I'm using Json.net api JsonConvert.PopulateObject which accepts two parameters first the json string and second the actual object which you want to fill.
The structure of the object that I want to fill is
internal class Customer
{
public Customer()
{
this.CustomerAddress = new Address();
}
public string Name { get; set; }
public Address CustomerAddress { get; set; }
}
public class Address
{
public string State { get; set; }
public string City { get; set; }
public string ZipCode { get; set; }
}
My json string is
{
"Name":"Jack",
"State":"ABC",
"City":"XX",
"ZipCode":"098"
}
Now the Name property gets filled becuase it is present in json string but the CustomerAddress is not getting populated. Is there any way by which I can tell the Json.net library that populate CustomerAddress.City from the City property in the json string ?
Directly - no.
But it should be possible to achieve that, e.g. here is an attempt (assuming you can't change json):
class Customer
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public Address CustomerAddress { get; set; } = new Address(); // initial value
// private property used to get value from json
// attribute is needed to use not-matching names (e.g. if Customer already have City)
[JsonProperty(nameof(Address.City))]
string _city
{
set { CustomerAddress.City = value; }
}
// ... same for other properties of Address
}
Other possibilities:
change json format to contain Address object;
custom serialization (e.g. using binder to serialize fake type and convert it to needed);
... (should be more).
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 have a json object like that:
And i want to access the "question" field throught this code-line:
string msg = (json1["data"][0]["question"]).ToString();
But it doesnt work, why?
But it doesnt work, why?
Because you need to look at the json again.
"data" is an object, not an array. As such "[0]" is not valid as it would access the first element of the array. The only array you have in there is the "answers" element. "question" is directly a property of "data".
Prepare a C# Model like below
public class rootClass
{
public bool ok { get; set; }
public data data { get; set; }
}
public class data
{
public string question { get; set; }
public string[] answers { get; set; }
public int id { get; set; }
}
and use JsonConvert(Newtonsoft dll) class to deserialise and access like below
rootClass rootClass = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<rootClass>(inputJson);
string msg = rootClass.data.question;
I'm writing a console app to retrieve JSON data from a 3rd party API. I have no control over the API data structures or functionality.
Several of the calls I make will return multiple 'pages' of data. The data is a collection of objects of a certain type e.g. User.
I have created classes in my app to match the various data types from the API.
public class User
{
[JsonProperty("id")]
public int ID { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("first_name")]
public string FirstName { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("last_name")]
public string LastName { get; set; }
}
public class FooBar
{
[JsonProperty("foo")]
public string Foo { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("bar")]
public string Bar { get; set; }
}
The API response is always in the same format for these calls. While the actual object types in the "data" array will differ depending on what call has been made.
{
"paging":{"page":1},
"data":[{<object>}, {<object>}, {<object>},...]
}
I have created a class to try to deserialize these. The dynamic[] type for the Data property is for illustrative purposes and I am happy to change it if there is a better approach.
public class ApiResponseObject
{
[JsonProperty("paging")]
public Paging PagingInfo { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("data")]
public dynamic[] Data { get; set; }
}
And I would like to have the Data collection resolve to the appropriate type for the objects it contains. e.g.
string userJson = "{\"paging\":{\"page\":1},\"data\":[{\"id\":1,\"first_name\":\"Joe\",\"last_name\":\"Bloggs\"},{\"id\":2,\"first_name\":\"Jane\",\"last_name\":\"Doe\"}]}"; // json string would come from API
string foobarJson = "{\"paging\":{\"page\":1},\"data\":[{\"foo\":\"Lorem\",\"bar\":\"Ipsum\"},{\"foo\":\"Dolor\",\"bar\":\"Amet\"}]}";
var userResponse = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<ApiResponseObject>(userJson);
var foobarResponse = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<ApiResponseObject>(foobarJson);
The deserialization succeeds but the Data collection is of type JObject and cannot be cast into the correct type (User, FooBar).
I am trying to avoid having to write specific response object classes for each request if possible.
I will know what type of object I am expecting in the collection when I am requesting it so I could pass that type to the deserializer but I'm not clear on how to achieve that in this particular scenario.
Something like the below psuedo code would be ideal.
var userResponse = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<ApiResponseObject<User>>(userJson);
Thanks for your help!
You can use the generic type T, like this :
public class ApiResponseObject<T>
{
[JsonProperty("paging")]
public Paging PagingInfo { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("data")]
public T[] Data { get; set; }
}
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 sent the following JSON to a WCF service which accepts Stream as a parameter.
{"ReservationStream":
{"clientFirstName":"Abe",
"clientLastName":"Lincoln",
"clientPhone":"0544944860",
"clientEmail":"abe#mail.com",
"pickupLocationID":"3699",
"pickupAddressString":"JFK Airport Terminal 1",
"pickupFlightNumber":"LY001",
"pickupAirline":"El Al",
"pickupAirportName":"John F Kennedy Intl",
}
}
In the debugger, the stream variable shows all values as expected. I want to deserialize into a class defined as follows:
public class ReservationStream
{
public String clientFirstName { get; set; }
public String clientLastName { get; set; }
public String clientPhone { get; set; }
public String clientEmail { get; set; }
public String pickupLocationID { get; set; }
public String pickupAddressString { get; set; }
public String pickupFlightNumber { get; set; }
public String pickupAirline { get; set; }
public String pickupAirportName { get; set; }
}
When I call
JavaScriptSerializer javaScriptSerializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
ReservationStream structuredReservations = javaScriptSerializer.Deserialize<ReservationStream>(strJSON);
no exception is thrown, but all of the fields have null values. Where is my mistake?
I think it's because your JSON object is nested inside a ReservationStream tag.
Try with just:
{
"clientFirstName":"Abe",
"clientLastName":"Lincoln",
"clientPhone":"0544944860",
"clientEmail":"abe#mail.com",
"pickupLocationID":"3699",
"pickupAddressString":"JFK Airport Terminal 1",
"pickupFlightNumber":"LY001",
"pickupAirline":"El Al",
"pickupAirportName":"John F Kennedy Intl"
}
You're trying to deserialize an object containing a ReservationStream object rather than the ReservationStream object itself.
One way to get around this is to make a wrapper class which contains a ReservationStream and deserialize using this:
public class WrapperClass
{
public ReservationStream ReservationStream { get; set; }
}
WrapperClass wrapperClass = serializer.Deserialize<WrapperClass>(strJSON);
I once have the same problem and I removed the javaScriptSerializer and directly used the method parameter like this
public static string UpdateTemplateProperties(TemplateProperties templateProperties)
{
var x = templateProperties.Something
}
and I have the javascript object structure as you
just be sure to have the same name for the parameter and the first object-name in your javascript object literal