58

I have a Java class, User:

public class User
{
    int id;
    String name;
    Timestamp updateDate;
}

And I receive a JSON list containing user objects from a webservice:

[{"id":1,"name":"Jonas","update_date":"1300962900226"},
{"id":5,"name":"Test","date_date":"1304782298024"}]

I have tried to write a custom deserializer:

@Override
public User deserialize(JsonElement json, Type type,
                        JsonDeserializationContext context) throws JsonParseException {

        return new User(
            json.getAsJsonPrimitive().getAsInt(),
            json.getAsString(),
            json.getAsInt(),
            (Timestamp)context.deserialize(json.getAsJsonPrimitive(),
            Timestamp.class));
}

But my deserializer doesn't work. How can I write a custom JSON deserializer for Gson?

3

3 Answers 3

95

I'd take a slightly different approach as follows, so as to minimize "manual" parsing in my code, as unnecessarily doing otherwise somewhat defeats the purpose of why I'd use an API like Gson in the first place.

// output:
// [User: id=1, name=Jonas, updateDate=2011-03-24 03:35:00.226]
// [User: id=5, name=Test, updateDate=2011-05-07 08:31:38.024]

// using java.sql.Timestamp

public class Foo
{
  static String jsonInput = 
    "[" +
      "{\"id\":1,\"name\":\"Jonas\",\"update_date\":\"1300962900226\"}," +
      "{\"id\":5,\"name\":\"Test\",\"update_date\":\"1304782298024\"}" +
    "]";

  public static void main(String[] args)
  {
    GsonBuilder gsonBuilder = new GsonBuilder();
    gsonBuilder.setFieldNamingPolicy(FieldNamingPolicy.LOWER_CASE_WITH_UNDERSCORES);
    gsonBuilder.registerTypeAdapter(Timestamp.class, new TimestampDeserializer());
    Gson gson = gsonBuilder.create();
    User[] users = gson.fromJson(jsonInput, User[].class);
    for (User user : users)
    {
      System.out.println(user);
    }
  }
}

class User
{
  int id;
  String name;
  Timestamp updateDate;

  @Override
  public String toString()
  {
    return String.format(
      "[User: id=%1$d, name=%2$s, updateDate=%3$s]",
      id, name, updateDate);
  }
}

class TimestampDeserializer implements JsonDeserializer<Timestamp>
{
  @Override
  public Timestamp deserialize(JsonElement json, Type typeOfT, JsonDeserializationContext context)
      throws JsonParseException
  {
    long time = Long.parseLong(json.getAsString());
    return new Timestamp(time);
  }
}

(This assumes that "date_date" should be "update_date", in the original question.)

5
  • 3
    I definitely prefer this model - if Timestamp is the only thing failing to parse, better to make Timestamp deserializable, rather than manually parse the whole User object, when Gson is already perfectly capable of doing so.
    – dimo414
    Commented Oct 19, 2012 at 13:14
  • small edit. we can use "return new Timestamp(json.getAsLong());" instead of "long time = Long.parseLong(json.getAsString()); return new Timestamp(time);"
    – Nishanth
    Commented Jan 7, 2016 at 20:53
  • You can also method-chain the GsonBuilder, improving readability.
    – MC Emperor
    Commented Sep 11, 2017 at 12:43
  • 1
    Is there any method to know the field name that is processing currently in Deserializer?
    – Alanight
    Commented May 22, 2018 at 6:53
  • excellent answer...it solved my problem perfectly....thanks alot :)
    – Murli
    Commented Nov 15, 2019 at 13:54
61
@Override
public User deserialize(JsonElement json, Type type,
        JsonDeserializationContext context) throws JsonParseException {

    JsonObject jobject = json.getAsJsonObject();

    return new User(
            jobject.get("id").getAsInt(), 
            jobject.get("name").getAsString(), 
            new Timestamp(jobject.get("update_date").getAsLong()));
}

I'm assuming User class has the appropriate constructor.

2
  • 1
    This approach defeats the whole purpose of GSON.
    – SMR
    Commented Sep 5, 2021 at 5:42
  • I agree, it should rather be return context.deserialize(json, User.class);
    – nilesh
    Commented Feb 5, 2022 at 18:56
1

Today I was looking for this thing as my class had java.time.Instant and the default gson could not deserialize it. My POJOs look like this:

open class RewardResult(
  @SerializedName("id")
  var id: Int,
  @SerializedName("title")
  var title: String?,
  @SerializedName("details")
  var details: String?,
  @SerializedName("image")
  var image: String?,
  @SerializedName("start_time")
  var startTimeUtcZulu: Instant?,   // Unit: Utc / Zulu. Unit is very important
  @SerializedName("end_time")
  var endTimeUtcZulu: Instant?,
  @SerializedName("unlock_expiry")
  var unlockExpiryTimeUtcZulu: Instant?,
  @SerializedName("target")
  var target: Int,
  @SerializedName("reward")
  var rewardItem: RewardItem
);

data class RewardItem(
  @SerializedName("type")
  var type: String?,
  @SerializedName("item_id")
  var itemId: Int,
  @SerializedName("amount")
  var amount: Int
)

Then for Instant variables, I parse the json's time variables and convert string to Instant. For integer , string, etc I use jsonObject.get("id").asInt etc. For other pojo, I use the default deserializer like this:

val rewardItem: RewardItem = context!!.deserialize(rewardJsonElement,
        RewardItem::class.java);

So the corresponding custom deserializer looks like this:

  val customDeserializer: JsonDeserializer<RewardResult> = object : JsonDeserializer<RewardResult> {
    override fun deserialize(json: JsonElement?, typeOfT: Type?, context: JsonDeserializationContext?): RewardResult {
      val jsonObject: JsonObject = json!!.asJsonObject;

      val startTimeString: String? = jsonObject.get("start_time")?.asString;
      var startTimeUtcZulu: Instant? = createTimeInstant(startTimeString);


      val endTimeString: String? = jsonObject.get("end_time")?.asString;
      var endTimeUtcZulu: Instant? = createTimeInstant(endTimeString);

      val unlockExpiryStr: String? = jsonObject.get("unlock_expiry")?.asString;
      var unlockExpiryUtcZulu: Instant? = createTimeInstant(unlockExpiryStr);

      val rewardJsonElement: JsonElement = jsonObject.get("reward");
      val rewardItem: ridmik.one.modal.reward.RewardItem = context!!.deserialize(rewardJsonElement,
          ridmik.one.modal.reward.RewardItem::class.java);  // I suppose this line means use the default jsonDeserializer

      var output: ridmik.one.modal.reward.RewardResult = ridmik.one.modal.reward.RewardResult(
          id = jsonObject.get("id").asInt,
          title = jsonObject.get("title")?.asString,
          details = jsonObject.get("details")?.asString,
          image = jsonObject.get("image")?.asString,
          startTimeUtcZulu = startTimeUtcZulu,
          endTimeUtcZulu = endTimeUtcZulu,
          unlockExpiryTimeUtcZulu = unlockExpiryUtcZulu,
          target = jsonObject.get("target").asInt,
          rewardItem = rewardItem
      );

      Timber.tag(TAG).e("output = "+output);

      return output;
    }

  }

Finally, I create my custom gson like this:

 val gsonBuilder = GsonBuilder();
 gsonBuilder.registerTypeAdapter(RewardResult::class.javaObjectType,
          this.customJsonDeserializer);
      val customGson: Gson = gsonBuilder.create();

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