285

Here is my string

{
    'user': {
        'name': 'abc',
        'fx': {
            'message': {
                'color': 'red'
            },
            'user': {
                'color': 'blue'
            }
        }
    },
    'timestamp': '2013-10-04T08: 10: 41+0100',
    'message': 'I'mABC..',
    'nanotime': '19993363098581330'
}    

Here the message contains single quotation mark, which is same as the quotation used in JSON. What I do is fill up a string from user inputs such as message. So, I need to escape those kind of special scenarios which breaks the code. But other than string replace, is there any way to make them escape but still allow HTML to process them back to the correct message?

6
  • 73
    JSON uses only double quotes, not single quotes, see json.org
    – Niels Bom
    Dec 13, 2013 at 12:36
  • 5
    RFC 4627 states that parsers must be able to parse conformant JSON (paragraph 4), and may support additional non-JSON extensions. However, paragraph 5 emphatically states that all producers (generators) MUST produce ONLY 100% compliant JSON. Producing JSON with frame characters that do not need escaping is an especially bad idea. Please consider replacing your apostrophes with quotes. ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt
    – Luv2code
    Jul 7, 2015 at 4:25
  • 3
    @Luv2code While the points you're making remain true, note that you're citing an obsolete spec. When reading RFCs, always use the tools.ietf.org/html version, not the text version. The HTML versions are easier to read and link to subsections of, and most importantly, at the top of the HTML versions is a list of all subsequent RFCs that update or obsolete the one you're reading. If you'd gone to tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4627 you'd have seen that RFC 4627 is obsolete and has been replaced by RFC 7159.
    – Mark Amery
    Jul 10, 2015 at 11:46
  • 8
    For people reading this in the future, RFC 7159 has in turn been obsoleted by tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8259 Mar 13, 2018 at 13:15
  • Related post - Do the JSON keys have to be surrounded by quotes?
    – RBT
    Jun 18, 2019 at 11:57

11 Answers 11

532

I'm appalled by the presence of highly-upvoted misinformation on such a highly-viewed question about a basic topic.

JSON strings cannot be quoted with single quotes. The various versions of the spec (the original by Douglas Crockford, the ECMA version, and the IETF version) all state that strings must be quoted with double quotes. This is not a theoretical issue, nor a matter of opinion as the accepted answer currently suggests; any JSON parser in the real world will error out if you try to have it parse a single-quoted string.

Crockford's and ECMA's version even display the definition of a string using a pretty picture, which should make the point unambiguously clear:

Image showing the definition of a string from the JSON spec

The pretty picture also lists all of the legitimate escape sequences within a JSON string:

  • \"
  • \\
  • \/
  • \b
  • \f
  • \n
  • \r
  • \t
  • \u followed by four-hex-digits

Note that, contrary to the nonsense in some other answers here, \' is never a valid escape sequence in a JSON string. It doesn't need to be, because JSON strings are always double-quoted.

Finally, you shouldn't normally have to think about escaping characters yourself when programatically generating JSON (though of course you will when manually editing, say, a JSON-based config file). Instead, form the data structure you want to encode using whatever native map, array, string, number, boolean, and null types your language has, and then encode it to JSON with a JSON-encoding function. Such a function is probably built into whatever language you're using, like JavaScript's JSON.stringify, PHP's json_encode, or Python's json.dumps. If you're using a language that doesn't have such functionality built in, you can probably find a JSON parsing and encoding library to use. If you simply use language or library functions to convert things to and from JSON, you'll never even need to know JSON's escaping rules. This is what the misguided question asker here ought to have done.

5
  • 3
    4 hex bytes or nibbles?
    – leetbacoon
    Nov 29, 2019 at 11:11
  • 66
    I approve of the grumpiness of this post.
    – Mike Nakis
    Nov 8, 2020 at 10:14
  • Mr. O'Brian's use of Jess' plan when JSON encoding works using the single quote (apostrophe) notes here. {"note":"William O'Brian found Jess' plan for JSON was good."} Dec 12, 2023 at 13:26
  • @MarkSchultheiss Hmm... I don't understand your point or how your example is relevant to my answer. What you're showing isn't an example of a single-quoted string; it's an example of a double-quoted string whose content includes some single quotes.
    – Mark Amery
    Dec 12, 2023 at 14:17
  • Just pointing out ONE use here as I often see people putting what SHOULD be JSON that is not really. I DO like this answer BTW but I am not alone in that :); Dec 12, 2023 at 14:21
352

A JSON string must be double-quoted, according to the specs, so you don't need to escape '.
If you have to use special character in your JSON string, you can escape it using \ character.

See this list of special character used in JSON :

\b  Backspace (ascii code 08)
\f  Form feed (ascii code 0C)
\n  New line
\r  Carriage return
\t  Tab
\"  Double quote
\\  Backslash character


However, even if it is totally contrary to the spec, the author could use \'.

This is bad because :

  • It IS contrary to the specs
  • It is no-longer JSON valid string

But it works, as you want it or not.

For new readers, always use a double quotes for your json strings.

17
  • 40
    "single quoted json strings"? This is nonsense; strings in JSON can only ever be double-quoted. Try JSON.parse("'foo'") in your browser console, for example, and observe the SyntaxError: Unexpected token '. The JSON spec is really simple and clear about this. There is no escape sequence in JSON for single quotes, and a JSON string cannot be single-quoted.
    – Mark Amery
    Dec 17, 2014 at 1:12
  • 23
    Even the supposedly clarifying update to this answer is bad. While technically true, it is misleading to say that you "don't need" to escape ', in much the same way that it is technically true but misleading to say that legally you don't need to murder children. More correct would be to say that you cannot escape '. \' is an illegal escape sequence, and if you use it then your JSON is not valid JSON and any JSON parser will choke on it. (Certainly JavaScript's JSON.parse and Python's json.loads do.)
    – Mark Amery
    Jan 31, 2015 at 16:26
  • 3
    This answer remains utter nonsense after many edits. You claim, wrongly, that using single-quoted strings in JSON and using the \' escape sequence "works, as you want it or not". This is false. I challenge you to exhibit any JSON parser in popular use that will not choke on single-quoted strings or on the \' sequence. I have already pointed out that JSON.parse("'foo'") and JSON.parse('"\\\'"') (in JavaScript) and json.loads("'foo'") and json.loads('"\\\'"') (in Python) both throw exceptions. What on earth is your basis for the claim that using these constructs "works"?
    – Mark Amery
    Apr 19, 2015 at 14:08
  • 12
    @Luv2code interesting quote. You're misinterpreting it slightly; it doesn't mean that any character can be escaped simply by putting a backslash in front of it. A fuller quote is "Any character may be escaped. If the character is in the Basic Multilingual Plane (U+0000 through U+FFFF), then it may be represented as a six-character sequence. ... Alternatively, there are two-character sequence escape representations of some popular characters." (emphasis mine). It's saying you can escape ' as \u0027, not that you can escape it as \'.
    – Mark Amery
    Jul 7, 2015 at 7:05
  • 2
    @Luv2code still, it does mean that my upvoted comment stating that "you cannot escape '" (and comparing such an act to the murder of children!) is technically wrong; more accurate is to say that you can escape it, just not as \'. I hadn't realised that the RFC version of the spec referred to sequences like \u0027 as a way of 'escaping' the characters they represent. The key point that \' is illegal, though, is still true and important.
    – Mark Amery
    Jul 7, 2015 at 7:10
52

Everyone is talking about how to escape ' in a '-quoted string literal. There's a much bigger issue here: single-quoted string literals aren't valid JSON. JSON is based on JavaScript, but it's not the same thing. If you're writing an object literal inside JavaScript code, fine; if you actually need JSON, you need to use ".

With double-quoted strings, you won't need to escape the '. (And if you did want a literal " in the string, you'd use \".)

2
  • 1
    Hi, you said with double-quoted strings, you won't need to escape the '. Foe example if my string value is "Member's_id" : 4 , are you saying it doesn't need escaping? Apparently I am having a problem where its giving an error of wrong encoding: UTF-8 and it is being read as Member�s. Its a manually generated json file.
    – Shubham
    Jul 28, 2019 at 16:06
  • 4
    ' in a JSON string literal must not be escaped. Did you copy-paste it from somewhere? Maybe it's really a \u2019, not an apostrophe. My guess: someone typed it into MS Word, which turned it into a quotation mark because it thinks it knows best. Grammatically, the good old ASCII character apostrophe (', a.k.a. \x27, which we've been calling "single quote" up until now) is the one you want. But it would still be nice to fix your character encoding issue, in case there are other similar problems. So pick a character encoding, and use it for both reads and writes. Or escape using \u. Aug 1, 2019 at 21:30
7

Most of these answers either does not answer the question or is unnecessarily long in the explanation.

OK so JSON only uses double quotation marks, we get that!

I was trying to use JQuery AJAX to post JSON data to server and then later return that same information. The best solution to the posted question I found was to use:

var d = {
    name: 'whatever',
    address: 'whatever',
    DOB: '01/01/2001'
}
$.ajax({
    type: "POST",
    url: 'some/url',
    dataType: 'json',
    data: JSON.stringify(d),
    ...
}

This will escape the characters for you.

This was also suggested by Mark Amery, Great answer BTW

Hope this helps someone.

0
0

May be i am too late to the party but this will parse/escape single quote (don't want to get into a battle on parse vs escape)..

JSON.parse("\"'\"")
0

I was struggling with this for complicated mixtures of strings, lists and dictionarys wrapped in JSON.

The simple answer is, don't do anything! Use:

 json.dumps( item, indent=4 )

where item is for instance a dictionary of dictionary of strings and lists and it will escape everything for you itself. This will also result in pretty print output that is human readable.

Example of a part of a dictionary of dictionaries containing lists with special forward slash character:

        {
            "MEASUREMENT": [
                "1\u20444 cup"
            ],
            "DESCRIPTION": [
                "dried"
            ],
            "INGREDIENT": [
                "cranberries"
            ]
        },

It does the right thing for \n replacing it with \\n and so forth. You don't want to escape strings that don't need escaping so let dumps do it for you.

-1

The answer the direct question:
To be safe, replace the required character with \u+4-digit-hex-value

Example: If you want to escape the apostrophe ' replace with \u0027
D'Amico becomes D\u0027Amico

NICE REFERENCE: http://es5.github.io/x7.html#x7.8.4

https://mathiasbynens.be/notes/javascript-escapes

2
  • -1 for the references. The question is about JSON, but your linked references are about JavaScript, and list escape sequences that aren't valid in JavaScript like \'.
    – Mark Amery
    Sep 29, 2018 at 15:35
  • 2
    Thanks Mark - I really just wanted to give an alternative angle - depending on who arrives here may find this useful. But I take your point about JSON & Javascript - Thanks for being a Ninja on the forums. Oct 6, 2018 at 9:19
-3

Using template literals...

var json = `{"1440167924916":{"id":1440167924916,"type":"text","content":"It's a test!"}}`;
1
  • This does not parse or decode the string in any way. The string also contains no `\` characters in it.
    – i336_
    Mar 13, 2021 at 11:41
-3

Use encodeURIComponent() to encode the string.

Eg.:

var product_list = encodeURIComponent(JSON.stringify(product_list));

You don't need to decode it since the web server automatically do the same.

1
  • 1
    The question is about encoding strings containing quote marks in JSON, not about encoding JSON for passing in a URL.
    – Quentin
    Feb 5, 2021 at 11:00
-7

To allow single quotes within doubule quoted string for the purpose of json, you double the single quote. {"X": "What's the question"} ==> {"X": "What''s the question"}

https://codereview.stackexchange.com/questions/69266/json-conversion-to-single-quotes

The \' sequence is invalid.

2
  • 3
    Doubling a single quote in a JSON string doesn't escape it. It just means your string contains two single quotes, instead of one.
    – Mark Amery
    Dec 29, 2019 at 14:51
  • You seem to have confused JSON with SQL.
    – Quentin
    Feb 5, 2021 at 11:00
-17

regarding AlexB's post:

 \'  Apostrophe or single quote
 \"  Double quote

escaping single quotes is only valid in single quoted json strings
escaping double quotes is only valid in double quoted json strings

example:

'Bart\'s car'       -> valid
'Bart says \"Hi\"'  -> invalid
3
  • 17
    Single quoted strings are not legal in JSON. JSON is not javascript. JSON does not allow escaping the single quote. See json.org for the very simple document of JSON syntax.
    – srm
    Oct 16, 2014 at 18:55
  • 4
    downvote - because single quotes jsons are not valid! Apr 19, 2015 at 14:56
  • Single quotes are invalid in json. Please show a working sample if this is possible
    – Rohith
    Feb 3, 2020 at 16:06

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.