78

I'm trying to build a restful API and I'm struggling on how to serialize JSON data to a HTTP query string.

There are a number of mandatory and optional arguments that need to be passed in the request, e.g (represented as a JSON object below):

{
   "-columns" : [
      "name",
      "column"
   ],
   "-where" : {
      "-or" : {
         "customer_id" : 1,
         "services" : "schedule"
      }
   },
   "-limit" : 5,
   "return" : "table"
}

I need to support a various number of different clients so I'm looking for a standardized way to convert this json object to a query string. Is there one, and how does it look?

Another alternative is to allow users to just pass along the json object in a message body, but I read that I should avoid it (HTTP GET with request body).

Any thoughts?

Edit for clarification:

Listing how some different languages encodes the given json object above:

  • jQuery using $.param: -columns[]=name&-columns[]=column&-where[-or][customer_id]=1&-where[-or][services]=schedule&-limit=5&return=column
  • PHP using http_build_query: -columns[0]=name&-columns[1]=column&-where[-or][customer_id]=1&-where[-or][services]=schedule&-limit=5&return=column
  • Perl using URI::query_form: -columns=name&-columns=column&-where=HASH(0x59d6eb8)&-limit=5&return=column
  • Perl using complex_to_query: -columns:0=name&-columns:1=column&-limit=5&-where.-or.customer_id=1&-where.-or.services=schedule&return=column

jQuery and PHP is very similar. Perl using complex_to_query is also pretty similar to them. But none look exactly the same.

16
  • why not just using POST requests?
    – akonsu
    Apr 8, 2013 at 6:34
  • 1
    check if this helps, api.jquery.com/jQuery.param
    – Jubair
    Apr 8, 2013 at 6:37
  • 21
    @akonsu: Because I'm trying to fetch (GET) some data, not POST new data.
    – Andreas
    Apr 8, 2013 at 6:38
  • Are you looking to do this on the server side, and if so, what language? If on the client side, can you use jquery?
    – 000
    Apr 8, 2013 at 6:41
  • 1
    I always thought that url encoding is language independent. you just replace some characters with their hexadecimal representation preceeded by a % character. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percent-encoding
    – akonsu
    Apr 8, 2013 at 6:48

5 Answers 5

76

URL-encode (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percent-encoding) your JSON text and put it into a single query string parameter. for example, if you want to pass {"val": 1}:

mysite.com/path?json=%7B%22val%22%3A%201%7D

Note that if your JSON gets too long then you will run into a URL length limitation problem. In which case I would use POST with a body (yes, I know, sending a POST when you want to fetch something is not "pure" and does not fit well into the REST paradigm, but neither is your domain specific JSON-based query language).

4
  • 2
    Yea that is probably one way to accomplish this. I doubt that I will run into the URL length limitation problem. I wonder what's best: 1) Pass a single json parameter 2) Use POST (although we're GETting) or 3) Use GET with a message body. Maybe support both 1) and 3) ?
    – Andreas
    Apr 8, 2013 at 8:34
  • 1
    By the way, the "JSON-based query langague" I'm using comes from SQL::Abstract::More: search.cpan.org/~dami/SQL-Abstract-More-1.11/lib/SQL/Abstract/…
    – Andreas
    Apr 8, 2013 at 8:37
  • 1
    I would implement 1) and 2). I would use 1) as much as I can and when url gets too long I would use POST. A GET with a body I do not like because it is weird, although it is technically possible.
    – akonsu
    Apr 8, 2013 at 9:24
  • Note there is no "official" URL length limit. In theory URLs can have any length, but due to restrictions of some implementations (e. g. old proxy servers) only URLs up to 2048 are considered "safe".
    – deamon
    Jun 11, 2018 at 12:41
24

There is no single standard for JSON to query string serialization, so I made a comparison of some JSON serializers and the results are as follows:

JSON:    {"_id":"5973782bdb9a930533b05cb2","isActive":true,"balance":"$1,446.35","age":32,"name":"Logan Keller","email":"[email protected]","phone":"+1 (952) 533-2258","friends":[{"id":0,"name":"Colon Salazar"},{"id":1,"name":"French Mcneil"},{"id":2,"name":"Carol Martin"}],"favoriteFruit":"banana"}
Rison:   (_id:'5973782bdb9a930533b05cb2',age:32,balance:'$1,446.35',email:'[email protected]',favoriteFruit:banana,friends:!((id:0,name:'Colon Salazar'),(id:1,name:'French Mcneil'),(id:2,name:'Carol Martin')),isActive:!t,name:'Logan Keller',phone:'+1 (952) 533-2258')
O-Rison: _id:'5973782bdb9a930533b05cb2',age:32,balance:'$1,446.35',email:'[email protected]',favoriteFruit:banana,friends:!((id:0,name:'Colon Salazar'),(id:1,name:'French Mcneil'),(id:2,name:'Carol Martin')),isActive:!t,name:'Logan Keller',phone:'+1 (952) 533-2258'
JSURL:   ~(_id~'5973782bdb9a930533b05cb2~isActive~true~balance~'!1*2c446.35~age~32~name~'Logan*20Keller~email~'logankeller*40artiq.com~phone~'*2b1*20*28952*29*20533-2258~friends~(~(id~0~name~'Colon*20Salazar)~(id~1~name~'French*20Mcneil)~(id~2~name~'Carol*20Martin))~favoriteFruit~'banana)
QS:      _id=5973782bdb9a930533b05cb2&isActive=true&balance=$1,446.35&age=32&name=Logan Keller&[email protected]&phone=+1 (952) 533-2258&friends[0][id]=0&friends[0][name]=Colon Salazar&friends[1][id]=1&friends[1][name]=French Mcneil&friends[2][id]=2&friends[2][name]=Carol Martin&favoriteFruit=banana
URLON:   $_id=5973782bdb9a930533b05cb2&isActive:true&balance=$1,446.35&age:32&name=Logan%20Keller&[email protected]&phone=+1%20(952)%20533-2258&friends@$id:0&name=Colon%20Salazar;&$id:1&name=French%20Mcneil;&$id:2&name=Carol%20Martin;;&favoriteFruit=banana
QS-JSON: isActive=true&balance=%241%2C446.35&age=32&name=Logan+Keller&email=logankeller%40artiq.com&phone=%2B1+(952)+533-2258&friends(0).id=0&friends(0).name=Colon+Salazar&friends(1).id=1&friends(1).name=French+Mcneil&friends(2).id=2&friends(2).name=Carol+Martin&favoriteFruit=banana

The shortest among them is URL Object Notation.

2
  • 1
    JSON is a standard (see ECMA-404)! You have to keep the order and quote all strings with double quotes. (like the JSON: ... line you have.) Jan 7, 2019 at 2:09
  • 1
    @AlexisWilke the libraries convert the JSON into a format suitable for URL's and other usecases. You then use the library to decode the URL back to real JSON. var url = urlon.encode(JSON) var JSON = urlon.decode(url) Feb 20, 2023 at 19:06
6

How about you try this sending them as follows:

http://example.com/api/wtf?
[-columns][]=name&
[-columns][]=column&
[-where][-or][customer_id]=1&
[-where][-or][services]=schedule&
[-limit]=5&
[return]=table&

I tried with a REST Client enter image description here

And on the server side (Ruby with Sinatra) I checked the params, it gives me exactly what you want. :-)

enter image description here

1
  • How standard is this? If you open your API as public would you need to document your ad-hoc serialization or is there some RFC you can reference? Mar 13, 2023 at 17:35
5

Another option might be node-querystring. It also uses a similar scheme to the ones you've so far listed.

It's available in both npm and bower, which is why I have been using it.

0

Works well for nested objects.

Passing complex objects as query parameters of a url. In the example below, obj is the JSON object to pass into query parameters.

Injecting JSON object as query parameters:

value = JSON.stringify(obj);

URLSearchParams to convert a string to an object representing search params. toString to retain string type for appending to url:

queryParams = new URLSearchParams(value).toString();

Pass the query parameters using template literals:

url = `https://some-url.com?key=${queryParams}`;

Now url will contain the JSON object as query parameters under key (user-defined name)

Extracing JSON from url:

This is assuming you have access to the url (either as string or URL object)

url_obj = new URL(url); (only if url is NOT a URL object, otherwise ignore this step)

Extract all query parameters in the url:

queryParams = new URLSearchParams(url_obj.search);

Use the key to extract the specific value:

obj = JSON.parse(queryParams.get('key').slice(0, -1));

slice() is used to extract a tailing = in the query params which is not required.

Here obj will be the same object passed in the query params.

I recommend to try these steps in the web console to understand better.

You can test with JSON examples here: https://json.org/example.html

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