" should work flawlessly. The only exception I can think of is if either array is empty, you should just return the other String unchanged; again, that's very easy to check for as a String.
I really don't think there's any reason to make it more complex than that.
I used this code for Combine two Json Array.
String s1 = "[{name: \"Bob\", car: \"Ford\"},{name: \"Mary\", car: \"Fiat\"}]";
String s2 = "[{name: \"Mack\", car: \"VW\"},{name: \"Steve\", car: \"Mercedes Benz\"}]";
String s3=new String("");
s1=s1.substring(s1.indexOf("[")+1, s1.lastIndexOf("]"));
s2=s2.substring(s2.indexOf("[")+1, s2.lastIndexOf("]"));
s3="["+s1+","+s2+"]";
System.out.println(s3);
And here is my solution, You may want to merge more than two arrays :
Java version:
public static JSONArray mergeMultiJsonArray(JSONArray... arrays) {
JSONArray outArray = new JSONArray();
for (JSONArray array : arrays)
for (int i = 0; i < array.length(); i++)
outArray.put(array.optJSONObject(i));
return outArray;
}
Kotlin version:
fun mergeMultiJsonArray(vararg arrays: JSONArray): JSONArray {
val outArr = JSONArray()
for (array in arrays)
for (i in 0 until array.length())
outArray.put(array.optJSONObject(i))
return outArr
}
i use this code to append all the elements of a jsonArray to a common JsonArray.
public JSONArray getMergeJsonArrays(ArrayList<JSONArray> jsonArrays) throws JSONException
{
JSONArray MergedJsonArrays= new JSONArray();
for(JSONArray tmpArray:jsonArrays)
{
for(int i=0;i<tmpArray.length();i++)
{
MergedJsonArrays.put(tmpArray.get(i));
}
}
return MergedJsonArrays;
}
This function does the magic, adding multiples arrays returning one JSONArray with all elements
public static JSONArray JoinArrays(JSONArray... jsonArrays) {
JSONArray resultJSONArray = new JSONArray();
Arrays.stream(jsonArrays).forEach(jsonArray -> IntStream.range(0, jsonArray.length()).mapToObj(jsonArray::get).forEach(resultJSONArray::put));
return resultJSONArray;
}
Use Below Method pass all JSON array in ArrayList this method will return cumulative JsonArray
public JSONArray getMergeJson(ArrayList<JSONArray> xyz){
JSONArray result=null;
JSONObject obj= new JSONObject();
obj.put("key",result);
for(JSONArray tmp:patches){
for(int i=0;i<tmp.length();i++){
obj.append("key", tmp.getJSONObject(i)); ;
}
}
return obj.getJSONArray("key");
}
I am building an android app that needs to download and synchronise with an online database, I am sending my query from the app to a php page which returns the relevant rows from a database in JSON format.
can someone please tell me the best way to iterate through a JSON array?
I receive an array of objects:
[{json object},{json object},{json object}]
What is the simplest piece of code I could use to access the JSONObjects in the array?
EDIT: now that I think of it the method I used to iterate the loop was:
for (String row: json){
id = row.getInt("id");
name = row.getString("name");
password = row.getString("password");
}
So I guess I had was somehow able to turn the returned Json into and iterable array. Any Ideas how I could achieve this?
I apologise for my vaguness but I had this working from an example I found on the web and have since been unable to find it.
I think this code is short and clear:
int id;
String name;
JSONArray array = new JSONArray(string_of_json_array);
for (int i = 0; i < array.length(); i++) {
JSONObject row = array.getJSONObject(i);
id = row.getInt("id");
name = row.getString("name");
}
Is that what you were looking for?
I have done it two different ways,
1.) make a Map
HashMap<String, String> applicationSettings = new HashMap<String,String>();
for(int i=0; i<settings.length(); i++){
String value = settings.getJSONObject(i).getString("value");
String name = settings.getJSONObject(i).getString("name");
applicationSettings.put(name, value);
}
2.) make a JSONArray of names
JSONArray names = json.names();
JSONArray values = json.toJSONArray(names);
for(int i=0; i<values.length(); i++){
if (names.getString(i).equals("description")){
setDescription(values.getString(i));
}
else if (names.getString(i).equals("expiryDate")){
String dateString = values.getString(i);
setExpiryDate(stringToDateHelper(dateString));
}
else if (names.getString(i).equals("id")){
setId(values.getLong(i));
}
else if (names.getString(i).equals("offerCode")){
setOfferCode(values.getString(i));
}
else if (names.getString(i).equals("startDate")){
String dateString = values.getString(i);
setStartDate(stringToDateHelper(dateString));
}
else if (names.getString(i).equals("title")){
setTitle(values.getString(i));
}
}
Unfortunately , JSONArray doesn't support foreach statements, like:
for(JSONObject someObj : someJsonArray) {
// do something about someObj
....
....
}
When I tried #vipw's suggestion, I was faced with this exception:
The method getJSONObject(int) is undefined for the type JSONArray
This worked for me instead:
int myJsonArraySize = myJsonArray.size();
for (int i = 0; i < myJsonArraySize; i++) {
JSONObject myJsonObject = (JSONObject) myJsonArray.get(i);
// Do whatever you have to do to myJsonObject...
}
If you're using the JSON.org Java implementation, which is open source, you can just make JSONArray implement the Iterable interface and add the following method to the class:
#Override
public Iterator iterator() {
return this.myArrayList.iterator();
}
This will make all instances of JSONArray iterable, meaning that the for (Object foo : bar) syntax will now work with it (note that foo has to be an Object, because JSONArrays do not have a declared type). All this works because the JSONArray class is backed by a simple ArrayList, which is already iterable. I imagine that other open source implementations would be just as easy to change.
On Arrays, look for:
JSONArray menuitemArray = popupObject.getJSONArray("menuitem");
You are using the same Cast object for every entry.
On each iteration you just changed the same object instead creating a new one.
This code should fix it:
JSONArray jCastArr = jObj.getJSONArray("abridged_cast");
ArrayList<Cast> castList= new ArrayList<Cast>();
for (int i=0; i < jCastArr.length(); i++) {
Cast person = new Cast(); // create a new object here
JSONObject jpersonObj = jCastArr.getJSONObject(i);
person.castId = (String) jpersonObj.getString("id");
person.castFullName = (String) jpersonObj.getString("name");
castList.add(person);
}
details.castList = castList;
While iterating over a JSON array (org.json.JSONArray, built into Android), watch out for null objects; for example, you may get "null" instead of a null string.
A check may look like:
s[i] = array.isNull(i) ? null : array.getString(i);