22

I think I need to create a specialist ObjectMapper and cannot find any sample code to start the process.

The creator of the JSON is using .Net and public properties and therefore uses field names with an uppercase initial. I am parsing the JSON into POJOs so I would like to use a lowercase initial.

At their end:

    public class Facet
    {
        public string Name { get; set; }
        public string  Value { get; set; }
    }

At my end I must therefore have:

    public class Facet {
        public String Name;
        public String Value;
    }

I would much prefer:

    public class Facet {
        public String name;
        public String value;
    }

Am I right that this could be done with an ObjectMapper?

1
  • 1
    I have retitled and removed the second part of the question. The other half is posted here Sep 16, 2012 at 20:22

5 Answers 5

28

Your first issue can be addressed very simply with the @JsonProperty annotation:

// java-side class
public class Facet
{
    @JsonProperty("Name")
    public String name;

    @JsonProperty("Value")
    public String value;
}

Now the ObjectMapper will match up the differently-cased field names. If you don't want to add annotations into your classes, you can create a Mix-in class to stand in for your Facet:

public class FacetMixIn
{
    @JsonProperty("Name")
    public String name;

    @JsonProperty("Value")
    public String value;
}

objectMapper.getDeserializationConfig().addMixInAnnotations(Facet.class, FacetMixIn.class);

This will achieve the same thing, without requiring additional annotations in your Facet class.

5
  • That's exactly what I was looking for in part 1 :) Thanks. I have added to part 2. Does that make it easier? Sep 15, 2012 at 17:20
  • I've split the original question into two now so this is now a complete answer. By all means modify to reflect the change in the question. Sep 16, 2012 at 20:23
  • Wow. If I could multi-upvote this I would. I have wasted close to a full day just this week on JSON mapping issues caused by APIs that use leading uppercase on some parameters. Once I figured out that was the cause these annotations are a perfect fix. Jun 8, 2018 at 20:28
  • @BrianKnoblauch really glad to have helped another dev
    – pb2q
    Jun 8, 2018 at 22:13
  • From jackson 2.5 onwards you can add mixin simply like - objectMapper.addMixIn(Facet.class, FacetMixIn.class) May 22, 2020 at 14:55
15

Instead of annotating each field, the Jackson ObjectMapper can be configured to use a built-in or custom PropertyNamingStrategy, to apply a consistent translation between Java property/field names and JSON element names.

For example:

myObjectMapper.setPropertyNamingStrategy(PascalCaseStrategy);
4
  • Thanks @ProgrammerBruce for your further help. I will check this works when I get back to work later in the new year. BTW - is there a strategy that will match ANY case? If no, perhaps you could post one. I am trying to deal with a customer who could change their conventions at any time. Jan 3, 2013 at 2:24
  • Last I looked (a year or so ago), name translations only go in one direction (either from Java property/field names to JSON element names, or vice versa), and so implementing case-insensitive matching wasn't as trivial as it otherwise could be. Jan 4, 2013 at 3:48
  • @Jose: They're different things. SnakeCaseStrategy is for "snake_case_variables"
    – dagnelies
    Mar 11, 2016 at 14:49
  • @arnaud indeed, sorry about that.
    – Jose Alban
    Mar 11, 2016 at 15:17
8

This problem could be solved from Jackson 2.5.0 like this:

ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
mapper.configure(MapperFeature.ACCEPT_CASE_INSENSITIVE_PROPERTIES, true);

From the javadoc:

com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.MapperFeature.ACCEPT_CASE_INSENSITIVE_PROPERTIES

Feature that will allow for more forgiving deserialization of incoming JSON. If enabled, the bean properties will be matched using their lower-case equivalents, meaning that any case-combination (incoming and matching names are canonicalized by lower-casing) should work.

Note that there is additional performance overhead since incoming property names need to be lower-cased before comparison, for cases where there are upper-case letters. Overhead for names that are already lower-case should be negligible however.

Feature is disabled by default.

Since: 2.5

1
  • Has anyone compared the performance difference against using the annotations? The annotations feel safer, but after talking to other JSON users (other languages), this here option (case insensitive) seems to be the normal expected behaviour... Jackson seems to be the oddball by being strict about casing. Jun 8, 2018 at 22:46
0

Just a quick update as I was looking for same answer and a code snippet objectMapper.setPropertyNamingStrategy(PropertyNamingStrategy.SNAKE_CASE);

1
  • This should be a comment. If you do not yet have enough rep to comment yet then thank you for your contribution but when you do, please delete this answer and post a comment. May 2, 2019 at 5:14
0

Since v 2.13 use builder:

XmlMapper xmlMapper = (XmlMapper) getObjectMapper();

private ObjectMapper getObjectMapper() {
    return XmlMapper.builder()
        .configure(MapperFeature.ACCEPT_CASE_INSENSITIVE_PROPERTIES, true)
        .build();
}
1
  • 1
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