6

I have a couple of POJOs which looks like this:

class Items {
    List<Item> items;

    public List<Item> getItems() {
        return items;
    }

    ...
}

class Item {
    String name;
    Date insertionDate;

    ...
}

I want to be able to serialize the Date field in Item using a custom format (add a prefix to the date, something like "Date:xxx"), but I don't want to do that always (as it's used by other consumers which don't require this prefix), only in specific cases.

If I annotate Item's getInsertionDate() with@JsonSerialize(using = CustomDateSerializer.class) I can probably make this work, however, I don't want to do that since I don't always want to serialize this field using this method, only in a specific case.

So ideally, I would do this in my controller which does want to customize the serialization:

@JsonSerialize(using = CustomDateSerializer.class)
public List<Item> getItems() {
   ....
}

where CustomDateSerializer extends SerializerBase<Date> and Jackson would figure out that it should serialize each item in the List using the default serializer, and when it hits a Date object it should use my custom serializer. Of course this does not work since that's not how @JsonSerialize is used, but is there a way to make this work other than to wrap Item with a wrapper and use that wrapper when I want the custom serialization? Am I thinking about this the wrong way and there's another way to do this?

Note that I'm using Spring MVC so I'm not calling the serialization directly.

Any help would be much appreciated :)

1 Answer 1

2
+50

The problem is that Jackson does not see the annotations on getItems() if it is a service end point method; it is typically only passed type List<Item> that Spring determines. With JAX-RS (like Jersey), annotations associated with that method are passed, however (and perhaps Spring has some way as well); although it then requires bit more support from integration code (for JAX-RS, Jackson JAX-RS JSON provider module) to pass that along.

It might be easier to actually create a separate POJO (and not pass List types) so that you can add necessary annotations.

If you were using Jackson directly, you could also use ObjectWriter and specify default date format to use. But I don't know if Spring allows you to do that (most frameworks do not and only expose configurability of ObjectMapper).

One more note -- instead of custom serializer (and/or deserializer), you can also use simple annotations with Dates (and on Jackson 2.x):

public class DateStuff {
  @JsonFormat(shape=JsonFormat.Shape.STRING, pattern="'Date:'yyyy'-'MM'-'dd")
  public Date date;
}

to specify per-property format override.

6
  • one question: if I create a separate POJO instead of List, can I annotate it somehow to apply this formatting to all Dates within the List it holds, or do I need to separately annotate each Date object?
    – TheZuck
    Jan 4, 2013 at 17:26
  • You can annotate List property, and it should apply to all Dates (etc) contained.
    – StaxMan
    Jan 4, 2013 at 18:55
  • I'll try it when I move to 2.0+, currently at 1.9.7 and 2.0+ is not in the standard maven repository yet. Thanks for you help!!
    – TheZuck
    Jan 4, 2013 at 20:00
  • 1
    Huh? Jackson 2.0 has been in central Maven repo for over a year now. But it was moved to a new Java package, to allow co-existence with 1.x (i.e. big systems may use both since they are not fully compatible)
    – StaxMan
    Jan 4, 2013 at 22:50
  • my bad, misread the download page instructions. thanks again :)
    – TheZuck
    Jan 5, 2013 at 9:18

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