Fast JSON parser for java projects.
The easiest way to get started is to look at maven-example. For more comprehensive examples, check out the unit tests or the demo.
For Java projects, to use this library, add this to your build.gradle file:
allprojects {
repositories {
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
}
}
...
dependencies {
implementation 'com.github.instagram.ig-json-parser:runtime:master-SNAPSHOT' // the runtime
implementation 'com.github.instagram.ig-json-parser:processor:master-SNAPSHOT' // the annotation processor
}
For Android projects using Android Studio 3.0+ or Gradle 4.0+, you can enable the annotation processor as following:
allprojects {
repositories {
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
}
}
...
dependencies {
annotationProcessor 'com.github.instagram.ig-json-parser:processor:master-SNAPSHOT'
implementation 'com.github.instagram.ig-json-parser:runtime:master-SNAPSHOT'
}
If you are using older gradle versions, you can use old apt
plugin to integrate the annotation processor:
allprojects {
repositories {
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
}
}
...
apply plugin: 'com.neenbedankt.android-apt'
dependencies {
apt 'com.github.instagram.ig-json-parser:processor:master-SNAPSHOT'
implementation 'com.github.instagram.ig-json-parser:runtime:master-SNAPSHOT'
}
If you are using other build systems, please find instructions here
There should be a package-visible no-argument constructor for each of your model classes. The fields also need to be package-visible.
Each class that needs a serializer/deserializer generated should be
annotated with @JsonType
. Each field that needs to be mapped to/from
JSON should be annotated with @JsonField
. The @JsonField
annotation
has one mandatory argument, which is the fieldname for the field in the
JSON.
The following is an example of a very simple model class:
@JsonType
class Dessert {
@JsonField(fieldName="type")
String type;
@JsonField(fieldName="rating")
float rating;
}
Compiling your model classes with the annotations will automatically
generate the serializer and deserializer. They will be in a generated
class with the same name as your class, except with the suffix
__JsonHelper
. For example, to deserialize the Dessert
class above,
simply run the code:
Dessert parsed = Dessert__JsonHelper.parseFromJson(inputJsonString);
To serialize a class, run:
String serialized = Dessert__JsonHelper.serializeToJson(dessertObject);
The following scalar types are supported:
- String
- boolean/Boolean
- int/Integer
- long/Long
- float/Float
- double/Double
The following collection types are supported:
- List/ArrayList
- Queue/ArrayDeque
- Map/HashMap
- Set/HashSet
If a json field is another dictionary, it can be represented by another
model class. That model class must also have the @JsonType
annotation.
Add the following lines to your proguard-rules file:
-dontwarn sun.misc.Unsafe
-dontwarn javax.annotation.**
If you need to process your JSON after a first pass, you can change your @JsonType
annotation to be @JsonType(postprocess = true)
and add a method to your code and add a method YourClass postprocess()
which will be called after the JSON is processed (see: QuestionableDesignChoice
in the example below)
@JsonType
public class Example {
@JsonField(fieldName = "container")
Container mContainer;
@JsonType
public static class Container {
@JsonField(fieldName = "questionable_design_choice")
List<QuestionableDesignChoice> mQuestionableDesignChoice;
}
@JsonType(postprocessingEnabled = true)
public static class QuestionableDesignChoice {
@JsonField(fieldName = "property")
String mProperty;
QuestionableDesignChoice postprocess() {
// post-process things here...
return this;
}
}
}
Parsing the supported data types is straightforward. For enums or built-in Java classes, you will need to add customized parsing.
Value extract formatters override how we extract the value from the JsonParser
object, while serialize code formatters override how we serialize a java field back to json. We use the serde for PointF in the example below, where a point is represented as an array in json.
@JsonField(
fieldName = "position",
valueExtractFormatter =
"com.instagram.common.json.android.JsonTypeHelper.deserializePointF(${parser_object})",
serializeCodeFormatter =
"com.instagram.common.json.android.JsonTypeHelper.serializePointF("
+ "${generator_object}, \"${json_fieldname}\", ${object_varname}.${field_varname})")
@Nullable
protected PointF mPosition;
To save generating serializer code if you only need deserialization, serializer generation can be disabled or enabled globally and per-class. The default is to generate serializers for all classes. To disable generation globally, pass
-AgenerateSerializer=false
to the command-line arguments of javac. To override the default generation option for a single class, see
JsonType.generateSerializer()
.
See the CONTRIBUTING file for how to help out.
ig-json-parser is MIT licensed, as found in the LICENSE file.