JSONSerializer can transform any java object to JSON notation and back with a simple and
clean interface, leveraging all the builders in JSONObject and JSONArray. To transform a
java obect into JSON use JSONSerializer.toJSON()
. To transform a valid JSON
value (by JSON, I mean an Object implementing that interface), use toJava()
.
The last method is an instance method because the serializer needs special configuration to
transform a JSON value to a bean class, array, List or DynaBean.
The simplest way to create a JSONArray
from a java array or collection
is through the static factory methods from JSONArray
. JSONArray.fromObject()
will inspect its parameter and call the correct factory or constructor.
Examples:
The simplest way to create a JSONObject
from a bean or Map
is through the static factory methods from JSONObject
. JSONObject.fromObject()
will inspect its parameter and call the correct factory or constructor.
Examples:
CAUTION: when parsing, JSONObject and JSONArray will check for cycles in the hierarchy, throwing an exception if one is found. You can change this behavior by registering a CycleDetectionStrategy. |
Json-lib can transform JSONObjects to either a DynaBean or an specific bean class.
When using DynaBean all arrays are converted to Lists, when using an specific bean class
the transformation will use type conversion if necessary on array properties.
Convert to DynaBean:
Convert to Bean:
There are two special cases when converting to an specific bean, if the target bean
has a Map property and it must contain other beans, JSONObject.toBean()
will
transform the nested beans into DynaBeans. If you need those nested beans transformed into an
specific class, you can either postprocess the Map attribute or provide hints on JSONObject's
attributes for conversion. JSONObject.toBean()
may be passed a third argument,
a Map, that will provide thos hints. Every key must be either the name of a property or a
regular expression matching the object's properties, and the value must be a Class
.
The second case is similar and it happens when the target bean has a Collection (List) as a property and it must contain other beans. In this case there is no way to provide hints for class conversion. The only possible solution is to postprocess the collection transforming each DynaBean into an specific bean.
To ease the postprocessing scenarios, EZMorph provides a Morpher capable of
transforming a DynaBean into an specific bean,
BeanMorpher
Example:
This yields a MyBean instance that has DynaBeans inside the 'data' attribute', so now comes
the part of postprocessing, this can be done with an Iterator
Example:
To learn more about Morphers, please visit EZMorph's project site.
Working with XML has become easier since version 1.1. Transforming JSONObjects and JSONArrays from and to XML is done through the XMLSerializer.
Writing to JSON to XML is as simple as calling XMLSerializer.write()
, but there are a lot
of options that you may configure to get better control of the XML output. For example you may change the
default names for the root element ('o' if object, 'a' if array), the default name for object (an object inside
an array is "anonymous"), the default name for array (for the same reason as object), the default name for
element (array items have no name). If you'd like to output namescape information but your JSON does not
includes it, no problem, you have 8 methods that will let you register and manage namespaces; namespaces
defined this way have precedence on any namespace declaration that may be inside the JSON. By default
XMLSerializer will append special attributes to each xml element for easing the transformation back to JSON
but you may configure it to skip appending those attributes. Any property on a JSONObject that begins
with '@' will be treated as an attribute, any property named '#text' will be treated as a Text node.
Please review the javadoc for XMLSerializer to know more about the configurable options.
Code | XML output |
---|---|
XMLSerializer treats each element as a string
unless a type parameter is specified.
JSONFunction needs an additional parameter that specifies that function's params.
All xml attributes
will have the prefix '@' and text nodes will have the property name '#text'. XMLSerializer supports
the rules outlined at
Converting Between XML and JSON
XML input | Code |
---|---|
CAUTION: when parsing, JSONObject and JSONArray will check for cycles in the hierarchy, throwing an exception if one is found. You can change this behavior by registering a CycleDetectionStrategy. |