I have an application that performs a little slow over the internet due to bandwidth reasons. I have enabled GZip which has improved download time by a significant amout, but I was also considering whether or not I could switch from XML to JSON in order to squeeze out that last bit of performance. Would using JSON make the message size significantly smaller, or just somewhat smaller? Let's say we're talking about 250kB of XML data (which compresses to 30kB).
7 Answers
In terms of object serialization, JSON will generally be more compact (even when compressed). For Example:
I serialized the same instance of an object into both XML and JSON and got the following:
JSON
{
"Account": "2222",
"Login": "124235",
"SalesId": null,
"CustomerReference": "9652358474",
"Status": null,
"DropShip": 0,
"PromoCode": null,
"Notes": "For the truck",
"Errors": null,
"ReferenceId": null,
"PaymentMethod": "CKPhone",
"CheckPayment": {
"Name": "Simon Riggs",
"CompanyName": "Darth Inc",
"AccountNumber": "565555555",
"RoutingNumber": "222224455116",
"CheckNumber": "32",
"Address": {
"Attention": null,
"Street1": "555 W Portebello Rd",
"Street2": null,
"City": "London",
"State": "Texas",
"Zipcode": "45217",
"Country": null,
"ReferenceId": null,
"GetAxType": 2
},
"ReferenceId": null,
"GetAxType": 2
},
"CreditCardPayment": {
"Name": "Simon Riggs",
"CardNumber": "1111222233334444",
"Cvv2": "546",
"Month": 10,
"Year": 2018,
"Address": {
"Attention": null,
"Street1": "555 W Portebello Rd",
"Street2": null,
"City": "London",
"State": "Texas",
"Zipcode": "45217",
"Country": null,
"ReferenceId": null,
"GetAxType": 2
},
"ReferenceId": "0",
"GetAxType": 2
},
"ShippingAddress": {
"Attention": "Simon Riggs",
"Street1": "555 W Portebello Rd",
"Street2": null,
"City": "London",
"State": "Texas",
"Zipcode": "45217",
"Country": null,
"ReferenceId": null,
"GetAxType": 2
},
"Totals": {
"SubTotal": 25.0,
"TotalTax": 5.0,
"ShippingTotal": 10.0,
"ShippingTax": 1.5,
"GrandTotal": 35.0
},
"Lines": [{
"SKU": "1442-4521",
"LineNum": 0.0,
"Qty": 2.0,
"Price": 72.95,
"ShippingClass": "Ground",
"ReferenceId": null,
"GetAxType": 2
},
{
"SKU": "1212-5549",
"LineNum": 0.0,
"Qty": 1.0,
"Price": 31.15,
"ShippingClass": "Ground",
"ReferenceId": null,
"GetAxType": 2
}],
"GetAxType": 2
}
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?>
<SalesOrder xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
<Account>2222</Account>
<Login>124235</Login>
<CustomerReference>9652358474</CustomerReference>
<DropShip>0</DropShip>
<Notes>For the truck</Notes>
<PaymentMethod>CKPhone</PaymentMethod>
<CheckPayment>
<Name>Simon Riggs</Name>
<CompanyName>Darth Inc</CompanyName>
<AccountNumber>565555555</AccountNumber>
<RoutingNumber>222224455116</RoutingNumber>
<CheckNumber>32</CheckNumber>
<Address>
<Street1>555 W Portebello Rd</Street1>
<City>London</City>
<State>Texas</State>
<Zipcode>45217</Zipcode>
</Address>
</CheckPayment>
<CreditCardPayment>
<Name>Simon Riggs</Name>
<CardNumber>1111222233334444</CardNumber>
<Cvv2>546</Cvv2>
<Month>10</Month>
<Year>2018</Year>
<Address>
<Street1>555 W Portebello Rd</Street1>
<City>London</City>
<State>Texas</State>
<Zipcode>45217</Zipcode>
</Address>
<ReferenceId>0</ReferenceId>
</CreditCardPayment>
<ShippingAddress>
<Attention>Simon Riggs</Attention>
<Street1>555 W Portebello Rd</Street1>
<City>London</City>
<State>Texas</State>
<Zipcode>45217</Zipcode>
</ShippingAddress>
<Totals>
<SubTotal>25</SubTotal>
<TotalTax>5</TotalTax>
<ShippingTotal>10</ShippingTotal>
<ShippingTax>1.5</ShippingTax>
<GrandTotal>35</GrandTotal>
</Totals>
<Lines>
<SalesLine>
<SKU>1442-4521</SKU>
<LineNum>0</LineNum>
<Qty>2</Qty>
<Price>72.95</Price>
<ShippingClass>Ground</ShippingClass>
</SalesLine>
<SalesLine>
<SKU>1212-5549</SKU>
<LineNum>0</LineNum>
<Qty>1</Qty>
<Price>31.15</Price>
<ShippingClass>Ground</ShippingClass>
</SalesLine>
</Lines>
</SalesOrder>
When encoded in ASCII, the JSON is 1422 bytes while the XML is 1954 bytes. After compressing them using a GZipStream, the difference is smaller but still pretty clear. The JSON compresses down to 524 bytes while the XML compresses down to 695 bytes.
Serialization/deserialization time will vary by implementation (and hardware of course) but I serialized and deserialized the above JSON and XML 100,000 times in a loop and got the total accumulative times:
JSON Serialization: 5258 ms, XML Serialization: 3266 ms
JSON Deserialization: 9582 ms, XML Deserialization: 4604 ms
So XML serializes and deserializes faster using the libraries I'm using (see below), but with averages measuring in the hundredths of milliseconds, I'd say network bandwidth and transfer time is more consequential.
(Note: I did this in C# using Microsoft's System.Xml.Serialization.XmlSerializer and JSON.Net's Newtonsoft.Json.JsonConvert classes)
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Would love to see this experiment redone with the latest version of Newtonsoft.Json, which has undergone a lot of optimization over the last 7+ years. Commented Feb 5 at 18:10
Not an answer, but rather a suggestion to examine your assumptions.
How is JSON smaller?
JSON:
"person":{"firstname":"Fred",
"lastname":"Flintstone",
"age":38,
"spouse":"Wilma" }
XML:
<person firstname='Fred'
lastname='Flintstone'
age='38'
spouse='Wilma'/>
I just don't see how, in general, a JSON expression is going to be 30% smaller than "equivalent" XML. Even as you ramp up the complexity of these things, with nested structures and arrays, it's not going to be a 30% difference. It's approximately equivalent, with json earning an advantage because the end tag of a nested structure is a } , while XML earns an advantage because it need not quote field names.
If you forced me to use XML elements, like this:
<person>
<firstname>Fred<firstname>
<lastname>Flintstone<lastname>
<age>38</age>
<spouse>Wilma</spouse>
</person>
...sure, the resulting XML is larger than the prior JSON. But that seems like cheating.
Now it may be that the way you format your XML currently uses elements for everything, and that there's an opportunity to shrink the payload accordingly. But that doesn't necessarily imply JSON. If you've got tools and libraries that handle XML, you can keep XML and shrink.
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80Using attributes for content is cheating. This violates well-established principles of XML design. Commented Apr 21, 2010 at 2:37
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9Well established? To quote from the summary of that article: As with most design issues, this question rarely has absolute answers. And, In this article, Uche Ogbuji offers a set of guiding principles for what to put in elements and what to put in attributes. Are you claiming that Uche Ogbuji's recommendations hold the weight of "well established principles"? I don't agree. And I don't agree that using XML in the same way as JSON is somehow unacceptable or confusing.– CheesoCommented Apr 21, 2010 at 16:25
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9Attributes are fine until you need child elements, which impacts xslt/xpath, could be a big (or small) change, depending on extent of transformation logic, be careful.– raffianCommented Dec 16, 2014 at 18:54
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9Your method only works on flat data. As soon as you start to format nested data, you have no choice as to go with nested tags. Commented Jan 20, 2015 at 12:28
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5A contrived example of a single element doesn't demonstrate real world scenarios. As soon as you have a list of people the divide gets bigger. Also, XML documents typically have to have a root element and a header. Commented Jul 27, 2015 at 22:45
actually this is harder to answer then it seems,
several years ago json was 'faster' but the differences have become finer between the two.
what I've observed is;
- xml compresses better with gzip then json .. time saved in download can offset other components
- xml parsing/querying in raw js is roughly equiv with json
- xml parsing/querying in jquery is much slower ... I won't begrudge jquery developers to focus on json
overall, tech that speeds up modern browsers also applies to xml processing as well.
generally, whenever I hear json touted as a 'lowfat' alternative to XML I wonder if its not some subliminal obsession with weight issues ... thats on my pessimistic days;
basically the rule of thumb I follow is
markup good for documents json good for data
and move on ... nothing to see here
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3Excellent point that JSON is good for data and XML is good for documents. It stands to reason that XML compresses better, there's more redundant information. Commented Jul 27, 2015 at 22:48
The best way to answer this is to test it yourself, since compression is involved. You also neatly avoid the XML vs JSON holy war by having an objective answer!
Since it's just a test and doesn't really need to work, you could just write up an xml->json converter in javascript that walked the XML DOM tree and copied it into a nested array/object structure then passed it to JSON.stringify(). The only tricky bit would be deciding what becomes an array and what becomes an object.
Find a representative sample (or a few) of the data being sent, convert it to JSON with your tool, gzip it and the original XML and compare sizes.
Note: I looked around for an online XML->JSON converter and they were all terrible--copius whitespace outside of quotes (illegal in JSON, alters size) and unquoted key names (ditto). Don't use them for your test or you'll get bad data.
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3I wasn't aware that there was an XML vs JSON holy war. Commented Apr 26, 2010 at 13:48
Generally speaking, JSON is much faster and smaller than the equivalent XML. XML is richer in that you can store metadata (attributes) and content separately, but the same can be achieved in JSON with appropriate structuring conventions.
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7I don't agree with this general statement. I can write an equivalent XML doc that is more compact than JSON, if I confine myself to using attributes. If I use more of the power of XML, as you said, using both attributes and elements, the XML document will become larger than the original JSON document, but it also holds the potential to convey more meaning. It's wrong to flatly state, "JSON is smaller". It isn't. Common use of JSON is smaller than common use of XML (where everything is an element), but the common use is not required.– CheesoCommented Apr 20, 2010 at 17:56
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2@Cheeso: Firstly, common use is the only thing that counts in the real world. Secondly, I suspect that only way to make XML smaller is to violate recommended practice such as not using attributes to store content. See here for an exposition of some of the principles of XML design, with authoritative supporting references; note how verbose the final example is. An equivalent JSON might be:
{"menu":[{"portion":[250,"mL"], "name":"Small soft drink"}, {"portion":[500,"g"], "name":"Sirloin steak"}]}
. Commented Apr 21, 2010 at 2:31 -
1@Marcelo, regarding common use, I don't agree with your viewpoint. How other people format their XML has no bearing on whether I can or should use it in server-to-browser communication in my app. Aso, regarding the article, it's fine to make recommendations, but what weight do they hold in this particular case? Why follow them? As I said in my full answer, if you force the XML to be verbose, it will be verbose. If you allow yourself to use the more succint XML usage, then it will be comparable with JSON in length.– CheesoCommented Apr 21, 2010 at 16:28
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2@Cheeso, On common use: When someone sends you a SOAP packet, you can't say, "Can I have all attributes, please?" If you live on an island, by all means do whatever you want, but that's not what XML is about. On the article: Getting from A to B is much quicker at double the speed limit. XML design guidelines aren't plucked from thin air; the authors hope to steer you clear of blind alleys. You can disagree, just don't argue that your XML is succinct because you ignore good advice. Also, my JSON example has the same structure as in the article. You can only shrink the XML by hiding structure. Commented Apr 22, 2010 at 0:37
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2You are correct, if someone else picks the data format, I can't ask them to change it. But that's not what the original question was about. In the orig question, the asker was choosing the data format. Regarding the "hiding structure" side effect of shrinking XML, you are correct. But you fail to mention that JSON lacks that structure; the shrunken XML duplicates the structure of a JSON representation. As for "that's not what XML is about"... I have no idea what that means. You seem to want to argue strongly against the idea that XML is of comparable size to JSON. Not sure why.– CheesoCommented Apr 22, 2010 at 1:26
Yes JSON would be about 30% faster there are fewer characters going over the line and its very quick to parse.
Ypu could also take a look at "YAML" which sends an absolute mininmum of metadata in the message.
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4
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The 30% is just my personal perceived experience. You can write more compact exml using atributes rather than tags but XML tends twards a "longer is better" way of thinking and compact XML will look "wrong" to any xml guru. Also because JSON is pretty much JavaScript its pretty easy write an efficient parser in JavaScript ( something more than "eval" which works on most JSON!) and frameworks like DOJO have excellent JSON parsers. Commented Apr 22, 2010 at 1:18
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1The reason why XML seems to favour elements over attributes is the fact that you can control elements and their contents far better than you can control attributes and their contents. My source is personal experience with WXS, though I have a feeling that RNG would disprove that idea. It's all a matter of personal experience. Generally though, XML looks better with elements than with attributes, and elements are a requirement in some cases (unless you want attributes like "person-1", "person-2", ..., "person-N"). That means that similar JSON (they can't always be equivalent) is smaller.– DustinCommented Apr 22, 2010 at 1:43
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I hate to play devil's advocate, but 30% does sound like a made up figure! ;-) Commented Apr 26, 2010 at 13:38
<person firstname='Fred'
lastname='Flintstone'
age='38'
spouse='Wilma'/>
"person":{"firstname":"Fred",
"lastname":"Flintstone",
"age":38,
"spouse":"Wilma" }
XML: 80 chars
JSON: 92 chars.
XML is the 13% slimmer winner, who would have thought for all the bogus claims?
[Example taken from Cheeso above. Note that carriage return types change the size but equally for both. Without any returns in either, the ratio is XML: 74, JSON: 86, a 14% difference]
Someone claimed in this discussion that "using attributes for content is cheating" (citing [this][1]).
1) Pray tell how well formed XML is 'cheating'? If it doesn't cheat the (very long) spec, then let's please get over it. Valid is valid.
2) In that case an ASP.NET web.config is 'cheating', among a thousand other big-dog examples.
<forms loginUrl="~/Home/Login"
defaultUrl="~/Home"
timeout="2880"
requireSSL="false"
slidingExpiration="true" />
To be fair, there are those who tend to have a bloated-XML mentality in how they form the XML.
But it should not be said that the 13% slimmer XML variety is not just as valid. And thus it even beats JSON (in size).
[1]: http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/xml/library/x-eleatt/index.html [2004 article, mind you]
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10Not "cheating" but certainly a very poor example for comparison. It's highly optimised to make XML win (it doesn't even use any non-self-closing tags which typical XML files are full of).– NickGCommented May 16, 2013 at 16:26
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Hey @NickG, you shouldn't give down votes for matters of personal preference, particularly when my answer was 100% factual and scientific in nature. Commented May 19, 2013 at 4:09
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12You're totally missing my point. The example you've used is for the ideal case of "flat" tabular data which could easily be stored in CSV even more efficiently than JSON. XML was invented to fulfil the need to store multi-level data (a data tree) or to represent objects in serial form. When data is heavily nested, you cannot store every record on one line with attributes only and a self closing tag. You've basically chosen the best case scenario (flat data) rather than a more real-word example XML was designed for.– NickGCommented May 19, 2013 at 8:20
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3I give up. I have no problem with self-closing tags; I use them myself all the time. As I clearly said, I only have a problem with the poor example you used to demonstrate your point. As you're clearly offended by comments, I'll upvote your answer again when the site allows me to.– NickGCommented May 20, 2013 at 8:50
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1It's poor example. Is has only one node. And that's excemptional case. It does not use main feature of XML and JSON: the ability to hold complex data. You could go further and compare <p/> to {p:{}}. JSON will be 50% larger then XML. but that's will be an example as bad as you provided.– babayCommented May 26, 2019 at 3:20