Im trying to serialize my dictionary that looks like that:
private Dictionary<MetaDataKey, User> _dictionary;
where MetaDataKey and Users classes looks like that:
internal class User
{
public string UserName { get; set; }
public string UserPassword { get; set; }
public List<Account> Accounts { get; set; }
}
internal class Account
{
public string Subject { get; set; }
public string AccName { get; set; }
public string AccPass { get; set; }
public List<string> Notes { get; set; }
}
internal class MetaDataKey
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public string Password { get; set; }
}
I am trying to save\load the dictionary to\from a json file like this:
private void DictionaryInit()
{
//gets the dictionary file if exists, create an empty one if not.
string path = Directory.GetCurrentDirectory() + "\\dic.json";
if (!File.Exists(path))
{
_dictionary = new Dictionary<MetaDataKey, User>();
return;
}
using (StreamReader r = new StreamReader(path))
{
string json = r.ReadToEnd();
_dictionary = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Dictionary<MetaDataKey, User>>(json);
}
}
public void DictionarySave()
{
//save the dictionary into dic.json file
string path = Directory.GetCurrentDirectory() + "\\dic.json";
string json = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(_dictionary);
File.WriteAllText(path, json);
}
when I am loading a new record to the dictionary and trying to save it I get:
{"WpfApplication2.MetaDataKey":{"UserName":"Enter Name","UserPassword":"Enter Password","Accounts":null}}
instead of:
{"WpfApplication2.MetaDataKey":{"Name":"Enter Name","Password":"Enter Password"},"WpfApplication2.User":{"UserName":"Enter Name","UserPassword":"Enter Password","Accounts":null}}
as you can tell, I am getting the fields of Users in MetaDataKey class.
even after I fix it manualy I am still getting exception:
An exception of type 'Newtonsoft.Json.JsonSerializationException' occurred in Newtonsoft.Json.dll but was not handled in user code
when I am trying to load a non-empty file.
In conclusion, 2 problems:
1. bad json saving.
2. bad json loading
From the documentation of Json.Net:
When serializing a dictionary, the keys of the dictionary are converted to strings and used as the JSON object property names. The string written for a key can be customized by either overriding ToString() for the key type or by implementing a TypeConverter. A TypeConverter will also support converting a custom string back again when deserializing a dictionary.
You have two options:
like the documentation suggests: create a TypeConverter for your MetaDataKey and link it with attribute ([TypeConverter(typeof(MetaDataKeyConverter))]) - This is not trivial as you will have to convert the MetaDataKey to json string yourself, and also deserialize from string.
Create a JsonConverter for dictionary and use it in your JsonConvert.SerializeObject and JsonConvert.DeserializeObject methods.
The simplest thing you can do is to convert the dictinary to a List<KeyValuePair<MetaData,User>> this is easy as _dictionary.ToList()
So for serializing:
string json = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(_dictionary.ToList());
And for deserialize:
_dictionary =
JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<List<KeyValuePair<MetaDataKey, User>>>(json)
.ToDictionary(kv => kv.Key, kv => kv.Value);
For most cases I would choose option 3
Try to use JsonProperty attribute like the following:
internal class User
{
[JsonProperty("UserName ")]
public string UserName { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("UserPassword")]
public string UserPassword { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("Accounts ")]
public List<Account> Accounts { get; set; }
}
Related
I got this strange API response from one external service:
{emplooye: "Michael",age:"25",attachments:[{idAttachment: "23",attachmentPath:"C://Users/1"},{idAttachment: "24",attachmentPath:"C://Users/2"}]},{emplooye: "John",age:"30",attachments:{idAttachment: "25",attachmentPath:"C://Users/3"}}
Has anyone ever faced a situation where sometimes the "Attachment" property can be an array, sometimes it can be an object? I created a class to manipulate the data, but when I find an object, the code breaks.
I'm doing this in C#.
Class Used
public class Attachments
{
public string idAttachment{ get; set; }
public string attachmentPath{ get; set; }
}
public class Root
{
public string emplooye {get; set;}
public string age {get;set}
public List<Attachments> attachments { get; set; } = new List<Attachments>();
}
your json is not even close to json, should be something like this
var json = "[{\"emplooye\":\"Michael\",\"age\":\"25\",\"attachments\":[{\"idAttachment\":\"23\",\"attachmentPath\":\"C://Users/1\"},{\"idAttachment\":\"24\",\"attachmentPath\":\"C://Users/2\"}]},{\"emplooye\":\"John\",\"age\":\"30\",\"attachments\":{\"idAttachment\":\"25\",\"attachmentPath\":\"C://Users/3\"}}]";
Using Newtonsoft.Json you can create a JsonConstructor
using Newtonsoft.Json;
List<Data> data= JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<List<Data>>(json);
public class Data
{
public string emplooye { get; set; }
public string age { get; set; }
public List<Attachments> attachments { get; set; }
[JsonConstructor]
public Data(JToken attachments)
{
if (attachments.Type.ToString() == "Array")
this.attachments = attachments.ToObject<List<Attachments>>();
else
this.attachments = new List<Attachments> { attachments.ToObject<Attachments>() };
}
public Data() {}
}
public class Attachments
{
public string idAttachment { get; set; }
public string attachmentPath { get; set; }
}
You can use Newtonsoft to parse to a JToken which will handle the typing for you, but with the downside of not having a stable and predictable class to deserialize to automatically
Then, you would want to check its type, which returns a JTokenType enum
Once you know what the underlying types are, marshal the data into your DTO classes
JToken responseJT = JToken.Parse(json); //json string
if (responseJT.Type == JTokenType.Array)
//its an array, handle as needed ...
else if (responseJT.Type == JTokenType.Object)
//its an object, handle as needed ...
Personally, I would keep the attachments property as a List<Attachments> and if the JToken has a JSON object I would just set it as the [0] index of that property. This way things stay consistent and you can use LINQ on that property with ease
I am retrieving data from office365 api. The response is in JSON format. I want to get data like Id, DisplayName etc. into variables but not getting the right way to do it. Following this link. I'm new to API and JSON. Will Appreciate pointers as well towards best learning links.Sample JSON below for listing sub folders of Inbox folder.
Response JSON data.
{"#odata.context":"https://outlook.office365.com/api/v1.0/$metadata#Me/Folders('Inbox')/ChildFolders","value":
[
{"#odata.id":"https://outlook.office365.com/api/v1.0/Users('sample.user#demosite.com')/Folders('AAMkADBjMGZiZGFlLTE4ZmEtNGRlOS1iMjllLTJmsdfsdfdDSFSDFDFDF=')",
"Id":"AAMkADBjMdfgdfgDFGDFGDFGdfGDFGDFGDFGGDzrACAAB4xqMmAAA=",
"DisplayName":"SampleFolder","ParentFolderId":"AAMkADBjMGZiZGFlLTE4ZmEtNGRlOS1sdsDFSDFSDFSDFSDFSDFDFDFrACAAAAAAEMAAA=","ChildFolderCount":0,"UnreadItemCount":8,"TotalItemCount":94},
{"#odata.id":"https://outlook.office365.com/api/v1.0/Users('sample.user#demosite.com')/Folders('AAMkADBjMGZiZGFlLTE4ZmEasdasdasdASDASDASDASDSADDASDASDAB4xqMnAAA=')",
"Id":"AAMkADBjMGZiZGFlLTE4ZmEtNGRlOS1iMjllLTJmOGZkNGRhZmIzNQAuAasdASDASDASDASEDASDASDxSEHjzrACAAB4xqMnAAA=",
"DisplayName":"AnotherSampleFolder","ParentFolderId":"AAMkADBjMGZiZGFlLTE4ZmEtNGRlOS1sdsDFSDFSDFSDFSDFSDFDFDFrACAAAAAAEMAAA=","ChildFolderCount":0,"UnreadItemCount":21,"TotalItemCount":75}
]
}
The C# code using to parse JSON and find the required data.
HttpResponseMessage response = httpClient.SendAsync(request).Result;
if (!response.IsSuccessStatusCode)
throw new WebException(response.StatusCode.ToString() + ": " + response.ReasonPhrase);
string content = response.Content.ReadAsStringAsync().Result;
JObject jResult = JObject.Parse(content);
if (jResult["odata.error"] != null)
throw new Exception((string)jResult["odata.error"]["message"]["value"]);
//Attempt one - using dynamic [NOT WORKING - getting NULL values in the variables]
dynamic results = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<dynamic>(content);
var folderName = results.Id;
var folderId = results.Name;
//Attempt two - [Not working - Throwing exception -
//Object reference not set to an instance of an object.]
var folderID = (string)jResult["odata.context"]["odata.id"][0]["Id"];
First create a class for your json object
public class RootObject
{
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "#odata.context")]
public string context { get; set; }
public List<Value> value { get; set; }
}
public class Value
{
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "#odata.id")]
public string dataId { get; set; }
public string Id { get; set; }
public string DisplayName { get; set; }
public string ParentFolderId { get; set; }
public int ChildFolderCount { get; set; }
public int UnreadItemCount { get; set; }
public int TotalItemCount { get; set; }
}
Then Json Convert the Json string to your RootObject if your are using Newtonsoft Json then Deserilaze by using
RootObject shortiee = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<RootObject>("Your Json String");
private List<string> GetDisplayNames(JObject content)
{
var obj = Json.Parse(content);
var values = obj["value"].ToList();
var displayNames = new List<string>();
foreach (var value in values)
{
displayNames .Add(system["DisplayName"].ToString());
}
return displayNames;
}
This would return the names, for example, and you could do this for each value you need to retrieve. However, this does not require you to serialize/deserialize the json object before using it. It works, but is most likely not best practice.
if (jResult["odata.error"] != null)
throw new Exception((string)jResult["odata.error"]["message"]["value"]);
//Attempt one - using dynamic [NOT WORKING - getting NULL values in the variables]
dynamic results = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<dynamic>(content);
Side note: There is no key called "odata.error" in your JSON data. So you're effectively calling something which will return null.
One of the ways to deserialise JSON is to create model classes for the objects you want to process and deserialise into them directly, eg. JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Folder>(content). As you are talking to an Office365 API, you find documentation and examples here on how they are defined.
Taken your folder response as an example, your model for a single Folder could look like this:
public class Folder
{
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "#odata.id")]
public string OdataId { get; set; }
public string Id { get; set; }
public string DisplayName { get; set; }
public string ParentFolderId { get; set; }
public int ChildFolderCount { get; set; }
public int UnreadItemCount { get; set; }
public int TotalItemCount { get; set; }
}
Note1: in your example, you get a response with list of folders, so have to adjust this accordingly.
Note2: you can use JsonProperty to define a mapping between a JSON property/key and a C# property as shwon for #odata.id.
However, you can also use the Outlook Client Library which would make it mostly unnecessary to deal with JSON data directly (which seems preferable, unless you have a very specific reason to deal with JSON directly).
I have a string in JSON format as follows
string jsonStr = "{"Type":1, "Id":1000,"Date":null,"Group": "Admin","Country":"India","Type":1}";
I want to modify this string so that Id attribute should always be the first. The order of attributes matters.
Is there any way I can modify this string.
I tried searching google but did not find appropriate solution.
Any help would be appreciated.
EDIT:
I also tried to deserialize object using
object yourOjbect = new JavaScriptSerializer().DeserializeObject(jsonStr);
But here also the "type" attribute comes first. I dont find any way to move the attributes within this deserialized object
It's possible. Use the JsonProperty attribute, property Order.
http://www.newtonsoft.com/json/help/html/JsonPropertyOrder.htm.
Let me know if it works.
Instead of attempting to manipulate the order of the outputted JSON and comparing strings, I would transform both JSON strings that you want to compare, into objects and then perform your comparison. You could then compare individual properties or entire objects with something like the following:
void CompareJSON()
{
string json = #"{""Type"":1, ""Id"":1000,""Date"":null,""Group"": ""Admin"",""Country"":""India"",""Type"":1}";
string jsonToCompare = "JSON TO COMPARE";
MyObject myJsonObject = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<MyObject>(json);
MyObject myJsonObjectToCompare = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<MyObject>(jsonToCompare);
if (myJsonObject.Id == myJsonObjectToCompare.Id)
{
// Do something
}
}
class MyObject
{
public int Id { get; set; }
public int Type { get; set; }
public DateTime? Date { get; set; }
public string Group { get; set; }
public string Country { get; set; }
}
Please note that this example is carried out using the Newtonsoft.JSON library. More information on the library can be found here.
Just make your JSON into a c# class with Id first and then serialize it again if that is what you need. You do know that you have "Type" twice in the JSON string? In this solution it will get "fixed" so you only have it once as it should be. But if your string really is with two Type this wont work since the strings will be incorrect. If they really are like that you need to do some ugly string manipulation to fix the order but i hope the first string is incorrect only here and not in your code.
private void Test() {
string json = #"{""Type"":1, ""Id"":1000,""Date"":null,""Group"": ""Admin"",""Country"":""India"",""Type"":1}";
JavaScriptSerializer jsonSerializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
MyJsonObject myJsonObject = jsonSerializer.Deserialize<MyJsonObject>(json);
string s = jsonSerializer.Serialize(myJsonObject);
//Returns: {"Id":1000,"Type":1,"Date":null,"Group":"Admin","Country":"India"}
}
class MyJsonObject {
public int Id { get; set; }
public int Type { get; set; }
public DateTime? Date { get; set; }
public string Group { get; set; }
public string Country { get; set; }
}
I have this sample code that i am working with. The json is a result of the http post.
var json = #"{'user': {
'country':'US',
'email':'testapi#example.com',
'first_name':'Test',
'last_name':'API',
'phone':null,
'zip':null,
'login_url':'https://new.site.com/xlogin/12325/abd9832cd92'
}
}";
var jsonSerializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
var itemsList = (IDictionary<string, object>)jsonSerializer.DeserializeObject(json);
var url = itemsList["user.login_url"];
On itemsList["user.login_url"] i am getting the following error:
The given key was not present in the dictionary.
Description: An unhandled exception occurred during the execution of the current web request. Please review the stack trace for more information about the error and where it originated in the code.
Exception Details: System.Collections.Generic.KeyNotFoundException: The given key was not present in the dictionary.
Source Error:
Line 545: var jsonSerializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
Line 546: var itemsList = (IDictionary<string, object>)jsonSerializer.DeserializeObject(json);
Line 547: var url = itemsList["user.login_url"];
Line 548: }
Line 549:
Am i doing something wrong here? How should i access the first name, last name and url etc from this object?
Alternately, how can i tie this result to a class that has following properties? I just need a pointer to a good resource.
public class User
{
public string Country { get; set; }
public string Email { get; set; }
public string FirstName { get; set; }
public string LastName { get; set; }
public string Phone { get; set; }
public string Zip { get; set; }
public string LoginUrl { get; set; }
}
Thanks.
Well I really don't understand why u are using IDictionary to parse json object.
Use Newtonsoft.Json instead of jsonSerializer much more essay to use.
Go on http://json2csharp.com/ and generate your class to define you json (copy json and result is C# class).
Now tie your json to new RootObject not user:
using System;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var json = #"{'user': {
'country':'US',
'email':'testapi#example.com',
'first_name':'Test',
'last_name':'API',
'phone':null,
'zip':null,
'login_url':'https://new.site.com/xlogin/12325/abd9832cd92'
}
}";
RootObject userObj = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<RootObject>(json.ToString());
}
}
//generated with http://json2csharp.com/
public class User
{
public string country { get; set; }
public string email { get; set; }
public string first_name { get; set; }
public string last_name { get; set; }
public object phone { get; set; }
public object zip { get; set; }
public string login_url { get; set; }
}
public class RootObject
{
public User user { get; set; }
}
}
"user.login_url" is the property path you'd expect to use in JavaScript ... try accessing the dictionary keys instead
var user = itemsList["user"] as IDictionary<string,object>;
var url = user["login_url"] as string;
itemsList["user"] contains a second Dictionary. So you can navigate down to the login_url variable using
var user = (IDictionary<string, object>)itemsList["user"];
var login_url = user["login_url"];
Try using http://json.net/ it will give you a Dictionary with the types you want..
I get this response string from the Bitly api:
{ "status_code": 200,
"status_txt": "OK",
"data":
{ "long_url": "http:\/\/amazon.de\/",
"url": "http:\/\/amzn.to\/1mP2o58",
"hash": "1mP2o58",
"global_hash": "OjQAE",
"new_hash": 0
}
}
How do I convert this string to a dictionary and how do I access the value for the key "url" (without all the \)
This isn't just some ordinary string. This is a data structure in JSON format, a common and well-established format, originally used in Javascript but now rather common as a data transfer mechanism between services and clients.
Rather than reinventing the wheel and parsing the JSON yourself, I suggest you use an existing JSON library for C#, such as JSON.NET, which will eat up that string and parse it into .NET objects for you.
Here's a code sample, taken from JSON.NET's documentation, showing its usage:
string json = #"{
'href': '/account/login.aspx',
'target': '_blank'
}";
Dictionary<string, string> htmlAttributes =
JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Dictionary<string, string>>(json);
Console.WriteLine(htmlAttributes["href"]);
// /account/login.aspx
Console.WriteLine(htmlAttributes["target"]);
// _blank
If you add a package like Newtonsoft's Json to your project, you can deserialize the Json in to an anonymous type. You can then fetch the url from that. This is available via NuGet within Visual Studio and provides support for async or sync serialization/deserialization.
public string GetUrl(string bitlyResponse)
{
var responseObject = new
{
data = new { url = string.Empty },
};
responseObject = JsonConvert.DeserializeAnonymousType(bitlyResponse, responseObject);
return responseObject.data.url;
}
I'd use JSON.NET.
http://james.newtonking.com/json
MIT License which means if you're doing anything commercial you are good.
I don't think you would want to go straight to a Dictionary, because there is some stuff there that isn't a one to one relationship. So you could make a class like the following.
public class BitlyData
{
public string LongUrl{ get; set; }
public string Url { get; set; }
public string Hash { get; set; }
public string GlobalHash { get; set; }
public string NewHash { get; set; }
}
You could then use Json.NET to turn that String into an JObject. So we'll call your string bitlyString.
JObject bitlyObject = JObject.Parse(bitlyString);
Now we have that all that is left to do is access the data.
BitlyData theData = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<BitlyData>(bitlyObject["data"]);
Then you can access the url (and any other pieces) using the getters.
Of course you could make it even better by having class that handles the other bits as well so you just do one serialisation.
1)Add these classes to your project
public class Rootobject
{
public int status_code { get; set; }
public string status_txt { get; set; }
public Data data { get; set; }
}
public class Data
{
public string long_url { get; set; }
public string url { get; set; }
public string hash { get; set; }
public string global_hash { get; set; }
public int new_hash { get; set; }
}
2)Add a reference to JSON.NET
3)
string jsonString= "YOUR JSON STRING";
Rootobject weps = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Rootobject>(jsonString);
Console.WriteLine(weps.status_code);
if (weps.data != null)
{
Console.WriteLine(weps.data.url);
Console.WriteLine(weps.data.global_hash);
//...
}