I am running into an issue when using json that I am not sure how to approach it. I create an object like this:
var jsonObj = {"000000": 0, "010000": 1, "020000": 0 .... };
where the 0's and 1's are to act as bits. However if I were to try and call this object:
alert(jsonObj.000000);
I get an "Unexpected number" error in Chrome because it is handling the 00000 as a number and not a string. If I were to restructure the json object with a letter before the 6 numbers "c000000" then
alert(jsonObj.c000000);
Would return a correct value. Curious if anyone else has experienced anything like this and how to handle it??
JS
inJSON
does stand for JavaScript, but that's just because the syntax for its data structures were based on JavaScript's object and array literal notations. This is a point of confusion for many people. When you're writing JavaScript code, and you dovar foo = {"bar":"baz"}
, you haven't technically created any JSON data even though the same object structure could be used to create JSON. Since JSON is text, within the JavaScript environment, valid JSON would be represented with...String
, for examplevar myJSON = '{"bar":"baz"}'
, although you wouldn't often see this, since JSON text is typically created as markup on a server. But if that JSON markup is fetched from a server, say via an AJAX request, it will show up as text converted into aString
object, which would then need to be parsed into an actual JavaScript object that can be manipulated.