173

I would like to parse data from JSON which is of type String. I am using Google Gson.

I have:

jsonLine = "
{
 "data": {
  "translations": [
   {
    "translatedText": "Hello world"
   }
  ]
 }
}
";

and my class is:

public class JsonParsing{

   public void parse(String jsonLine) {

      // there I would like to get String "Hello world"

   }

}
1

11 Answers 11

263

This is simple code to do it, I avoided all checks but this is the main idea.

 public String parse(String jsonLine) {
    JsonElement jelement = new JsonParser().parse(jsonLine);
    JsonObject  jobject = jelement.getAsJsonObject();
    jobject = jobject.getAsJsonObject("data");
    JsonArray jarray = jobject.getAsJsonArray("translations");
    jobject = jarray.get(0).getAsJsonObject();
    String result = jobject.get("translatedText").getAsString();
    return result;
}

To make the use more generic - you will find that Gson's javadocs are pretty clear and helpful.

6
  • 1
    JsonObject extends JsonElement, so it is both.
    – MByD
    Mar 30, 2011 at 19:45
  • the first line throws cannot instantiate of the type JsonParser on version gson-2.2.4.jar Jun 13, 2014 at 11:28
  • 3
    String result = jobject.get("translatedText").toString(); This results will include the double quotes. String result = jobject.get("translatedText").getAsString(); doesn't include the quotes. Oct 23, 2015 at 23:02
  • Al I the only one who thinks Gson overcomplicates things 98% of the time? A simple JSONObject would do, but we all hate try/catch that much? Jan 18, 2017 at 8:39
  • I need to use the parser class, however, I am getting the MalformedJsonException, so I have to be able to do SetLeinient with JsonParser. How?
    – Mason Wang
    Jun 12, 2017 at 15:55
122

In my first gson application I avoided using additional classes to catch values mainly because I use json for config matters

despite the lack of information (even gson page), that's what I found and used:

starting from

Map jsonJavaRootObject = new Gson().fromJson("{/*whatever your mega complex object*/}", Map.class)

Each time gson sees a {}, it creates a Map (actually a gson StringMap )

Each time gson sees a '', it creates a String

Each time gson sees a number, it creates a Double

Each time gson sees a [], it creates an ArrayList

You can use this facts (combined) to your advantage

Finally this is the code that makes the thing

        Map<String, Object> javaRootMapObject = new Gson().fromJson(jsonLine, Map.class);

    System.out.println(
        (
            (Map)
            (
                (List)
                (
                    (Map)
                    (
                        javaRootMapObject.get("data")
                    )
                 ).get("translations")
            ).get(0)
        ).get("translatedText")
    );
0
21

Simplest thing usually is to create matching Object hierarchy, like so:

public class Wrapper {
   public Data data;

   static class Data {
      public Translation[] translations;
   }
   static class Translation {
      public String translatedText;
   }
}

and then bind using GSON, traverse object hierarchy via fields. Adding getters and setters is pointless for basic data containers.

So something like:

Wrapper value = GSON.fromJSON(jsonString, Wrapper.class);
String text = value.data.translations[0].translatedText;
4
  • 2
    Then your object structure is NOT matching JSON.
    – StaxMan
    Mar 12, 2015 at 21:33
  • why Data and Translation class static even if Wrapper is not?
    – Bench Vue
    Jul 27, 2022 at 10:07
  • I think that's a typo sort of: Data and Translation only need to be static if they are inner classes.
    – StaxMan
    Aug 8, 2022 at 19:58
  • 1
    Changed slightly so that static modifier makes sense.
    – StaxMan
    Aug 8, 2022 at 22:18
15

You can create corresponding java classes for the json objects. The integer, string values can be mapped as is. Json can be parsed like this-

Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().create(); 
Response r = gson.fromJson(jsonString, Response.class);

Here is an example- http://rowsandcolumns.blogspot.com/2013/02/url-encode-http-get-solr-request-and.html

0
10

You can use a separate class to represent the JSON object and use @SerializedName annotations to specify the field name to grab for each data member:

public class Response {

   @SerializedName("data")
   private Data data;

   private static class Data {
      @SerializedName("translations")
      public Translation[] translations;
   }

   private static class Translation {
      @SerializedName("translatedText")
      public String translatedText;
   }

   public String getTranslatedText() {
      return data.translations[0].translatedText;
   }
}

Then you can do the parsing in your parse() method using a Gson object:

Gson gson = new Gson();
Response response = gson.fromJson(jsonLine, Response.class);

System.out.println("Translated text: " + response.getTranslatedText());

With this approach, you can reuse the Response class to add any other additional fields to pick up other data members you might want to extract from JSON -- in case you want to make changes to get results for, say, multiple translations in one call, or to get an additional string for the detected source language.

9

One way would be created a JsonObject and iterating through the parameters. For example

JsonObject jobj = new Gson().fromJson(jsonString, JsonObject.class);

Then you can extract bean values like:

String fieldValue = jobj.get(fieldName).getAsString();
boolean fieldValue = jobj.get(fieldName).getAsBoolean();
int fieldValue = jobj.get(fieldName).getAsInt();

Hope this helps.

5

Using Gson to Solve
I would create a class for individual parameter in the json String. Alternatively you can create one main class called "Data" and then create inner classes similarly. I created separate classes for clarity.

The classes are as follows.

  • Data
  • Translations
  • TranslatedText

In the class JsonParsing the method "parse" we call gson.fromJson(jsonLine, Data.class) which will convert the String in java objects using Reflection.

Once we have access to the "Data" object we can access each parameter individually.

Didn't get a chance to test this code as I am away from my dev machine. But this should help.

Some good examples and articles.
http://albertattard.blogspot.com/2009/06/practical-example-of-gson.html
http://sites.google.com/site/gson/gson-user-guide

Code

public class JsonParsing{

       public void parse(String jsonLine) {

           Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().create();
           Data data = gson.fromJson(jsonLine, Data.class);

           Translations translations = data.getTranslation();
           TranslatedText[] arrayTranslatedText = translations.getArrayTranslatedText(); //this returns an array, based on json string

           for(TranslatedText translatedText:arrayTranslatedText )
           {
                  System.out.println(translatedText.getArrayTranslatedText());
           }
       }

    }


    public class Data{
           private  Translations translations;
          public Translations getTranslation()
          {
             return translations;
          }

          public void setTranslation(Translations translations)
           {
                  this.translations = translations;
           }
    }

    public class Translations
    {
        private  TranslatedText[] translatedText;
         public TranslatedText[] getArrayTranslatedText()
         {
             return translatedText;
         }

           public void setTranslatedText(TranslatedText[] translatedText)
           {
                  this.translatedText= translatedText;
           }
    }

    public class TranslatedText
    {
        private String translatedText;
        public String getTranslatedText()
        {
           return translatedText;
        }

        public void setTranslatedText(String translatedText)
        {
           this.translatedText = translatedText;
        }
    }
2
  • Don't you need some setters on those helper classes? Nothing can set the private String translatedText without violating access control, so there's no way fromJSON could set it in JVMs that have not opted-into reflection trampling all over access control. Mar 30, 2011 at 19:47
  • @Mike Samuel shoot completely forgot about the Setters Mar 30, 2011 at 20:14
5
    JsonParser parser = new JsonParser();
    JsonObject jo = (JsonObject) parser.parse(data);
    JsonElement je = jo.get("some_array");

    //Parsing back the string as Array
    JsonArray ja = (JsonArray) parser.parse(o.get("some_array").getAsString());
    for (JsonElement jo : ja) {
    JsonObject j = (JsonObject) jo;
        // Your Code, Access json elements as j.get("some_element")
    }

A simple example to parse a JSON like this

{ "some_array" : "[\"some_element\":1,\"some_more_element\":2]" , "some_other_element" : 3 }

0
4

Firstly generate getter and setter using below parsing site

http://www.jsonschema2pojo.org/

Now use Gson

GettetSetterClass object=new Gson().fromjson(jsonLine, GettetSetterClass.class);

Now use object to get values such as data,translationText

2

You can use a JsonPath query to extract the value. And with JsonSurfer which is backed by Gson, your problem can be solved by simply two line of code!

    JsonSurfer jsonSurfer = JsonSurfer.gson();
    String result = jsonSurfer.collectOne(jsonLine, String.class, "$.data.translations[0].translatedText");
1

One line code:

System.out.println(new Gson().fromJson(jsonLine,JsonObject.class).getAsJsonObject().get("data").getAsJsonObject().get("translations").getAsJsonArray().get(0).getAsJsonObject().get("translatedText").getAsString());

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