18

I have this file which I want to read with PowerShell:

var myMap =
[
  {
    "name": "JSON Example",
    "attr": "Another attribute"
  }
]

My PowerShell v3 Code:

$str = Get-Content $file | Select -Skip 1;
$str | ConvertFrom-Json;

But I'm always getting this error:

ConvertFrom-Json : Invalid array passed in, ']' expected. (1): [
At S:\ome\Path\script.ps1:60 char:8
+ $str | ConvertFrom-Json;
+        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    + CategoryInfo          : NotSpecified: (:) [ConvertFrom-Json], ArgumentException
    + FullyQualifiedErrorId : System.ArgumentException,Microsoft.PowerShell.Commands.ConvertFromJsonCommand

If I copy and paste the JSON code manually into the code, everything is working fine:

'[
  {
    "name": "JSON Example",
    "attr": "Another attribute"
  }
]' | ConvertFrom-Json;
0

4 Answers 4

34

Try to pipe to Out-String before piping to ConvertFrom-Json:

Get-Content $file | Select -Skip 1 | Out-String | ConvertFrom-Json

In your working example the JSON code is a string while the non-working example returns a collection of lines. Piping to Out-String converts the collection to a single string, which is what the InputObject parameter accept.

4
  • It works now! Thanks for the explanation! I'll accept your answer in 4 minutes.
    – ComFreek
    Aug 27, 2012 at 10:58
  • Thank you very much, such a great explanation May 7, 2018 at 5:12
  • News in 2020: ConvertFrom-Json in PowerShell 5 now also supports arrays and multiple things piped into it, e.g. (@("{", '"a":9}') | ConvertFrom-Json).a works! Hence, Out-String is not necessary anymore.
    – ComFreek
    Jan 9, 2020 at 7:50
  • Amazon EC2s come equipped with Powershell 4.0 and a lower version of Amazon CLI. So I ran into this same issue in the EC2 environment but not on the local machine, thanks for the workaround! You'd think they'd at least keep the CLI up to date... Jan 16, 2020 at 5:57
10

Alternatively you can use Get-Content -Raw which will retrieve the JSON as a single string.

See this post for more info: http://blogs.technet.com/b/heyscriptingguy/archive/2014/04/23/json-is-the-new-xml.aspx

0

The var myMap = isn't json, it's javascript. Delete the first line and it will be fine.

EDIT:

Oh, you are skipping the first line. It may be that there's a carriage return missing in the last line of the file, and Powershell 3 is more sensitive to it. It works fine in Powershell 5.1 even without a carriage return at the end.

1
  • Thanks for bringing up the version, that led me to looking up the docs. Indeed, ConvertFrom-Json in PS 5 is more relaxing wrt. its input parameters. I commented that under the accepted answer. I think that way it's most visible. I think you can safely delete this answer then to declutter the answer list a bit :)
    – ComFreek
    Jan 9, 2020 at 7:52
-1

another answer that also works: use GC -raw <FILE> which will pass in as string

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