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Does anyone knows a java library that could easily encode java Maps into json objects and the other way around?

UPDATE

For reasons couldn't explain ( and I hate sometimes ) I can't use generics on my environment.

What' I'm trying to do is to have something like this:

Map a = new HashMap();
a.put( "name", "Oscar" );

Map b = new HashMap();
b.put( "name", "MyBoss"); 
a.put( "boss",  b ) ;


List list = new ArrayList();
list.add( a );
list.add( b );


 String json = toJson( list );
 // and create the json:
 /*
    [
       {
         "name":"Oscar",
         "boss":{
              "name":"MyBoss"
         }
        },
        {
            "name":"MyBoss"
        }
     ]

  */ 

And be able to have it again as a list of maps

 List aList = ( List ) fromJson( jsonStirng );
share|improve this question
@dma_k Thanks for the reference. I actually neede something like the last one because I didn't meant to bind to a bean. – OscarRyz Mar 24 '10 at 23:37

6 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

JSON-Simple looks relatively easy to use (examples below).

Map to JSON:

  Map map = new HashMap();
  map.put("name", "foo");
  map.put("nickname", "bar");
  String jsonText = JSONValue.toJSONString(map);

JSON to List/Map:

  String s = yourJsonString;
  List list = (JSONArray) JSONValue.parse(s);       
  Map map = (JSONObject) list.get(0);
share|improve this answer
This one did the work. I like Gson better for bean binding but unfortunately in my environment I can't use generics on which Gson relies heavily. JSON-Simple have a little bug though which I think could be easily solved: code.google.com/p/json-simple/issues/detail?id=18 I'm using this anyway, thanks for the link – OscarRyz Mar 24 '10 at 16:01
For what it's worth, I don't think you have to use generics even with GSON -- I am pretty sure it, too, would work. – StaxMan Nov 4 '10 at 0:12

You can use Google Gson for that. It has excellent support for Generic types.

Here's an SSCCE:

package com.stackoverflow.q2496494;

import java.util.LinkedHashMap;
import java.util.Map;

import com.google.gson.Gson;
import com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken;

public class Test {

   public static void main(String... args) {
        Map<String, String> map = new LinkedHashMap<String, String>();
        map.put("key1", "value1");
        map.put("key2", "value2");
        map.put("key3", "value3");
        Gson gson = new Gson();

        // Serialize.
        String json = gson.toJson(map);
        System.out.println(json); // {"key1":"value1","key2":"value2","key3":"value3"}

        // Deserialize.
        Map<String, String> map2 = gson.fromJson(json, new TypeToken<Map<String, String>>() {}.getType());
        System.out.println(map2); // {key1=value1, key2=value2, key3=value3}
    }

}
share|improve this answer
Is there a way to decode ( deserialize ) to non generic map ? – OscarRyz Mar 23 '10 at 17:54
Either replace Map<String, String> by Map<String, Object> or Map<Object, Object>. Or, more OO-friendly, just use a fullworthy Javabean. Gson can handle it perfectly as well. See this answer for an example: stackoverflow.com/questions/1688099/converting-json-to-java/… – BalusC Mar 23 '10 at 18:00
The problem is I'm using an environment that doesn't support generics, ( erhmm. don't ask me how or why, I just, can't use them ) and what I'm trying to find is a way to convert plain lists of maps to json and have them back. – OscarRyz Mar 23 '10 at 18:17
I see. Does it run Java 1.5 at any way? Else Gson won't run at any way. You may consider to have a look at Jackson then: jackson.codehaus.org (tutorial here jackson.codehaus.org/Tutorial, Ctrl+F on "untyped" to achieve the same what you want). The reason I suggest Jackson is by the way because it is fast. Benchmarks here BTW: cowtowncoder.com/blog/archives/2009/02/entry_204.html – BalusC Mar 23 '10 at 18:25
1  
Awesome answer. I've totally missed the TypeToken class, and could't remember what I did wrong. Thank you. :) – Lyubomyr Shaydariv Aug 7 '10 at 14:50
show 1 more comment

You can view the site from Json.org for the list of good JSON libraries in Java.

JSon.org's own implementation JSONObject can do just that. From their JavaDoC

 /**
     * Construct a JSONObject from a Map.
     * 
     * @param map A map object that can be used to initialize the contents of
     *  the JSONObject.
     */
    public JSONObject(Map map);

you can do

JSONObject json = new JSONObject(map);

To convert JSON String back to object....

String jsonString = "{\"name\" : \"some name\", \"age\" : 10}";
JSONObject json = new JSONObject(jsonString);

and you can access values like:

int age = json.getInt("age");

Constructor JavaDoC

Construct a JSONObject from a source JSON text string. This is the most commonly used JSONObject constructor.

Parameters: source A string beginning with { (left brace) and ending with } (right brace).

share|improve this answer
This goes from Map -> JSONObject, but the questioner wants both directions. – ThomasW Oct 27 '11 at 9:03

I guess the real question would be which JSON library (from org.json's page) would NOT allow doing this. As far as I know every single library there would allow this in some form. So every library mentioned so far works.

And to add some information, Jackson works very well with all kinds of data including basic Maps and Lists:

ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
String json = mapper.writeValue(list);
List listOfMaps = mapper.readValue(json, List.class);

which would handle this particular case. While generic type information can be used, it is optional when using "natural" binding to JDK container types.

share|improve this answer

We use http://json-lib.sourceforge.net/ in our project, it works just fine.

share|improve this answer

Using the google-gson library http://code.google.com/p/google-gson/ it looks like you could write something along the lines of

String json = "{'data1':100,'data2':'hello'}";
Gson gson = new Gson();
Map obj = gson.fromJson(json, Map.class);

and

Map obj = new Map();
Gson gson = new Gson();
String json = gson.toJson(obj);
share|improve this answer
-1 because the fromJson sample doesn't work, it throws java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Map objects need to be parameterized unless you use a custom serializer. Use the com.google.gson.reflect.TypeToken to extract the ParameterizedType. – OscarRyz Mar 23 '10 at 17:33

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