I have JSON that looks like this:
{
"values": [
[
123456,
789.0
],
[
123457,
null
]
]
}
The "schema" is: each value is an array of exactly two things, the first being a long and the second being a double (or null). I'd like to parse this into a Java object (just a POJO).
I tried Jackson, but it has a known bug which prevents nulls in arrays from working: https://github.com/FasterXML/jackson-databind/issues/403
I also tried Gson, but it apparently cannot cope with the idea of transforming arrays into Java objects (rather than into Java arrays):
com.google.gson.JsonSyntaxException: java.lang.IllegalStateException: Expected BEGIN_OBJECT but was BEGIN_ARRAY at line 3 column 6
Here's a full test class that demonstrates the non-working of both Jackson and Gson for this simple task:
import java.util.List;
import org.codehaus.jackson.annotate.JsonCreator;
import org.codehaus.jackson.map.ObjectMapper;
import com.google.gson.Gson;
public class JsonTest {
private static final String TEST_JSON =
"{\n" +
" \"values\": [\n" +
" [\n" +
" 123456,\n" +
" 789.0\n" +
" ],\n" +
" [\n" +
" 123457,\n" +
" null\n" +
" ]\n" +
" ]\n" +
"}\n";
public static class MyPojo1 {
public List<TimestampAndValue> values;
public static class TimestampAndValue {
public long timestamp;
public Double value;
@JsonCreator
public TimestampAndValue(List<Number> nums) {
if(nums == null || nums.size() < 2) {
throw new IllegalArgumentException(String.format("Expected at least two numbers (timestamp & value), instead got: %s", nums));
}
this.timestamp = nums.get(0).longValue();
this.value = nums.get(1).doubleValue();
}
}
}
public static class MyPojo2 {
public List<TimestampAndValue> values;
public static class TimestampAndValue {
public long timestamp;
public Double value;
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
System.out.println(new ObjectMapper().readValue(TEST_JSON, MyPojo1.class));
} catch(Throwable t) {
t.printStackTrace();
}
try {
System.out.println(new Gson().fromJson(TEST_JSON, MyPojo2.class));
} catch(Throwable t) {
t.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Question: what's the proper way to parse this JSON into a Java object? I'm thinking of just using the org.json raw materials to build my own simple parser, since the handy libraries are not so handy.
\n
's fromTEST_JSON
as it would improve readability and would not affect behavior.