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I have this code that deserializes a JSON string.
Now we can see that the JSON string has for example this property: (Please notice that the CORS property exist under the "has" property so we need to check if "has" also exist before I beleive)

CORS

My question is. Sometimes it do happens that this property could be missing in the JSON string. As seen I use the below code where I use the try/catch block. Because if the CORS property is missing, I get an exception but exceptions are very performance expensive and now I use the try/catch block on 30 properties.

I then wonder how can we check with code if the CORS property exists first? Below line of code WITHOUT try/catch gives this error when CORS does not exist:

Cannot perform runtime binding on a null reference

String corsvalue = "";
try { corsvalue = deserializedTicker.has.CORS.ToLower(); } catch { }

JSON string:

{ 
  "id": "hello", 
  "name": "Hello",
  "has": { 
    "CORS": false,
    "CORS2": true
  },
  "has2": { 
    "CORS3": false,
    "CORS4": true
  }
}

Complete code:

String JSONstring = "{ \"id\": \"hello\", \"name\": \"Hello\", \"has\": { \"CORS\": false, \"CORS2\": true }, \"has2\": { \"CORS3\": false, \"CORS4\": true } }\";"

var deserializedTicker = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<JsonInfo>(JSONstring);

String corsvalue = "";
try { corsvalue = deserializedTicker.has.CORS.ToLower(); } catch { }


public class JsonInfo 
{
  public string id { get; set; }
  public string name { get; set; }
  public JsonHasInfo has { get; set; }
  public JsonHas2Info has2 { get; set; }
}

public class JsonHasInfo
{
  public bool CORS { get; set; }
  public bool CORS2 { get; set; }
}

public class JsonHas2Info
{
  public bool CORS3 { get; set; }
  public bool CORS4 { get; set; }
}
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  • 2
    I know it is bad style to answer a question with a question, but i will do it anyway. My apologies. What are you trying to achieve by attempting to invoke ToLower() on a bool value (CORS is a property of type bool)? What is the meaning of this?
    – user2819245
    Mar 7, 2019 at 18:51
  • Yes I know I put it to a string, not the best but working. I do use a Dictionary of the string type and just thought to put all values as string as I have double,int and String in my original code.
    – Andreas
    Mar 7, 2019 at 18:56
  • Did you carefully read What is NRE post already? (I think it is really duplicate, but maybe you are asking for something different than "better way for check if property is null than using NRE for flow control") Mar 7, 2019 at 18:56
  • @alexei I have not red that, I could see that the link was very large and red a few pages but are not sure how to relate that to this exactly. I wonder if this is a valid way to do it or wrong? deserializedTicker.has != null and then check for: deserializedTicker.has.CORS != null
    – Andreas
    Mar 7, 2019 at 19:02
  • By the way, a property (sometimes) missing in serialized Json data is just the property having the default value and the Json serializer just omitted writing/serializing the property with the default value. I don't know what your motivation/needs are that seemingly requires from you to test whether a property is explicitly present in the json data; but it kinda strikes me as an odd requirement to have...
    – user2819245
    Mar 7, 2019 at 19:06

1 Answer 1

2

Here you go:

String JSONstring = "{ \"id\": \"hello\", \"name\": \"Hello\", \"has\": { \"CORS\": false, \"CORS2\": true }, \"has2\": { \"CORS3\": false, \"CORS4\": true }}";

            JObject jobject = JObject.Parse(JSONstring);

            JToken cors = jobject.SelectToken("has.CORS");
            if (cors != null)
            {
                JsonInfo myEvent = jobject.ToObject<JsonInfo>();
            }
2
  • @Alders Yes, that seem to actually work. I just tested this out right now. It looks like a good solution. Thank you!
    – Andreas
    Mar 7, 2019 at 19:43
  • You really should be using bool? is you need try-state Boolean values... Mar 7, 2019 at 19:51

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