14

For json mapping I use the following method:

public static <T> T mapJsonToObject(String json, T dtoClass) throws Exception {
    ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
    return mapper.readValue(json, new TypeReference<RestResponse<UserDto>>() {
    });
}

And UserDto looks like this:

@JsonIgnoreProperties(ignoreUnknown = true)
public class UserDto {

    @JsonProperty("items")
    private List<User> userList;

    public List<User> getUserList() {
        return userList;
    }

    public void setUserList(List<User> userList) {
        this.userList = userList;
    }
}

I want to improve this method of mapping without being attached to a UserDto class, and replacing it with a generic.

Is it possible? And How?

Thanks.

2
  • @Dici I want to pass a generic class to the method as an argument and call TypeReference something like this: new TypeReference<RestResponse<generic_type_here>>() Jan 3, 2016 at 16:45
  • Your question is more or less the same as this except for Jackson rather than Gson. The answer remains the same, you just need to adapt the library APIs. Jan 3, 2016 at 19:29

4 Answers 4

11

TypeReference requires you to specify parameters statically, not dynamically, so it does not work if you need to further parameterize types.

What I think you need is JavaType: you can build instances dynamically by using TypeFactory. You get an instance of TypeFactory via ObjectMapper.getTypeFactory(). You can also construct JavaType instances from simple Class as well as TypeReference.

1
5

One approach will be to define a Jackson JavaType representing a list of items of type clazz. You still need to have access to the class of the generic parameter at runtime. The usual approach is something like

<T> class XX { XX(Class<T> clazz, ...) ... } 

to pass the class of the generic parameter into the generic class at construction.

Upon access to the Class clazz variable you can construct a Jackson JavaType representing, for example, a list of items of class clazz with the following statement.

JavaType itemType = mapper.getTypeFactory().constructCollectionType(List.class, clazz);

I hope it helped. I am using this approach in my own code.

0

Try this:

    import com.fasterxml.jackson.databind.ObjectMapper;
    import java.lang.reflect.Array;
    import java.util.Arrays;
    
    ...        


    public static <TargetType> List<TargetType> convertToList(String jsonString, Class<TargetType> targetTypeClass) {
        List<TargetType> listOfTargetObjects = null;
        ObjectMapper objectMapper = new ObjectMapper();
        TargetType[] arrayOfTargetType = (TargetType[]) Array.newInstance(targetTypeClass, 0);

        try {
            listOfTargetObjects = (List<TargetType>) Arrays.asList(objectMapper.readValue(jsonString, arrayOfTargetType.getClass()));
        } catch (JsonMappingException jsonMappingException) {
            listOfTargetObjects = null;
        } catch (JsonProcessingException jsonProcessingException) {
            listOfTargetObjects = null;
        } catch (Exception exception) {
            listOfTargetObjects = null;
        }

        return listOfTargetObjects;
    }
...
0

This is an example of parsing simple List based generics with Jackson, with a simple Java annotation!

package innovate.tamergroup.lastmiledelivery.loader.otm.models;

import java.util.List;

import javax.annotation.Generated;

import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.JsonInclude
import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.JsonProperty;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.JsonPropertyOrder;
import com.fasterxml.jackson.annotation.JsonTypeInfo;

@JsonInclude(JsonInclude.Include.NON_NULL)
@JsonPropertyOrder({
    "hasMore",
    "limit",
    "count",
    "offset",
    "items",
    "links"
})
@Generated("jsonschema2pojo")
public class OTMListWrapper<T> {

@JsonProperty("hasMore")
private Boolean hasMore;
@JsonProperty("limit")
private Long limit;
@JsonProperty("count")
private Long count;
@JsonProperty("offset")
private Long offset;
@JsonTypeInfo(use=JsonTypeInfo.Id.NONE, include=JsonTypeInfo.As.PROPERTY, property="items")
private List<T> items = null;
@JsonProperty("links")
private List<OTMLink> links = null;

@JsonProperty("hasMore")
public Boolean getHasMore() {
    return hasMore;
}

@JsonProperty("hasMore")
public void setHasMore(Boolean hasMore) {
    this.hasMore = hasMore;
}

public OTMListWrapper<T> withHasMore(Boolean hasMore) {
    this.hasMore = hasMore;
    return this;
}

@JsonProperty("limit")
public Long getLimit() {
    return limit;
}

@JsonProperty("limit")
public void setLimit(Long limit) {
    this.limit = limit;
}

public OTMListWrapper<T> withLimit(Long limit) {
    this.limit = limit;
    return this;
}

@JsonProperty("count")
public Long getCount() {
    return count;
}

@JsonProperty("count")
public void setCount(Long count) {
    this.count = count;
}

public OTMListWrapper<T> withCount(Long count) {
    this.count = count;
    return this;
}

@JsonProperty("offset")
public Long getOffset() {
    return offset;
}

@JsonProperty("offset")
public void setOffset(Long offset) {
    this.offset = offset;
}

public OTMListWrapper<T> withOffset(Long offset) {
    this.offset = offset;
    return this;
}

@JsonProperty("items")
public List<T> getItems() {
    return items;
}

@JsonProperty("items")
public void setItems(List<T> items) {
    this.items = items;
}

public OTMListWrapper<T> withItems(List<T> items) {
    this.items = items;
    return this;
}

@JsonProperty("links")
public List<OTMLink> getLinks() {
    return links;
}

@JsonProperty("links")
public void setLinks(List<OTMLink> links) {
    this.links = links;
}

public OTMListWrapper<T> withLinks(List<OTMLink> links) {
    this.links = links;
    return this;
}

}

Your Answer

Reminder: Answers generated by Artificial Intelligence tools are not allowed on Stack Overflow. Learn more

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

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