I need to convert a string {\"name\":\"test name\", \"age\":25}
to a JSONObject
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This URL might be a good starting point for you: stackoverflow.com/questions/41928803/…– PacificNW_LoverMay 31, 2017 at 22:40
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Depends on which kind of JSONObject, for org.json see stleary.github.io/JSON-java– F. GeorgeJun 1, 2017 at 0:18
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2And what backend? Java or JS?– glee8eJun 1, 2017 at 0:36
4 Answers
Perhaps I'm misunderstanding the question but it sounds like you are already using org.json which begs the question about why
val answer = JSONObject("""{"name":"test name", "age":25}""")
wouldn't be the best way to do it? What was wrong with the built in functionality of JSONObject?
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4Did you test your example using Kotlin? If yes, what version of the library did you use? If you try that with JSONObject version
org.json:json:20200518
you'll see that the contructor with a String object is not available in the JSONObject. Sep 29, 2020 at 13:28 -
Yes actually and given that the answer was provided back in 2017 I'm sure there have been quite a number of changes that have taken place over the past 3 years. However, the link to which json version is in the original post's comment. Here is a direct link to the javadoc stleary.github.io/JSON-java/org/json/JSONObject.html– RybaOct 4, 2020 at 15:16
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I just pulled up the 20200518 version of the source code and see that it does still support the string constructor just fine. Line 405 on github.com/stleary/JSON-java/blob/…– RybaOct 4, 2020 at 15:26
val rootObject= JSONObject()
rootObject.put("name","test name")
rootObject.put("age","25")
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7This answer assumes you already know the fields and values, which the asker can't know if they haven't parsed the string yet. Mar 6, 2019 at 18:14
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3How did this answer get so many upvotes!? It does not answer the question. The input data should be a JSON string, this example shows how to build a new JSONObject field by field. Sep 29, 2020 at 13:23
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2I know this doesn't answer the OP's question, but this did help me understand how to easily create JSON out of my data objects without adding another lib to my project. Dec 10, 2020 at 4:02
You can use https://github.com/cbeust/klaxon library.
val parser: Parser = Parser()
val stringBuilder: StringBuilder = StringBuilder("{\"name\":\"Cedric Beust\", \"age\":23}")
val json: JsonObject = parser.parse(stringBuilder) as JsonObject
println("Name : ${json.string("name")}, Age : ${json.int("age")}")
Result :
Name : Cedric Beust, Age : 23
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2This way is more preferable if you going to use this object as a result of API method since
JsonObject
from klaxon knows how to serialize itself back to Json. Aug 7, 2017 at 19:41 -
2
The approaches above are a bit dangerous: They don't provide a solution for illegal chars. They don't do the escaping... And we hate to do the escaping ourselves, don't we?
So here's what I did. Not that cute and clean but you have to do it only once.
class JsonBuilder() {
private var json = JSONObject()
constructor(vararg pairs: Pair<String, *>) : this() {
add(*pairs)
}
fun add(vararg pairs: Pair<String, *>) {
for ((key, value) in pairs) {
when (value) {
is Boolean -> json.put(key, value)
is Number -> add(key, value)
is String -> json.put(key, value)
is JsonBuilder -> json.put(key, value.json)
is Array<*> -> add(key, value)
is JSONObject -> json.put(key, value)
is JSONArray -> json.put(key, value)
else -> json.put(key, null) // Or whatever, on illegal input
}
}
}
fun add(key: String, value: Number): JsonBuilder {
when (value) {
is Int -> json.put(key, value)
is Long -> json.put(key, value)
is Float -> json.put(key, value)
is Double -> json.put(key, value)
else -> {} // Do what you do on error
}
return this
}
fun <T> add(key: String, items: Array<T>): JsonBuilder {
val jsonArray = JSONArray()
items.forEach {
when (it) {
is String,is Long,is Int, is Boolean -> jsonArray.put(it)
is JsonBuilder -> jsonArray.put(it.json)
else -> try {jsonArray.put(it)} catch (ignored:Exception) {/*handle the error*/}
}
}
json.put(key, jsonArray)
return this
}
override fun toString() = json.toString()
}
Sorry, might have had to cut off types that were unique to my code so I might have broken some stuff - but the idea should be clear
You might be aware that in Kotlin, "to" is an infix method that converts two objects to a Pair. So you use it simply like this:
JsonBuilder(
"name" to "Amy Winehouse",
"age" to 27
).toString()
But you can do cuter things:
JsonBuilder(
"name" to "Elvis Presley",
"furtherDetails" to JsonBuilder(
"GreatestHits" to arrayOf("Surrender", "Jailhouse rock"),
"Genre" to "Rock",
"Died" to 1977)
).toString()
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1This solution is also not valid. It's showing how to build a JSONObject field by field. Sep 29, 2020 at 13:24