409

I use a JSON library called JSONObject (I don't mind switching if I need to).

I know how to iterate over JSONArrays, but when I parse JSON data from Facebook I don't get an array, only a JSONObject, but I need to be able to access an item via its index, such as JSONObject[0] to get the first one, and I can't figure out how to do it.

{
   "http://http://url.com/": {
      "id": "http://http://url.com//"
   },
   "http://url2.co/": {
      "id": "http://url2.com//",
      "shares": 16
   }
   ,
   "http://url3.com/": {
      "id": "http://url3.com//",
      "shares": 16
   }
}
2

17 Answers 17

696

Maybe this will help:

JSONObject jsonObject = new JSONObject(contents.trim());
Iterator<String> keys = jsonObject.keys();

while(keys.hasNext()) {
    String key = keys.next();
    if (jsonObject.get(key) instanceof JSONObject) {
          // do something with jsonObject here      
    }
}
8
  • 29
    Be careful everyone, jObject.keys() returns the iterator with reverse index order.
    – macio.Jun
    Aug 31, 2013 at 17:36
  • 91
    @macio.Jun Nevertheless, the order doesn't matter in maps of properties: keys in JSONObject are unordered and your assertion was a simple reflection of a private implementation ;)
    – caligari
    Oct 1, 2013 at 13:55
  • 11
    What to use when we need all keys sequentially ?
    – keen
    May 6, 2014 at 9:51
  • 14
    Slight quibble: doesn't this lead to doing the key lookup twice? Maybe better to do 'Object o = jObject.get(key)', then check its type and then use it, without having to call get(key) again.
    – Tom
    May 30, 2014 at 17:23
  • 5
    I would just like to mention, for people that have the problem of "keys()" method not getting resolved (saying that the JSONObject doesn't have that method): you can instead type jsonObject.keySet().iterator() and it works fine. Mar 2, 2019 at 0:02
106

for my case i found iterating the names() works well

for(int i = 0; i<jobject.names().length(); i++){
    Log.v(TAG, "key = " + jobject.names().getString(i) + " value = " + jobject.get(jobject.names().getString(i)));
}
4
  • 1
    Although this example isn't really understood as Iterating in Java, it works quite well! Thanks.
    – Tim Visée
    Dec 31, 2015 at 1:27
  • Great answer. It works perfectly for almost all types of json objects nested or not. !
    – Ajay Kumar
    Sep 22, 2020 at 19:41
  • What is Log. v() ? Which library it belongs to?
    – tarekahf
    Sep 19, 2021 at 5:08
  • @tarekahf Android SDK
    – Acuna
    Jan 7, 2022 at 17:20
85

I will avoid iterator as they can add/remove object during iteration, also for clean code use for loop. it will be simply clean & fewer lines.

Using Java 8 and Lamda [Update 4/2/2019]

import org.json.JSONObject;

public static void printJsonObject(JSONObject jsonObj) {
    jsonObj.keySet().forEach(keyStr ->
    {
        Object keyvalue = jsonObj.get(keyStr);
        System.out.println("key: "+ keyStr + " value: " + keyvalue);

        //for nested objects iteration if required
        //if (keyvalue instanceof JSONObject)
        //    printJsonObject((JSONObject)keyvalue);
    });
}

Using old way [Update 4/2/2019]

import org.json.JSONObject;

public static void printJsonObject(JSONObject jsonObj) {
    for (String keyStr : jsonObj.keySet()) {
        Object keyvalue = jsonObj.get(keyStr);

        //Print key and value
        System.out.println("key: "+ keyStr + " value: " + keyvalue);

        //for nested objects iteration if required
        //if (keyvalue instanceof JSONObject)
        //    printJsonObject((JSONObject)keyvalue);
    }
}

Original Answer

import org.json.simple.JSONObject;
public static void printJsonObject(JSONObject jsonObj) {
    for (Object key : jsonObj.keySet()) {
        //based on you key types
        String keyStr = (String)key;
        Object keyvalue = jsonObj.get(keyStr);

        //Print key and value
        System.out.println("key: "+ keyStr + " value: " + keyvalue);

        //for nested objects iteration if required
        if (keyvalue instanceof JSONObject)
            printJsonObject((JSONObject)keyvalue);
    }
}
6
  • 8
    They never said they were using org.json.simple (which is a google library). The standard org.json.JSONObject forces you to use an iterator, unfortunately.
    – Alkanshel
    May 24, 2017 at 17:30
  • 1
    You saved my but here!
    – Lukuluba
    Sep 18, 2017 at 8:56
  • 1
    org.json.JSONObject does not have keySet() May 27, 2019 at 12:39
  • What version are you looking? stleary.github.io/JSON-java/org/json/JSONObject.html#keySet--
    – maaz
    May 27, 2019 at 22:11
  • 1
    Nice answer. Easy to get spoiled by options. :) All options just work flawlessly. Brilliant.
    – Ajay Kumar
    Sep 22, 2020 at 20:02
80

Can't believe that there is no more simple and secured solution instead of using an iterator in this answers...

JSONObject names () method returns a JSONArray of the JSONObject keys, so you can simply walk though it in loop:

JSONObject object = new JSONObject ();
JSONArray keys = object.names ();

for (int i = 0; i < keys.length (); i++) {
   
   String key = keys.getString (i); // Here's your key
   String value = object.getString (key); // Here's your value
   
}
7
  • 2
    what is object here?
    – RCS
    Feb 8, 2018 at 5:43
  • 1
    It's JSONObject. Something like JSONObject object = new JSONObject ("{\"key1\",\"value1\"}");. But do not put raw json to it, add items in it with put () method: object.put ("key1", "value1");.
    – Acuna
    Feb 9, 2018 at 6:23
  • Thanks Sir It is very helpful to me
    – Ganesan J
    Aug 12, 2020 at 17:51
  • @GanesanJ glad to hear it)
    – Acuna
    Sep 18, 2020 at 12:50
  • This is by far the cleanest answer, +1 Oct 18, 2021 at 19:44
19
Iterator<JSONObject> iterator = jsonObject.values().iterator();

while (iterator.hasNext()) {
 jsonChildObject = iterator.next();

 // Do whatever you want with jsonChildObject 

  String id = (String) jsonChildObject.get("id");
}
2
  • jsonChildObject = iterator.next(); should probably define jsonChildObject, like JSONObject jsonChildObject = iterator.next();, no?
    – kontur
    Feb 18, 2016 at 13:36
  • 1
    I like this solution, but declaring Iterator<JSONObject> will give a warning. I'd replace it with the generic <?> and do a cast on the call to next(). Also, I'd use getString("id") instead of get("id") to save doing a cast.
    – RTF
    Apr 14, 2016 at 10:38
15

org.json.JSONObject now has a keySet() method which returns a Set<String> and can easily be looped through with a for-each.

for(String key : jsonObject.keySet())
2
  • I think this is the most convenient solution. Thanks for advice :) Apr 28, 2018 at 10:42
  • 1
    Could you complete your example?
    – chasm
    Mar 14, 2019 at 19:21
10

Most of the answers here are for flat JSON structures, in case you have a JSON which might have nested JSONArrays or Nested JSONObjects, the real complexity arises. The following code snippet takes care of such a business requirement. It takes a hash map, and hierarchical JSON with both nested JSONArrays and JSONObjects and updates the JSON with the data in the hash map

public void updateData(JSONObject fullResponse, HashMap<String, String> mapToUpdate) {

    fullResponse.keySet().forEach(keyStr -> {
        Object keyvalue = fullResponse.get(keyStr);

        if (keyvalue instanceof JSONArray) {
            updateData(((JSONArray) keyvalue).getJSONObject(0), mapToUpdate);
        } else if (keyvalue instanceof JSONObject) {
            updateData((JSONObject) keyvalue, mapToUpdate);
        } else {
            // System.out.println("key: " + keyStr + " value: " + keyvalue);
            if (mapToUpdate.containsKey(keyStr)) {
                fullResponse.put(keyStr, mapToUpdate.get(keyStr));
            }
        }
    });

}

You have to notice here that the return type of this is void, but sice objects are passed as refernce this change is refelected to the caller.

7

First put this somewhere:

private <T> Iterable<T> iteratorToIterable(final Iterator<T> iterator) {
    return new Iterable<T>() {
        @Override
        public Iterator<T> iterator() {
            return iterator;
        }
    };
}

Or if you have access to Java8, just this:

private <T> Iterable<T> iteratorToIterable(Iterator<T> iterator) {
    return () -> iterator;
}

Then simply iterate over the object's keys and values:

for (String key : iteratorToIterable(object.keys())) {
    JSONObject entry = object.getJSONObject(key);
    // ...
1
  • I voted for this, but "String key : ...." doesn't compile, and there doesn't seem to be a way to avoid an unchecked cast warning on the iterator. Stupid iterators.
    – Alkanshel
    May 24, 2017 at 17:42
2

I made a small recursive function that goes through the entire json object and saves the key path and its value.

// My stored keys and values from the json object
HashMap<String,String> myKeyValues = new HashMap<String,String>();

// Used for constructing the path to the key in the json object
Stack<String> key_path = new Stack<String>();

// Recursive function that goes through a json object and stores 
// its key and values in the hashmap 
private void loadJson(JSONObject json){
    Iterator<?> json_keys = json.keys();

    while( json_keys.hasNext() ){
        String json_key = (String)json_keys.next();

        try{
            key_path.push(json_key);
            loadJson(json.getJSONObject(json_key));
       }catch (JSONException e){
           // Build the path to the key
           String key = "";
           for(String sub_key: key_path){
               key += sub_key+".";
           }
           key = key.substring(0,key.length()-1);

           System.out.println(key+": "+json.getString(json_key));
           key_path.pop();
           myKeyValues.put(key, json.getString(json_key));
        }
    }
    if(key_path.size() > 0){
        key_path.pop();
    }
}
2

With Java 8 and lambda, cleaner:

JSONObject jObject = new JSONObject(contents.trim());

jObject.keys().forEachRemaining(k ->
{

});

https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/Iterator.html#forEachRemaining-java.util.function.Consumer-

2
  • It iterates only the keys but you still need to get the value, so you can use jObject.get(k);
    – Roesmi
    Sep 27, 2017 at 15:21
  • I get "Cast from null to consumer requires minimum API 24" Oct 5, 2017 at 7:04
2

I once had a json that had ids that needed to be incremented by one since they were 0-indexed and that was breaking Mysql auto-increment.

So for each object I wrote this code - might be helpful to someone:

public static void  incrementValue(JSONObject obj, List<String> keysToIncrementValue) {
        Set<String> keys = obj.keySet();
        for (String key : keys) {
            Object ob = obj.get(key);

            if (keysToIncrementValue.contains(key)) {
                obj.put(key, (Integer)obj.get(key) + 1);
            }

            if (ob instanceof JSONObject) {
                incrementValue((JSONObject) ob, keysToIncrementValue);
            }
            else if (ob instanceof JSONArray) {
                JSONArray arr = (JSONArray) ob;
                for (int i=0; i < arr.length(); i++) {
                    Object arrObj = arr.get(0);
                    if (arrObj instanceof JSONObject) {
                        incrementValue((JSONObject) arrObj, keysToIncrementValue);
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    }

usage:

JSONObject object = ....
incrementValue(object, Arrays.asList("id", "product_id", "category_id", "customer_id"));

this can be transformed to work for JSONArray as parent object too

2

We used below set of code to iterate over JSONObject fields

Iterator iterator = jsonObject.entrySet().iterator();

while (iterator.hasNext())  {
        Entry<String, JsonElement> entry = (Entry<String, JsonElement>) iterator.next();
        processedJsonObject.add(entry.getKey(), entry.getValue());
}
1

I made my small method to log JsonObject fields, and get some stings. See if it can be usefull.

object JsonParser {

val TAG = "JsonParser"
 /**
 * parse json object
 * @param objJson
 * @return  Map<String, String>
 * @throws JSONException
 */
@Throws(JSONException::class)
fun parseJson(objJson: Any?): Map<String, String> {
    val map = HashMap<String, String>()

    // If obj is a json array
    if (objJson is JSONArray) {
        for (i in 0 until objJson.length()) {
            parseJson(objJson[i])
        }
    } else if (objJson is JSONObject) {
        val it: Iterator<*> = objJson.keys()
        while (it.hasNext()) {
            val key = it.next().toString()
            // If you get an array
            when (val jobject = objJson[key]) {
                is JSONArray -> {
                    Log.e(TAG, " JSONArray: $jobject")
                    parseJson(jobject)
                }
                is JSONObject -> {
                    Log.e(TAG, " JSONObject: $jobject")
                    parseJson(jobject)
                }
                else -> {
                    Log.e(TAG, " adding to map: $key $jobject")
                    map[key] = jobject.toString()
                }
            }
        }
    }
    return map
}
}
0

Below code worked fine for me. Please help me if tuning can be done. This gets all the keys even from the nested JSON objects.

public static void main(String args[]) {
    String s = ""; // Sample JSON to be parsed

    JSONParser parser = new JSONParser();
    JSONObject obj = null;
    try {
        obj = (JSONObject) parser.parse(s);
        @SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
        List<String> parameterKeys = new ArrayList<String>(obj.keySet());
        List<String>  result = null;
        List<String> keys = new ArrayList<>();
        for (String str : parameterKeys) {
            keys.add(str);
            result = this.addNestedKeys(obj, keys, str);
        }
        System.out.println(result.toString());
    } catch (ParseException e) {
        e.printStackTrace();
    }
}
public static List<String> addNestedKeys(JSONObject obj, List<String> keys, String key) {
    if (isNestedJsonAnArray(obj.get(key))) {
        JSONArray array = (JSONArray) obj.get(key);
        for (int i = 0; i < array.length(); i++) {
            try {
                JSONObject arrayObj = (JSONObject) array.get(i);
                List<String> list = new ArrayList<>(arrayObj.keySet());
                for (String s : list) {
                    putNestedKeysToList(keys, key, s);
                    addNestedKeys(arrayObj, keys, s);
                }
            } catch (JSONException e) {
                LOG.error("", e);
            }
        }
    } else if (isNestedJsonAnObject(obj.get(key))) {
        JSONObject arrayObj = (JSONObject) obj.get(key);
        List<String> nestedKeys = new ArrayList<>(arrayObj.keySet());
        for (String s : nestedKeys) {
            putNestedKeysToList(keys, key, s);
            addNestedKeys(arrayObj, keys, s);
        }
    }
    return keys;
}

private static void putNestedKeysToList(List<String> keys, String key, String s) {
    if (!keys.contains(key + Constants.JSON_KEY_SPLITTER + s)) {
        keys.add(key + Constants.JSON_KEY_SPLITTER + s);
    }
}



private static boolean isNestedJsonAnObject(Object object) {
    boolean bool = false;
    if (object instanceof JSONObject) {
        bool = true;
    }
    return bool;
}

private static boolean isNestedJsonAnArray(Object object) {
    boolean bool = false;
    if (object instanceof JSONArray) {
        bool = true;
    }
    return bool;
}
0

This is is another working solution to the problem:

public void test (){

    Map<String, String> keyValueStore = new HasMap<>();
    Stack<String> keyPath = new Stack();
    JSONObject json = new JSONObject("thisYourJsonObject");
    keyValueStore = getAllXpathAndValueFromJsonObject(json, keyValueStore, keyPath);
    for(Map.Entry<String, String> map : keyValueStore.entrySet()) {
        System.out.println(map.getKey() + ":" + map.getValue());
    }   
}

public Map<String, String> getAllXpathAndValueFromJsonObject(JSONObject json, Map<String, String> keyValueStore, Stack<String> keyPath) {
    Set<String> jsonKeys = json.keySet();
    for (Object keyO : jsonKeys) {
        String key = (String) keyO;
        keyPath.push(key);
        Object object = json.get(key);

        if (object instanceof JSONObject) {
            getAllXpathAndValueFromJsonObject((JSONObject) object, keyValueStore, keyPath);
        }

        if (object instanceof JSONArray) {
            doJsonArray((JSONArray) object, keyPath, keyValueStore, json, key);
        }

        if (object instanceof String || object instanceof Boolean || object.equals(null)) {
            String keyStr = "";

            for (String keySub : keyPath) {
                keyStr += keySub + ".";
            }

            keyStr = keyStr.substring(0, keyStr.length() - 1);

            keyPath.pop();

            keyValueStore.put(keyStr, json.get(key).toString());
        }
    }

    if (keyPath.size() > 0) {
        keyPath.pop();
    }

    return keyValueStore;
}

public void doJsonArray(JSONArray object, Stack<String> keyPath, Map<String, String> keyValueStore, JSONObject json,
        String key) {
    JSONArray arr = (JSONArray) object;
    for (int i = 0; i < arr.length(); i++) {
        keyPath.push(Integer.toString(i));
        Object obj = arr.get(i);
        if (obj instanceof JSONObject) {
            getAllXpathAndValueFromJsonObject((JSONObject) obj, keyValueStore, keyPath);
        }

        if (obj instanceof JSONArray) {
            doJsonArray((JSONArray) obj, keyPath, keyValueStore, json, key);
        }

        if (obj instanceof String || obj instanceof Boolean || obj.equals(null)) {
            String keyStr = "";

            for (String keySub : keyPath) {
                keyStr += keySub + ".";
            }

            keyStr = keyStr.substring(0, keyStr.length() - 1);

            keyPath.pop();

            keyValueStore.put(keyStr , json.get(key).toString());
        }
    }
    if (keyPath.size() > 0) {
        keyPath.pop();
    }
}
0

The easiest way is to use a for-each loop over the set of keys. Given you have a String value of JSON called "text":

JSONObject jsonObject = new JSONObject(text);
for (String key : jsonObject.keySet()) {
    // Print out each value to verify this code
    System.out.println(jsonObject.get(key));
}
0

It looks like the JSON data you provided is an object where each key is a URL and the corresponding value is another object. If you want to access items by index, you may want to convert the outer object into an array. However, keep in mind that in JavaScript, objects don't have a specific order, so converting it to an array might not preserve the order.

Assuming you're working in a JavaScript environment, you can convert the outer object to an array and then access elements by index. Here's an example:

const jsonData = {
   "http://url.com/": {
      "id": "http://url.com//"
   },
   "http://url2.co/": {
      "id": "http://url2.com//",
      "shares": 16
   },
   "http://url3.com/": {
      "id": "http://url3.com//",
      "shares": 16
   }
};

// Convert the object to an array
const jsonArray = Object.entries(jsonData).map(([key, value]) => ({ key, value }));

// Access the first item
const firstItem = jsonArray[0];

// Accessing specific properties of the first item
const firstItemId = firstItem.value.id;
const firstItemShares = firstItem.value.shares;

console.log(firstItemId);      // Output: http://url.com//
console.log(firstItemShares);  // Output: undefined (shares property is not present in the first item)

In this example, Object.entries is used to convert the object into an array of key-value pairs, and map is used to transform it into an array of objects. Now you can access items by index in the jsonArray. Keep in mind that if the order of items is important, you may want to reconsider the structure of your JSON data or use an array in the first place if possible.

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