Given a string of JSON data, how can you safely turn that string into a JavaScript object?

Obviously you can do this unsafely with something like...

var obj = eval("(" + json + ')');

...but that leaves us vulnerable to the json string containing other code, which it seems very dangerous to simply eval.

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8 Answers

up vote 35 down vote accepted

JSON.org has JSON parsers for many languages including 4 different ones for Javascript. I believe most people would consider json2.js their goto implementation.

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Don't bother with that crap. If you're using jQuery just use:

jQuery.parseJSON( jsonString );

It's exactly what you're looking for

http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.parseJSON/

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4  
version >= 1.4.1 required btw – Radek Jun 2 '11 at 10:17
4  
31kb added to your project also. – Dementic Jan 10 at 12:03
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Why not just:

JSON.parse(jsonString);
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1  
because it's not "safe". it's not supported in all browsers – vsync Oct 3 '11 at 13:01
1  
I'm pretty sure it's safe for Node.js – Stephen Oct 18 '11 at 17:07
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I'm not sure about other ways to do it but here's how you do it in Prototype (JSON tutorial).

new Ajax.Request('/some_url', {
  method:'get',
  requestHeaders: {Accept: 'application/json'},
  onSuccess: function(transport){
    var json = transport.responseText.evalJSON(true);
  }
});

Calling evalJSON() with true as the argument sanitizes the incoming string.

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If you're using jQuery, you can also just do $.getJSON(url, function(data) { });

Then you can do things like data.key1.something, data.key1.something_else, etc.

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you are using jQuery, aren't you ? – Alexandre C. Sep 2 '10 at 14:09
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$.ajax({ url: url, dataType: 'json', data: data, success: callback });


The callback is passed the returned data, which will be a JavaScript object or array as defined by the JSON structure and parsed using the $.parseJSON() method.

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JS Guru Douglas Crockford has written a parseJSON function which you download here

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2  
The code pointed to by this link has been superceded by json2.js mentioned above. – AllenJB May 6 '10 at 6:44
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I have successfully been using json_sans_eval for a while now. According to its author, it is more secure than json2.js.

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