Use FlexJSON, it's really easy. It allows you to create JSONSerializers which can include/exclude the fields you want.
Check out this article for some examples of using it with Play! Framework.
Here's a simple example:
public ComplexClass {
public Long id;
public String name;
// And lots of other fields you don't want
public String toJsonString() {
// Include id & name, exclude all others.
JSONSerializer ser = new JSONSerializer().include(
"id",
"name",
).exclude("*");
return ser.serialize(this);
}
}
You can add it to your dependencies.yml like so:
require:
- play
- net.sf.flexjson -> flexjson 2.1
What I usually do is write an interface for models that implements a toJSONString()
method so that I can call renderJSON(someModel.toJSONString())
in the controller.
Link to official website
EDIT: Extra example for lists/collections
Ok, when you start serializing list you might get some unexpected results. This is because the order of evaluation is important. The first include()
or exclude()
takes precedence over the following ones.
Here's an example of serializing the childs of a parent entity (OneToMany relation).
JSONSerializer ser = new JSONSerializer();
// Exclude these standard fields from childs
ser.exclude(
"*.persistent",
"*.class",
"*.entityId"
);
// Include childs and all its other fields
ser.include(
"childs",
"childs.*"
);
// Exclude everything else
ser.exclude("*");
String data = ser.serialize(parent);
The *
is a wildcard by the way. This piece of documentation explains it perfectly:
An exclude of *.class
will match to any path depth. So if flexjson is serializing the field with path of "foo.bar.class" the *
in *.class
will match foo.bar.