0

i am parsing an json string usin javascript

    {
      "head":   {
        "example": "0"
         },
      "res":   {
        "@test": "121",
        "@found": "5"
     }
}

i am getting the http response from the remote site and i am using javascript to extract the @found value .i used the below code .

 var json=eval('('+request.responseText+')');
        alert(json.head.res.@found);

gives me a null value can u please tell me how can i parse this.

1
  • res is parallel to head. Iterate till what depth it returns object. Try alert(json.res.@found);
    – hungryMind
    Oct 11, 2011 at 13:18

5 Answers 5

3
alert(json.head.res['@found']);

@ is not valid to start a variable name, so you have to use bracket notation. Or change the variable name to be valid.

Basically, in regular expression form: [a-zA-Z_$][0-9a-zA-Z_$]*. In other words, the first character can be a letter or _ or $, and the other characters can be letters or _ or $ or numbers.

What characters are valid for JavaScript variable names?


Per Topera's answer head and res are on the same level in your object not nested.

1

Attribute "res" is not inside "head" attribute.

Try this: json.res['@found']

0

Try json.res['@found']. JavaScript object properties that are not valid variable names cannot be accessed using dot notation. Also, as noted by others, @found is not in head.

0

fix these 3 things :

  • @ is not a valid variable name character. you should consider the [] syntax instead of the "dot" one.
  • res is not in head.
  • please don't use eval. I strongly advise you to use JSON.parse instead of eval
var json = JSON.parse(request.responseText);
alert(json.res['@found']);
1
  • thanks for your advice and the json is converted from xml so it has the name starts with @ .i used json-lib to convert it in java .
    – Ramesh
    Oct 11, 2011 at 13:35
0
alert(json.res['@found']);

res is not inside head.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.