64

In GSON to get a list of objects you do

Gson gson = new Gson();
Type token = new TypeToken<List<MyType>>(){}.getType();
return gson.fromJson(json, token);

It works great, but I want to go further and have MyType parametrized so I can have a common function to parse list of objects with this code

// the common function 
public <T> List<T> fromJSonList(String json, Class<T> type) {
  Gson gson = new Gson();
  Type collectionType = new TypeToken<List<T>>(){}.getType();
  return gson.fromJson(json, collectionType);
}

// the call
List<MyType> myTypes = parser.fromJSonList(jsonString, MyType.class);

Sadly returns an array of StringMaps, not the type. T is being interpreted as another generic type, not my type. Any workaround ?

1

13 Answers 13

61

Since gson 2.8.0, you can use TypeToken#getParametized((Type rawType, Type... typeArguments)) to create the typeToken, then getType() should do the trick.

For example:

TypeToken.getParameterized(List.class, myType.class).getType();
0
41

Generics work at compile-time. The reason super-type tokens work, is because (anonymous) inner classes can access the type arguments to their generic superclasses (superinterfaces), which in turn are stored directly in the bytecode metadata.

Once your .java source file is compiled, the type parameter <T> is obviously thrown away. Since it is not known at compile time, it cannot be stored in bytecode, so it's erased and Gson can't read it.

UPDATE

After newacct's answer, I tried to implement what he suggested in his option 2, ie implementing a ParameterizedType. The code looks like this (here is a basic test):

class ListOfSomething<X> implements ParameterizedType {

    private Class<?> wrapped;

    public ListOfSomething(Class<X> wrapped) {
        this.wrapped = wrapped;
    }

    public Type[] getActualTypeArguments() {
        return new Type[] {wrapped};
    }

    public Type getRawType() {
        return List.class;
    }

    public Type getOwnerType() {
        return null;
    }

}

the purpose of this code, is to be used inside getFromJsonList():

public List<T> fromJsonList(String json, Class<T> klass) {
    Gson gson = new Gson();
    return gson.fromJson(json, new ListOfSomething<T>(klass));
}

Even if the technique works and is indeed very clever (I didn't know it and I would have never thinked of it), this is the final accomplishment:

List<Integer> list = new Factory<Integer>()
         .getFromJsonList(text, Integer.class)

instead of

List<Integer> list = new Gson().fromJson(text,
         new TypeToken<List<Integer>>(){}.getType());

To me, all this wrapping in useless, even if I agree that TypeTokens make the code look nasty :P

12
  • It is. The key point to understand is that in order for the super-type token machinary to work, we must create a ficticious anonymous class, ie a piece of bytecode that has even its own Outer.$N.class file. This is the trick that makes TypeToken work, but can't really work in your case, because when the supplied method source is compiled, the Class<T> argument fo fromJSonList is erased
    – Raffaele
    Jan 3, 2013 at 14:10
  • It's not "erased" in the Type. Rather, the generic argument will be stored as a TypeVariable rather than a Class
    – newacct
    Jan 3, 2013 at 19:50
  • @newacct maybe you misunderstood that phrase. I mean, inside fonrJsonList(), the type argument is a raw Class.
    – Raffaele
    Jan 3, 2013 at 20:47
  • @Raffaele: but they are not using type to construct the collectionType. In fact, they are not using type at all
    – newacct
    Jan 3, 2013 at 21:00
  • 1
    Souldn't getRawType return ListOfSomething.class instead? Otherwise thanks, you saved my ass today :) Apr 19, 2014 at 15:49
30
public static final <T> List<T> getList(final Class<T[]> clazz, final String json)
{
    final T[] jsonToObject = new Gson().fromJson(json, clazz);

    return Arrays.asList(jsonToObject);
}

Example:

getList(MyClass[].class, "[{...}]");
3
  • Great answer! Thanks
    – Danilo C.
    Mar 28, 2017 at 9:42
  • How to use for getting Singel Object of <T>
    – CrazyMind
    Sep 13, 2017 at 7:53
  • 1
    Good answer, but be aware that the List returned by Arrays.asList is a read-only wrapper for the array. It's not an ArrayList. You can't add or modify items.
    – Lambart
    Sep 27, 2017 at 19:06
13

Here is the full code base on great answer from @oldergod

public <T> List<T> fromJSonList(String json, Class<T> myType) {
    Gson gson = new Gson();
    Type collectionType = TypeToken.getParameterized(List.class, myType).getType();
    return gson.fromJson(json, collectionType);
}

Using

List<MyType> myTypes = parser.fromJSonList(jsonString, MyType.class);

Hope it help

6

I've taken Raffaele's approach one step further and generified the class, so that it works with every class A, where B is a non-parameterized class. Might be useful for Sets and other Collections.

    public class GenericOf<X, Y> implements ParameterizedType {

    private final Class<X> container;
    private final Class<Y> wrapped;

    public GenericOf(Class<X> container, Class<Y> wrapped) {
        this.container = container;
        this.wrapped = wrapped;
    }

    public Type[] getActualTypeArguments() {
        return new Type[]{wrapped};
    }

    public Type getRawType() {
        return container;
    }

    public Type getOwnerType() {
        return null;
    }

}
5

In Kotlin you can simply use this function:

inline fun <reified T> fromJson(json: String): T {
  return Gson().fromJson(json, object: TypeToken<T>(){}.type)
}

and use it like

val myTypes: List<MyType> = fromJson(jsonString);

It will parse any object including gereric types as List. Keyword inline and reified ensures that type will not be erased.

For detail info I can recommend this Medium post

3

This has been answered in previous questions. Basically, there are 2 options:

  1. Pass the Type in from the calling site. The calling code will use TypeToken or whatever to construct it.
  2. Construct a Type corresponding to the parameterized type yourself. This will require you to write a class that implements ParameterizedType
2
  • I think option 1 completely defeats the purpose of fromJsonList() - option 2 is very clever instead. Is this what you mean?
    – Raffaele
    Jan 3, 2013 at 21:26
  • @Raffaele: perhaps. Or you can copy the source of ParameterizedTypeImpl (used internally by many Java libraries) from the Internet
    – newacct
    Jan 4, 2013 at 0:29
3

If programming in kotlin, we can use reified type parameter in inline function

class GenericGson {

    companion object {
        inline fun <reified T : Any> Gson.fromJsonTokenType(jsonString: String): T {
            val type = object : TypeToken<T>() {}.type
            return this.fromJson(jsonString, type)
        }

        inline fun <reified T : Any> Gson.fromJsonType(jsonString: String): T = this.fromJson(jsonString, T::class.java)

        inline fun <reified T : Any> fromJsonTokenType(jsonString: String): T = Gson().fromJsonTokenType(jsonString)

        inline fun <reified T : Any> fromJsonType(jsonString: String): T = Gson().fromJsonType(jsonString)
    }
}

And use like below in your code

val arrayList = GenericGson.fromJsonTokenType<ArrayList<Person>>(json)
0

Kotlin "ListOfSomething" solution that worked for me:

fun <T: Any> getGsonList(json: String, kclass: KClass<T>) : List<T> {

    return getGsonInstance().fromJson<List<T>>(json, ListOfSomething<T>(kclass.java))
}


internal class ListOfSomething<X>(wrapped: Class<X>) : ParameterizedType {

    private val wrapped: Class<*>

    init {
        this.wrapped = wrapped
    }

    override fun getActualTypeArguments(): Array<Type> {
        return arrayOf<Type>(wrapped)
    }

    override fun getRawType(): Type {
        return ArrayList::class.java
    }

    override fun getOwnerType(): Type? {
        return null
    }
}
0

In kotlin simple use for example:

Get places function

fun getPlaces<T> (jsonString : String, clazz: Class<T>) : T { val places : T = Gson().fromJson(jsonString,clazz) return places }

Then you can use as:

val places = getPlaces(Array<Place>::class.java)
0
  public static <T> T getObject(String gsonStr) {
        Gson gson = new GsonBuilder()
                .setLenient()
                .create();
        Type collectionType = new TypeToken< T>(){}.getType();
        return gson.fromJson(gsonStr,
                collectionType);
    }

When use:

Class1 class1=  getObject(jsonStr);
0

This work for everything. e.g. map which has a key and value generic.

CustomType type = new CustomType(Map.class, String.class, Integer.class);

So no more TokenType.

class CustomType implements ParameterizedType {
    private final Class<?> container;
    private final Class<?>[] wrapped;

    @Contract(pure = true)
    public CustomType(Class<?> container, Class<?>... wrapped) {
        this.container = container;
        this.wrapped = wrapped;
    }

    @Override
    public Type[] getActualTypeArguments() {
        return this.wrapped;
    }

    @Override
    public Type getRawType() {
        return this.container;
    }

    @Override
    public Type getOwnerType() {
        return null;
    }
}
0
public <T> List<T> fromJSonList(String json) {
  Gson gson = new Gson();
  Type collectionType = new TypeToken<List<T>>(){}.getType();
  return gson.fromJson(json, collectionType);
}

//Just call
List<MyType> myTypes = parser.<MyType>fromJSonList(jsonString);

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