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
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
Have some json and parse that whit this code:
dynamic json = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject(response.Content);
dynamic result =json.result;
after this line:
dynamic result =json.result;
have this output:
{
{
"321":{
"online_status":true,
"basic_info":{
"status":"Recharged",
"group_name":"IRN-UV002-M01",
"isp_name":"Main",
"creation_date":"2017-09-05 08:19:32",
"recharge_deposit":0.0,
"user_id":321,
"nearest_exp_date":"2018-02-22 10:21:00",
"credit":20387.775145462037,
"deposit":0.0,
"isp_id":0,
"group_id":72
},
"user_repr":"10001168-2100104f4Y8-FTTH",
}
}
}
and now want to get user_id from that json,how can i write code for that purpose?thanks.
The better way would be to deseralize this into a strongly typed object.
But for you you can use the JObject class to do something like the following (note not tested, but you should understand the concept):
dynamic result = JObject.Parse(source);
int id = result.321.basic_info.user_id;
You probably want to do something like this:
var yourInstance = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<YourClass>(responseJson);
For that, you need to define a class YourClass and related sub-classes which have properties matching the values returned in the JSON data, i.e. something like:
public class YourClass {
public bool online_status { get; set; }
public BasicInfo basic_info { get; set; }
public string user_repr { get; set; }
}
public class BasicInfo {
public string status { get; set; }
public string group_name{ get; set; }
public string isp_name{ get; set; }
public DateTime creation_date{ get; set; }
public string group_name{ get; set; }
// ...etc.
}
With this in place, JsonConvert should be able to understand and parse your data to the correct object.
This is just a rough example, but it should get you on your way.
Another way is to use JObject to hold the string.
var str = "{\"321\":{\"online_status\":true,\"basic_info\":{\"status\":\"Recharged\",\"group_name\":\"IRN-UV002-M01\",\"isp_name\":\"Main\",\"creation_date\":\"2017-09-05 08:19:32\",\"recharge_deposit\":0.0,\"user_id\":321,\"nearest_exp_date\":\"2018-02-22 10:21:00\",\"credit\":20387.775145462037,\"deposit\":0.0,\"isp_id\":0,\"group_id\":72},\"user_repr\":\"10001168-2100104f4Y8-FTTH\"}}";
var obj = JObject.Parse(str);
var userId = obj["321"]["basic_info"]["user_id"].ToString();
I have this json:
[{"trace":{"details":{"date":"[28-02-2016 11:04:26.856573]","type":"[info]","message":"[system done.]"},"context":{"context":[[{"ID":"john dillinger"}]]}}},{"trace":{"details":{"date":"[28-02-2016 11:04:26.856728]","type":"[info]","message":"[trace done.]"},"context":{"context":[[{"ID":"john dillinger"}]]}}}]
Newtonsoft.Json.JsonSerializationException: Cannot deserialize the current JSON array (e.g. [1,2,3]) into type, because the type requires a JSON object (e.g. {"name":"value"}) to deserialize correctly.
I've created this class for deserialize it:
public class Testing
{
public string date { get; set; }
public string type { get; set; }
public string message { get; set; }
public string context { get; set; }
}
and this is the code for deserialize the content:
string responseText = "json above";
var obj = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Testing>(responseText); //on this line the problem
in the obj line I get the exception. I'm a bit rusty with c# so I don't know exactly what am I doing wrong. Someone could enlighten me?
Your json is not a flat data as your Testing class is. Try using following
public class Details
{
public string date { get; set; }
public string type { get; set; }
public string message { get; set; }
}
public class Context
{
public List<List<ContextElement>> context { get; set; }
}
public class Trace
{
public Details details { get; set; }
public Context context { get; set; }
}
public class RootObject
{
public Trace trace { get; set; }
}
Just hit your json to http://json2csharp.com/ and it seems you need to add this type for the ID part of the context and modify the result so context uses this in the list.
public class ContextElement
{
public string ID { get; set; }
}
Your parsed json is of format
Check this with https://jsonformatter.curiousconcept.com/ yourself. Then you just need to make a C# classes to match that structure.
You need to deserialize a collection of Trace - like List<Trace>:
var obj = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<List<Trace>>(responseText);
Assuming that you have the following DTOs:
public class Trace
{
public TraceValue trace;
}
public class TraceValue
{
public Details details;
public Context context;
}
public class Details
{
public String date;
public String type;
public String message;
}
public class Context
{
public List<List<IdItem>> context;
}
public class IdItem
{
public String ID;
}
Proof (response is just a line provided by you, but with escaped quotes, so that it can be put directly into the code):
var response =
"[{ \"trace\":{ \"details\":{ \"date\":\"[28-02-2016 11:04:26.856573]\",\"type\":\"[info]\",\"message\":\"[system done.]\"},\"context\":{ \"context\":[[{\"ID\":\"john dillinger\"}]]}}},{\"trace\":{\"details\":{\"date\":\"[28-02-2016 11:04:26.856728]\",\"type\":\"[info]\",\"message\":\"[trace done.]\"},\"context\":{\"context\":[[{\"ID\":\"john dillinger\"}]]}}}]";
var obj = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<List<Trace>>(response);
I think you should use JavaScripSerializer
JavaScriptSerializer jsSerializer = new JavaScriptSerializer();
you can try
var obj = jsSerializer.Deserialize<Testing>(responseText);
I am not sure about this solution, may be it will work or not in your case.
But you can deserialize json string into string array of any dimension as:
var obj = jsSerializer.Deserialize<string[]>(responseText);
var obj = jsSerializer.Deserialize<string[][]>(responseText);
I have seen some other questions like this, but those are quite complex JSON data's that have objects within objects. Although the JSON I'm working with is never static, I doubt it's as complex as those. Also, it's my first time using JSON with C# so I'm a little clueless.
What I'm trying to achieve is to separate the data that is received from an API that I prompt using WebRequest in C#.
{
"johhny.debt": {
"id":35187540,
"name":"johnny.debt",
"profileIconId":786,
"Level":30,
"revisionDate":1428019045000
}
}
The returned JSON data is in a fashion like thereof.
I want to be able to access all of the properties of the above string in the following manner:
ID :
Name:
~~
~~
~~
... and so forth.
I'm assuming some type of class has to be made for this?
All help is appreciated, thank you all in advance.
Install Json.Net from Nuget
Install-Package Newtonsoft.Json
https://www.nuget.org/packages/Newtonsoft.Json/
Declare class for inner object ({"id":..., "name": ... }):
public class InnerObject
{
[JsonProperty("id")]
public int Id { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("name")]
public string Username { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("profileIconId")]
public int ProfileIconId { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("level")]
public int Level { get; set; }
[JsonProperty("revisionDate")]
public string RevisionDate { get; set; }
}
As you can see you can specify rename mapping from json fields to .Net object properties using JsonPropertyAttribute.
Read your json to Dictionary<string,InnerObject> and get value of "johhny.debt" key:
var dict = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Dictionary<string, InnerObject>>(jsonText);
var johhny = dict["johhny.debt"];
Or if your need always to parse exact json property 'johhny.debt', you could create root object class:
public class RootObject
{
[JsonProperty("johhny.debt")]
public InnerObject JohhnyDept { get; set; }
}
And deserialize it:
var root = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<RootObject>(jsonText);
var johhny = root.JohhnyDebt;
Just Create a class like this
public class RootObject
{
public int Id { get; set; }
public string name { get; set; }
public int profileIconId { get; set; }
public int Level { get; set; }
public string revisionDate { get; set; }
}
then install json.Net and this code to your main method
var jsonObject=JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<RootObject>(jsonText);
That's all
Update
var obj = JObject.Parse(json);
var RootObject = new RootObject()
{
Id = (int)obj["johhny.debt"]["id"],
Level = (int)obj["johhny.debt"]["Level"],
name = (string)obj["johhny.debt"]["name"],
profileIconId = (int)obj["johhny.debt"]["profileIconId"],
revisionDate = (string)obj["johhny.debt"]["revisionDate"]
};
Couldn't find an answer from the other Json Serialization issue questions, so maybe someone can help me:
I'm getting a JSON object from a REST api and attempting to Deserialize it to an object. Below is the JSON Object I receive:
{"id":"6wVcZ9ZF67ECUQ8xuIjFT2",
"userId":"83ca0ab5-3b7c-48fe-8019-000320081b00",
"authorizations":["employee","API","trainer","queueAdmin","supervisor","workflowAdmin","realtimeManager","forecastAnalyst","qualityEvaluator","contactCenterManager","teamLead","personnelAdmin","telephonyAdmin","qualityAdmin","businessAdmin","businessUser","accountAdmin","dialerAdmin","contentManagementUser","contentManagementAdmin","admin","api","scriptDesigner","agent","user"],
"primaryAuthorization":"employee",
"thirdPartyOrgName":"in",
"username":"somebody",
"selfUri":"https://blahblahblah.com/api/v1/auth/sessions/6wVcZ9ZF67ECUQ8xuIjFT2"}
And my object I'm attempting to DeSerialize to:
[Serializable]
public class Session : BaseRequest, ISession
{
public Session(string url) : base(url)
{
}
#region Members
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "userId")]
public string UserId { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "authorizations")]
public object[] Authorizations { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "primaryAuthorization")]
public string PrimaryAuthorization { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "thirdPartyOrgName")]
public string ThirdPartyOrgName { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "username")]
public string Username { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "id")]
public string Id { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "selfUri")]
public string SelfUri { get; set; }
#endregion
}
I simply make the web request and get the response stream using a stream reader and return the string. Pretty standard.
However, when I attempt to Deserialize into my Session object it always throws an error: Value Cannot be Null
var serializer = new JsonSerializer();
response = MakePostRequest(true);
var obj = serializer.Deserialize<Session>(new JsonTextReader(new StringReader(response)));
The response is the JSON string I get back from the web request and is exact to what I specified above.
I've done this before but normally I've been the one that designed the REST api. Not the case this time but I can't for the life of my figure out why this won't deserialize? I've specified the JSonProperty PropertyName to avoid issues with proper casing, is this not working right maybe? Any help is appreciated!
UDPATE
I think I found part of the problem. It is attempting to deserialize my base class which consists of :
public abstract class BaseRequest
{
protected BaseRequest(string apiUrl)
{
ApiUrl = apiUrl;
Request = (HttpWebRequest)WebRequest.Create(apiUrl);
}
public string ApiUrl { get; set; }
public string JsonPayload { get; set; }
public HttpWebRequest Request { get; private set; }
}
Is there any directive I can give to prevent it from doing so? Or will I need to refactor around this?
Below code works (using Json.Net):
var session = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Session>(json);
public class Session
{
public string Id { get; set; }
public string UserId { get; set; }
public List<string> Authorizations { get; set; }
public string PrimaryAuthorization { get; set; }
public string ThirdPartyOrgName { get; set; }
public string Username { get; set; }
public string SelfUri { get; set; }
}
EDIT
How should I tell it to ignore the base class?
var session = (Session)System.Runtime.Serialization.FormatterServices.GetSafeUninitializedObject(typeof(Session));
JsonConvert.PopulateObject(DATA, session);
But I don't think this is a nice way of doing it. Changing your design may be a better solution.
I've tested your code and it works fine, only change I made was removing the constructor, I take it that the serializer can't create an instance on the object for some reason, can you remove
public Session(string url) : base(url)
{
}
Your code works just fine for me but I haven't the BaseRequest source code so I made class with empty constructor.
IMO the exception is coming exactly from there. In the Session constructor the url parameter is null because your JSON object doesn't have url property. May be in the BaseRequest class you use this url param and you receive the Value Can't be Null error.
You can change just the name of parameter if this is the issue:
public Session(string selfUri ) : base(selfUri)
{
}
Check also if the 'response' variable is null. StringReader can throw this exception if you pass null to its constructor.