My server side code returns a value which is a JSON object on success and a string 'false' on failure. Now how can I check whether the returned value is a JSON object?
-
3If it's actually "your" server side code, why not have a status field in the JSON result rather than creating this "sometimes-it's-JSON-and-sometimes-it's-not" situation...?– HostileFork says dont trust SENov 28, 2010 at 6:53
-
1@Hostile For debugging reasons. You never now which kind of failure the server will throw and at that point json is not being used.– bartNov 28, 2010 at 18:21
-
1I still don't see how having an error code (as a named field) in the server response would undermine that. It's good enough for Freebase! wiki.freebase.com/wiki/MQL_errors– HostileFork says dont trust SENov 30, 2010 at 9:44
-
Please change the accepted answer to Serguei Federov's, if you can the currently accepted answer is incorrect.– Serj SaganNov 3, 2015 at 21:09
-
What's a "json object"? There's JSON strings and JS objects, but there's no such thing as a "JavaScript Object Notation object".– mpenMar 16, 2016 at 19:36
13 Answers
The chosen solution doesn't actually work for me because I get a
"Unexpected Token <"
error in Chrome. This is because the error is thrown as soon as the parse comes across and unknown character. However, there is a way around this if you are returning only string values through ajax (which can be fairly useful if you are using PHP or ASPX to process ajax requests and might or might not return JSON depending on conditions)
The solution is quite simple, you can do the following to check if it was a valid JSON return
var IS_JSON = true;
try
{
var json = $.parseJSON(msg);
}
catch(err)
{
IS_JSON = false;
}
As I have said before, this is the solution for if you are either returning string type stuff from your AJAX request or if you are returning mixed type.
-
The question isn't about non-JSON-strings in any point. The server returns always a valid JSON (a string
false
is also valid JSON). The question is only about a single point: how to differentiate if the parsed JSON-string is a booleanfalse
or an object– Dr.MolleFeb 6, 2015 at 22:55 -
2Performance consideration: Wrapping this in a function, make sure to not parse the json twice (once inside the try catch, and once in the code that calls the function.) Mar 31, 2015 at 8:36
-
jQuery.parseJSON() should return an object of type "object", if the string was JSON, so you only have to check the type with typeof
var response=jQuery.parseJSON('response from server');
if(typeof response =='object')
{
// It is JSON
}
else
{
if(response ===false)
{
// the response was a string "false", parseJSON will convert it to boolean false
}
else
{
// the response was something else
}
}
-
32Might also need to use a try / catch for exceptions if it is possible that parseJSON is going to be dealing with something other than JSON values (i.e. HTML)– acorncomMar 22, 2012 at 22:44
-
2Prior to jQuery 1.9, $.parseJSON returned null instead of throwing an error if it was passed an empty string, null, or undefined, even though those are not valid JSON. jquery site link Mar 27, 2013 at 20:44
-
7This solution is not the best, because return
"SyntaxError: JSON.parse: unexpected character"
error! , I thinks the best solution is use try/catch that said bySerguei Fedorov
in here: stackoverflow.com/questions/4295386/… Dec 24, 2013 at 18:58 -
2If you don't want to use jquery, you can use vanilla JS by checking constructor type as described here : stackoverflow.com/questions/11182924/…– MatApr 21, 2014 at 9:10
-
2This answer is incorrect, the answer by Serguei Federov should be the accepted answer. Nov 3, 2015 at 21:08
Solution 3 (fastest way)
/**
* @param Object
* @returns boolean
*/
function isJSON (something) {
if (typeof something != 'string')
something = JSON.stringify(something);
try {
JSON.parse(something);
return true;
} catch (e) {
return false;
}
}
You can use it:
var myJson = [{"user":"chofoteddy"}, {"user":"bart"}];
isJSON(myJson); // true
The best way to validate that an object is of type JSON or array is as follows:
var a = [],
o = {};
Solution 1
toString.call(o) === '[object Object]'; // true
toString.call(a) === '[object Array]'; // true
Solution 2
a.constructor.name === 'Array'; // true
o.constructor.name === 'Object'; // true
But, strictly speaking, an array is part of a JSON syntax. Therefore, the following two examples are part of a JSON response:
console.log(response); // {"message": "success"}
console.log(response); // {"user": "bart", "id":3}
And:
console.log(response); // [{"user":"chofoteddy"}, {"user":"bart"}]
console.log(response); // ["chofoteddy", "bart"]
AJAX / JQuery (recommended)
If you use JQuery to bring information via AJAX. I recommend you put in the "dataType" attribute the "json" value, that way if you get a JSON or not, JQuery validate it for you and make it known through their functions "success" and "error". Example:
$.ajax({
url: 'http://www.something.com',
data: $('#formId').serialize(),
method: 'POST',
dataType: 'json',
// "sucess" will be executed only if the response status is 200 and get a JSON
success: function (json) {},
// "error" will run but receive state 200, but if you miss the JSON syntax
error: function (xhr) {}
});
var checkJSON = function(m) {
if (typeof m == 'object') {
try{ m = JSON.stringify(m); }
catch(err) { return false; } }
if (typeof m == 'string') {
try{ m = JSON.parse(m); }
catch (err) { return false; } }
if (typeof m != 'object') { return false; }
return true;
};
checkJSON(JSON.parse('{}')); //true
checkJSON(JSON.parse('{"a":0}')); //true
checkJSON('{}'); //true
checkJSON('{"a":0}'); //true
checkJSON('x'); //false
checkJSON(''); //false
checkJSON(); //false
Since it's just false and json object, why don't you check whether it's false, otherwise it must be json.
if(ret == false || ret == "false") {
// json
}
I know this thread has been answered already, but coming here didn't really solve my problems, I found this function somewhere else. maybe someone coming here will find it to be of some use to them;
function getClass(obj) {
if (typeof obj === "undefined")
return "undefined";
if (obj === null)
return "null";
return Object.prototype.toString.call(obj)
.match(/^\[object\s(.*)\]$/)[1];
}
var data = 'json string ?';
var jdata = null;
try
{
jdata = $.parseJSON(data);
}catch(e)
{}
if(jdata)
{
//use jdata
}else
{
//use data
}
If you want to test explicitly for valid JSON (as opposed to the absence of the returned value false
), then you can use a parsing approach as described here.
I don't really like the accepted answer. First and foremost it requires jQuery, which is not always available or required. Secondly, it does a full stringification of the object which to me is overkill. Here's a simple function that thoroughly detects whether a value is JSON-like, using nothing more than a few parts of the lodash library for genericity.
import * as isNull from 'lodash/isNull'
import * as isPlainObject from 'lodash/isPlainObject'
import * as isNumber from 'lodash/isNumber'
import * as isBoolean from 'lodash/isBoolean'
import * as isString from 'lodash/isString'
import * as isArray from 'lodash/isArray'
function isJSON(val) {
if (isNull(val)
|| isBoolean(val)
|| isString(val))
return true;
if (isNumber(val))
return !isNaN(val) && isFinite(val)
if (isArray(val))
return Array.prototype.every.call(val, isJSON)
if (isPlainObject(val)) {
for (const key of Object.keys(val)) {
if (!isJSON(val[key]))
return false
}
return true
}
return false
}
I've even taken the time to put it up in npm as a package: https://npmjs.com/package/is-json-object. Use it together with something like Webpack to get it in the browser.
Hope this helps someone!
I am using this to validate JSON Object
function isJsonObject(obj) {
try {
JSON.parse(JSON.stringify(obj));
} catch (e) {
return false;
}
return true;
}
I am using this to validate JSON String
function isJsonString(str) {
try {
JSON.parse(str);
} catch (e) {
return false;
}
return true;
}
i tried all of the suggested answers, nothing worked for me, so i had to use
jQuery.isEmptyObject()
hoe that helps someone else out with this issue
You should return json always, but change its status, or in following example the ResponseCode property:
if(callbackResults.ResponseCode!="200"){
/* Some error, you can add a message too */
} else {
/* All fine, proceed with code */
};
-
@bart , you can just provide the object in the if condition , that will do the check.– kobeNov 28, 2010 at 4:38