1

I've got a JSON::Any, and when I access the "params" key I get a JSON::Any representing this:

{"a":0.9029593355545088,"b":2,"lh":1000,"ph":10,"pl":1}

I'd like to turn this into a Hash(String, Float64) and the simplest way I've found to do this is using to_json and then from_json since Hash#from_json doesn't accept the JSON::Any type.

params = Hash(String, Float64).from_json(json["params"].to_json)

It seems like I'm missing a concept or idiom somewhere. Is there a better way?


PS

If you want to play around with this, here's a snippet:

require "json"
json_string = %({"params": {"a": 1.2, "b": 2}})
json = JSON.parse(json_string)
Hash(String, Float64).from_json(json["params"].to_json)

Please note that in my code I don't have such easy access to json_string. Because it's buried in a much larger json response, I have to parse it to get down there and once parsed I have a JSON::Any. Thus it would seem I need to turn it back into a json string before I can turn it into a hash using from_json.

1 Answer 1

2

JSON.parse returns a JSON::Any, so you could use its handy casting helpers:

json["params"].as_h.transform_values(&.raw.as(Float64|Int64).to_f)

However if the structure is well defined, it's much better to make use of JSON::Serializable:

record ApiResponse, params : Hash(String, Float64) do
  include JSON::Serializable
end

json_string = %({"params": {"a": 1.2, "b": 2}})
json = ApiResponse.from_json(json_string)
json.params # => {"a" => 1.2, "b" => 2.0}

Or even better yet:

record ApiResponse, params : ApiParams do
  include JSON::Serializable
end

record ApiParams, a : Float64, b : Float64 do
  include JSON::Serializable
end

json_string = %({"params": {"a": 1.2, "b": 2}})
json = ApiResponse.from_json(json_string)
json.params # => ApiParams(@a=1.2, @b=2.0)
3
  • Thanks! I'm not familiar with that record macro (method?). Could you help me out with a link to some docs? Also, am I right that none of these take JSON::Any as an argument. So if I already have JSON::Any I'll need to first go to a string to_json before I can do the above?
    – KCE
    Oct 21, 2020 at 20:45
  • 1
    The suggestion here is to map your entire schema using these kinds of structs, replacing your entry point JSON.parse already and thus completely sidestepping JSON::Any. record is just a handy shortcut to defining a struct with a couple of property's.
    – Jonne Haß
    Oct 21, 2020 at 20:55
  • Oh I see now, so the more idiomatic way is to create matching structs and classes on the receiving end so that the entire JSON message is modeled. Of course, that makes sense now. Thank you!
    – KCE
    Oct 22, 2020 at 1:12

Your Answer

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

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