58

What is the equiv way in Jackson json annotation for the following jax-b annotations?

I need to produce json rather than xml and need to know the conventional jackson annotations that is equivalently denoted in jax-b.

  1. rename a field.
  2. use getters instead of fields.

These features are especially crucial if the json/xml element name is a java reserved word like "new", "public", "static", etc.

So that we have to name the POJO fields as "_new_", "_public_", "_static_", etc, respectively,

but use jax-b annotation to rename them back to "new", "public", "static", etc in the generated XML (and json) elements.

Renaming a field

@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.FIELD)
public class Person{
    @XmlElement(required = true)
    protected String name;
    @XmlElement(required = true)
    protected String address;
    @XmlElement(name = "contractor")
    protected boolean _restricted_ ;
    @XmlElement(name = "new")
    protected boolean _new_ ;
}

Redirect to using property getter (I think this is how it is done in jax-b)

@XmlAccessorType(XmlAccessType.PROPERTY)
public class Person{
    protected String name;
    protected String address;
    protected boolean _restricted_ ;
    protected boolean _new_ ;

    @XmlElement(required = true)
    protected String getName() {return name;}
    @XmlElement(required = true)
    protected String getAddress() {return address;}
    @XmlElement(name = "contractor")
    protected boolean getRestricted() {return _restricted_;}
    @XmlElement(name = "new")
    protected boolean getNew(){return _new_;}
}
3
  • Does @XmlElement(name = "new") not work for you? I just tried it on a Jersey servlet (which uses Jackson) and it worked fine.
    – Danny
    Mar 16, 2012 at 16:50
  • I am using RestyGWT - I think the feature is not found in RestyGWT and therefore I need to know the jackson equiv before attempting/proposing to submit a patch. Mar 16, 2012 at 17:05
  • Thanks @BlessedGeek for the hint. More info can be found at wiki.fasterxml.com/AnnotationIntrospector Despite the method in the link is a bit old, I'm using this code to set the priority of the serializer/deserializer. objectMapper.setAnnotationIntrospector( new AnnotationIntrospectorPair( new JacksonAnnotationIntrospector(), new JaxbAnnotationIntrospector() ) );
    – stephen
    Mar 15, 2016 at 17:56

5 Answers 5

120

Probably it's a bit late but anyway..

you can rename a property just adding

@JsonProperty("contractor")

And by default Jackson use the getter and setter to serialize and deserialize.

For more detailed information: http://wiki.fasterxml.com/JacksonFAQ

3
  • 2
    Can I use this @JsonProperty annotation within class Person that already annotated with @XmlElement? I tried to override values of the properties like this: @JsonProperty(value = "json_Name") @XmlElement(name = "name_provider") public String getName() { return name; } but anyway my value of the name is name_provider, not json_Name
    – Nikolas
    Sep 18, 2014 at 12:08
  • 2
    Yes, although whether it works depends on precedence of `AnnotationIntrospector's included (Jackson's own vs JAXB). Both will be detected, but one registered with higher priority "wins".
    – StaxMan
    Mar 20, 2015 at 19:10
  • Thanks @StaxMan for the hint. I've used the coding found here to set the priority
    – stephen
    Mar 15, 2016 at 18:00
8

With some example, You can also use it in getter and setter to rename it to different field

public class Sample {

    private String fruit;

    @JsonProperty("get_apple")
    public void setFruit(String fruit) {
        this.fruit = fruit;
    }

    @JsonProperty("send_apple")
    public String getFruit() {
        return fruit;
    }

}
0
3

Please note that the proper JavaEE API for this is to use the javax.json.bind.annotation.JsonbProperty annotation. Of course Jackson and others are just some implementations of the JSON Binding API, they will likely comply with this.

2

If you are not using Jackson still want to rename a property you can use @SerializedName("your_original_key_name")

My JSON Data:

{
  "default": "0"
}

As you know we never use predefined keywords as a variable name so solution is:

@SerializedName("default")
private String default_value;

public String getDefault_value() {
        return default_value;
    }
public void setDefault_value(String default_value) {
        this.default_value = default_value;
    }

That's all you have to do now value comes from the key "default" and you can use it with getter and setter using "default_value"

In this case (Predifind Keywords as Json Key Name) or in any other case where you want to change your variable name to get data from the original key name this is the easiest approach.

0

I'm just reiterating @Himanshu's Answer,

Java Bean Property Field

@SerializedName("TCS Rate")
private String TCSRate;

Here we need this import

import com.google.gson.annotations.SerializedName;

Maven Dependency

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.google.code.gson</groupId>
    <artifactId>gson</artifactId>
    <version>2.9.0</version>
</dependency>

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