2

string result is below:

{ "1": "something" }

string result = "{ \"1\"' : \"somestring\"}";

public class JsonData
{
    private string _1;

    public string 1 { get { return _1; } set { _1 = value; } }

    public JsonData()
    {
    }
}

JsonData data = Newtonsoft.Json.JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<JsonData >(result);

I want to deserialize the String but JsonData definition is wrong. Whats wrong with this?

1
  • It's wrong because you can't start a member name (be it properties, fields, method, classes, namespaces...) with a number. Jun 26, 2013 at 1:35

1 Answer 1

2

You code won't compile since identifiers cannot start with numbers.

You can use the JsonPropertyAttribute to reference the 1 property inside the Json.

public class JsonData
{
    [JsonProperty("1")]
    public string One { get; set; }
}

Usage:

var data = @"{ ""1"" : ""something"" }";

var result = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<JsonData>(data);
1
  • string result = @" { "data" : { { "1" : "somestring" }, { "2" : "somestring" }, { "3" : "somestring" }, { "4" : "somestring" }, { "5" : "somestring" }, { "6" : "somestring" }, { "7" : "somestring" }, { "8" : "somestring" }, { "9" : "somestring" }, { "10" : "somestring" }, ... to many } } ";
    – ruijiexie
    Jun 26, 2013 at 4:30

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