8

I have a "style" or "effective scala" type of question here: I have a "FeatureCheck" class which I need to serialize into a Json in Play framework.

case class FeatureCheck(val result: Option[Boolean], val missing: Option[Array[String]], val error: Option[String])

I am serializing it using my own "writes" but my code looks a lot like Java code. I would like to serialize each option in the check object only if it is defined (the final object should not have any empty values).

def writes(check: FeatureCheck): JsValue = {
  val builder = Seq.newBuilder[(String, JsValue)]
  if (check.error.isDefined) {
    builder += "error" -> JsString(check.error.get)
  }
  if (check.missing.isDefined) {
    builder += "missing" -> Json.toJson(check.missing.get)
  }
  if (check.result.isDefined) {
    builder += "result" -> JsBoolean(check.result.get)
  }
  JsObject(builder.result)
}

So I was wondering if there was a way to do this without those ugly if-then, or even removing the builder for the sequence.

Thanks for any help or comment given.

Clarrifications:

Let's say I want to just send result = true I want the resulting Json to be:

{"result":true} 

and NOT

{
    "result": true,
    "error": null,
    "missing": []
}

3 Answers 3

6

Given that you can simply append an option to a seq (see Add to list if value is not null), you can do what you want rather elegantly:

type JsField = (String, JsValue)
def writes(check: FeatureCheck): JsValue = {
  JsObject(
    Seq[JsField]() ++
    check.error.map("error" -> JsString(_)) ++
    check.missing.map("missing" -> Json.toJson(_)) ++
    check.result.map("result" -> JsBoolean(_))    
  )
}
4

You can skip the extra isDefined check, it will only check if the option value is Some. The getOrElse will perform the same thing for Option in scala.

This is a somewhat simpler version.

def writes(check: FeatureCheck): JsValue = {
  val builder = Seq.newBuilder[(String, JsValue)]
  builder += "error" -> JsString(check.error.getOrElse(""))
  builder += "missing" -> Json.toJson(check.missing.getOrElse({ Array[String]() }))
  builder += "result" -> JsBoolean(check.result.getOrElse(false))
  JsObject(builder.result)
}

And this may be considered even simpler.

def writes(check: FeatureCheck): JsValue = JsObject(
  List(
    "error" -> JsString(check.error.getOrElse("")),
    "missing" -> Json.toJson(check.missing.getOrElse({ Array[String]() })),
    "result" -> JsBoolean(check.result.getOrElse(false))
  )
)

EDIT

If you don't want the properties added if they are not present then this is more elegant I guess:

def writes(check: FeatureCheck): JsValue = JsObject(
  List(
    check.error.map("error" -> JsString(_)),
    check.missing.map("missing" -> Json.toJson(_)),
    check.result.map("result" -> JsBoolean(_))
  ).flatten
)
3
  • Wouldn't result in {"error":null, "missing":[], "result":true} rather than {"result":true} ?
    – le-doude
    Apr 29, 2013 at 13:03
  • 1
    @le_douard Ok you don't want to write the property at all if it is not defined? Then why did you use getOrElse in the first place?
    – maba
    Apr 29, 2013 at 13:06
  • sorry that getOrElse is mostly to make my IDE happy ... which could be misleading, I apologize. I corrected my questions ... sorry again
    – le-doude
    Apr 29, 2013 at 13:09
0

Another option you have is to filter out null fields after Json object creation, I use the following util method:

  def filterOutNullFields(jsonObject:JsObject) : JsObject =  {
    jsonObject.fields.foldLeft(jsonObject)((jsonObjectAcc , tupleKeyValue) => {
      if (tupleKeyValue._2.isInstanceOf[JsObject]) {
        val innerJsonObject = filterOutNullFields(tupleKeyValue._2.as[JsObject])
        jsonObjectAcc - tupleKeyValue._1 + (tupleKeyValue._1, innerJsonObject)
      }
      else {
        if (tupleKeyValue._2.equals(JsNull)) {
          jsonObjectAcc - tupleKeyValue._1
        } else {
          jsonObjectAcc
        }
      }
    })
  }

You can just use it like:

val featureCheckJson = Json.toJson(featureCheck)
val featureCheckJsonWithoutNullFields = filterOutNullFields(featureCheckJson.as[JsObject])

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