0

I have a JSON schema that defines disease notification data. In my case, I want to store the data of the disease and the patient's hospitalization data. If the patient who contracted the disease was hospitalized ("hospitalized ": 1) I need to write the hospital's name too, but if the patient was not hospitalized ("hospitalized": 2) I don't need to have the hospital name. That's my JSON Schema

{
 "$schema":"http://json-schema.org/draft-04/schema#",
 "title": "Notification",
 "description": "Information about disease notification",
 "type": "object",

 "properties":{

     "classification":{
         "enum":[1,2,3,4]
     },

     "evolution":{
        "enum":[1,2]
    },

    "hospitalization":{

        "description":"Patient hospitalization data",
        "type":"object",

        "oneOf":[

        {"$ref":"#/definitions/hospitalized_schema"},
        {"$ref":"#/definitions/not_hospitalized_schema"}

        ]
    }
},

"definitions":{

    "hospitalized_schema:":{

        "type":"object",

        "properties":{

            "hospitalized":{

                "enum":[1]

            },

            "hospital":{

                "description":"Hospital name",
                "type":"string"
            }

        },

        "required":["hospitalized","hospital"]
    },

    "not_hospitalized_schema":{

        "type":"object",

        "properties":{

            "hospitalized":{
                "enum":[2]
            }
        },

        "required":["hospitalized"]
    }   
},

"required":["classification","evolution","hospitalization"]
}

The JSON Schema has been validated on the site JSON Schema Lint. But I am having trouble validating the following JSON files:

{ 
    "classification":3,
    "evolution":2,
    "hospitalization": {
        "hospitalized":2
    }
}

In this case a I get the no (or more than one) schemas match error, but I would like it to be valid, because as the patient wasn't hospitalized, the hospitalized value must be 2.

My second JSON file is

{ 
    "classification":3,
    "evolution":2,
    "hospitalization": {
        "hospitalized":1,
        "hospital":"Hospital Name"
    }
}

This JSON file is validated correctly, but if I change the value of hospitalized to 2 the file still valid, but it's not true because since the patient was not hospitalized ("hospitalized": 2) my JSON file should not have the hospital field.

How can I fix these errors? That is, ensure that when the hospitalized field is 1, the fieldhospital is necessary and when the hospitalized field is 2, the hospital field is not necessary.

1 Answer 1

0

The reason your first test case isn't working is simply due to a typo at #/definitions/hopitalized_schema. It says hospitalized_schema: instead of hospitalized_schema. When you delete the extra :, it works as expected.

As for your second test case, I would advise you not to consider having the hospital field present an error. The best practice when working with JSON and JSON Schema is to ignore any additional properties that you aren't interested in. In this case, hospital is not relevant and therefore should be ignored.

However, if it really is important that the hospital property is not present when hospitalized is 2, you can add "not": { "required": ["hospital"] } to #/definitions/not_hospitalized_schema to explicitly require that it not be present.

1
  • Thanks! Using "not": { "required": ["hospital"] } ( and removing the extra ':' ) totally solved my problem.
    – regmoraes
    Aug 1, 2015 at 22:14

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.