You could write a model:
public class MyModel
{
public string AString { get; set; }
}
and then use a JSON serializer such as Json.NET:
string readString = "{\"aString\":\"Read me please!\"}";
MyModel model = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<MyModel>(readString);
Console.WriteLine(model.AString);
If you don't want to use third party solutions you could use the built-in JavaScriptSerializer
class:
string readString = "{\"aString\":\"Read me please!\"}";
MyModel model = new JavaScriptSerializer().Deserialize<MyModel>(readString);
Console.WriteLine(model.AString);
Now assuming you want to handle your second JSON string you could simply adapt your model:
public class Wrapper
{
public MyModel Result { get; set; }
}
public class MyModel
{
public string AString { get; set; }
public string AnotherString { get; set; }
}
and then deserialize to this wrapper class:
string readString = ... the JSON string in your second example ...;
Wrapper wrapper = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Wrapper>(readString);
Console.WriteLine(wrapper.Result.AString);
Console.WriteLine(wrapper.Result.AnotherString);
UPDATE:
And if you don't want to deserialize to a model you could directly do this:
string readString = "{\"aString\":\"Read me please!\"}";
var res = (JObject)JsonConvert.DeserializeObject(readString);
Console.WriteLine(res.Value<string>("aString"));
or with the built-in JavaScriptSerializer
class:
string readString = "{\"aString\":\"Read me please!\"}";
var serializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
var res = (IDictionary<string, object>)serializer.DeserializeObject(readString);
Console.WriteLine(res["aString"]);
Read me please!
from json string intovar readString =