35

JsonProperty isn't overriding the default name jackson gets from the getter. If I serialize the class below with ObjectMapper and jackson I get

{"hi":"hello"}

As you can see the JsonProperty annotation has no effect

class JacksonTester {
    String hi;

    @JsonProperty("hello")
    public String getHi() {
        return hi;
    }
}   

Putting @JsonProperty on the String itself doesn't work either. The only way it seems that I can change the name is by renaming the getter, the only problem is that it then will always be lowercase for the first letter

12 Answers 12

70

The problem was that I was using both the old and new jackson libraries

i.e. before I had import org.codehaus.jackson.annotate.JsonProperty; Which I had to change to below, to be consistent with the library I was using.

Since I was using maven that also meant updating my maven dependencies. import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.JsonProperty;

For it to work, I needed the @JsonProperty annotation on the getter (putting it on the object didn't work)

I found the answer here (thanks to francescoforesti) @JsonProperty not working as expected

2
  • 5
    I broke my head over this for a day! THANK YOU Apr 17, 2018 at 9:23
  • You can use @JsonSetter on the setter to change the prop name to look for if the var name does not coincide with the json prop name.
    – WesternGun
    Nov 8, 2018 at 10:15
40

If using Kotlin

I understand the original question is in Java, but since Kotlin is becoming very popular and many might be using it I'd like to post this here to help others.

Anyway, for Kotlin, because how getters/setters work, if you are using val, meaning you only expose the getter, you may need to apply the annotation to the getter like below:

class JacksonTester(@get:JsonProperty("hello") val hi: String)

3
  • 4
    This is a very important distinction between Java & Kotlin, and exactly what I needed. Oct 15, 2020 at 4:49
  • I was wondering why it wasn't working with my Kotlin data class, thank you! Feb 24, 2021 at 10:47
  • 1
    If you get an error for this, make sure you try applying this to all of your @JsonPropertys in the class. Also, @field:JsonProperty worked for me. Sep 9, 2021 at 19:38
29

I know its an old question but for me I got it working when I figured out that its conflicting with Gson library so I had to use @SerializedName("name") instead of @JsonProperty("name") hope this helps

2
  • 1
    this is what happened with me, I am using both Gson and Jackson library in my code and the conflict occurs. Thanks, this worked for me. Jan 21, 2021 at 11:00
  • 1
    @user1607261 those two imports are identical
    – Raphael
    May 26, 2021 at 19:12
7

I had same proplem

You need just to replace import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.JsonProperty; on import org.codehaus.jackson.annotate.JsonProperty; Its work.

1
  • 2
    Thank you very much. This is insane Apr 17, 2019 at 22:48
6

I had this problem when updating from older version to 2.8.3 of FasterXML Jackson.

The issue was when deserializing the JSON response from our DB into Java class object, our code didn't have @JsonSetter on the class' setters. Hence, when serializing, the output wasn't utilizing the class' getters to serialize the Java class object into JSON (hence the @JsonProperty() decorator wasn't taking effect).

I fixed the issue by adding @JsonSetter("name-from-db") to the setter method for that property.

Also, instead of @JsonProperty(), to rename properties using the getter method, you can and should use @JsonGetter() which is more specific to renaming properties.

Here's our code:

public class KwdGroup {
    private String kwdGroupType;

    // Return "type" instead of "kwd-group-type" in REST API response
    @JsonGetter("type") // Can use @JsonProperty("type") as well
    public String getKwdGroupType() {
        return kwdTypeMap.get(kwdGroupType);
    }

    @JsonSetter("kwd-group-type") // "kwd-group-type" is what JSON from the DB API outputs for code to consume 
    public void setKwdGroupType(String kwdGroupType) {
        this.kwdGroupType = kwdGroupType;
    }
}
1
  • 1
    the only answer on the internet that actually works for newer versions of jackson
    – vanomart
    Nov 29, 2017 at 18:36
2

I recently came across another interesting twist on this issue. We started using the Hibernate5Module to help with some lazy loading issues. Furthermore, we use Groovy so we are not defining getters and setters.

It turns out that the Hibernate Module seems to interfere with the @JsonProperty annotation. Specifically if you have something annotated with @Transient So, if you have something like:

@Transient
@ApiModelProperty(required = true)
@JsonProperty("alternateName")
String property

You won't see the alternateName in the JSON. Furthermore, your clients will likely have trouble with their POSTs and PUTs! To fix this, you can use a simple workaround. Define the getters and setters for the internal name you need to use(*) and don't use the value attribute on @JsonProperty So this works:

@Transient
@ApiModelProperty(required = true)
@JsonProperty
String alternateName

void setProperty(String property) {
    this.alternateName = property
}

@JsonIgnore
String getProperty() {
    this.alternateName
}

Note the use of the @JsonIgnore on the getter. If you don't, your framework will probably pick it up and you'll have duplicate entries for the same thing in your JSON.

Anyhow - I'm hoping this helps someone!

(*)We were trying to adhere to a particular interface, thus enforcing the name internally. However, the exposed API needed a different, user-friendly name.

1
  • Michael, same issue here, we have hibernate bean, one of the field is trustedIpRanges a list of lets say CidrBlock, then we have a logical String property called trustedIpRangesString which must use for serialization. the problem here is that the getter method is not called by jackson, so if we assign any value to the String property, then we can see it on the result, but we are building that String in the getter method which is not called. I am stuck, any help would be appreciated.
    – Mohamad
    Sep 9, 2019 at 20:02
1

Camel cases still seem to have issues even after defining proper annotations. Example:

@JsonProperty("mirrorport") private String mirrorPort;

Deserialization still fails when xml has <mirrorport>YES</mirrorport>

1

I was missing databind dependency

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.fasterxml.jackson.core</groupId>
    <artifactId>jackson-core</artifactId>
    <version>${fasterxml.version}</version>
</dependency>
0

Place it on the variable, not the getter

class JacksonTester {
    @JsonProperty("hello")
    private String hi;

    public String getHi() {
        return hi;
    }
} 
4
  • Tried that, doesn't work. The only thing that seems to work is renaming the getter which I don't want to be doing
    – tt_Gantz
    Sep 29, 2015 at 12:05
  • Did you try the verbose version @JsonProperty(value = "hello") either on the field or on the getter? Sep 29, 2015 at 12:21
  • @francescoforesti tried that and it didn't make a difference
    – tt_Gantz
    Sep 29, 2015 at 12:26
  • 3
    Ok. Did you already read this : stackoverflow.com/questions/21125173/… ? One comment says that it could happen if you have 2 libraries that contain the same annotation, and the wrong one is getting used. Sep 29, 2015 at 12:29
0

Have you tried below

class JacksonTester {
    private String hi;

    @JsonProperty("hello")
    public String getHi() {
        return hi;
    }
}   

I mean making the 'hi' variable declaration as private. Alternatively try to put a @JsonIgnore on the variable declaration and in case you would rather keep it at default scope.

1
  • @tt_Gantz After looking at your answer on the true root cause, I would have been surprised if my solution worked.
    – vvs
    Oct 2, 2015 at 13:11
0

I had same problem, this is happened with when I used com.fasterxml.jackson.core and com.google.code.gson:gson together

I resolved using gson.annotations @SerializedName("enum") instead of @JsonProperty("enum") which comes with fasterxml

Thanks

-3

Try this

class JacksonTester {
    private String hi;

    @JsonProperty("hi")
    public String getHi() {
        return hi;
    }
} 

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