8

I have an object that I want to serialize to Json format I'm using:

    public string ToJson()
    {
        JavaScriptSerializer jsonSerializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
        string sJSON = jsonSerializer.Serialize(this);
        return sJSON;
    }

How do I define some fields in "this" to not be serialized?

3 Answers 3

23

Use the ScriptIgnoreAttribute.

2
  • 3
    +1. This is the correct answer. I'm glad I read through the answers to the bottom, or I would've missed this. Works beautifully.
    – gilly3
    Jul 22, 2012 at 7:42
  • 1
    @karaxuna, it is supported down to 3.5 (which is when the JavascriptSerializer was introduced)
    – xr280xr
    May 13, 2014 at 16:53
4

The possible way is to declare those fields as private or internal.

The alternative solution is to use DataContractJsonSerializer class. In this case you add DataContract attribute to your class. You can control the members you want to serialize with DataMember attribute - all members marked with it are serialized, and the others are not.

You should rewrite your ToJson method as follows:

    public string ToJson()
    {
        DataContractJsonSerializer jsonSerializer = 
              new DataContractJsonSerializer(typeof(<your class name>));
        MemoryStream ms = new MemoryStream();
        jsonSerializer.WriteObject(ms, this);
        string json = Encoding.Default.GetString(ms.ToArray());
        ms.Dispose();
        return json;
    }
2

Check out the JavaScriptConverter class. You can register converters to customize the serialization/deserialization process for specific object types. You can then include the properties that you want, without making any changes to the original class.

2
  • Nice, but i be still difficult if I want a string member to be serialized while another string member to be not. right?
    – Elad Benda
    Jun 21, 2011 at 12:52
  • You basically return a dictionary of key/value pairs, so it would be up to your custom converter to simply include one and not the other. You could even serialize each member (or not) based on its value.
    – MikeWyatt
    Jun 21, 2011 at 13:41

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