def jsonSlurper = new JsonSlurper() def object = jsonSlurper.parseText(‘{ "name": "John Doe" } /* some comment */‘) assert object instanceof Map assert object.name == ‘John Doe‘
标签:
http://www.groovy-lang.org/json.html
Groovy comes with integrated support for converting between Groovy objects and JSON. The classes dedicated to JSON serialisation and parsing are found in the groovy.json
package.
JsonSlurper
is a class that parses JSON text or reader content into Groovy data structures (objects) such as maps, lists and primitive types like Integer
, Double
, Boolean
and String
.
The class comes with a bunch of overloaded parse
methods plus some special methods such as parseText
, parseFile
and others. For the next example we will use the parseText
method. It parses a JSON String
and recursively converts it to a list or map of objects. The other parse*
methods are similar in that they return a JSON String
but for different parameter types.
def jsonSlurper = new JsonSlurper() def object = jsonSlurper.parseText(‘{ "name": "John Doe" } /* some comment */‘) assert object instanceof Map assert object.name == ‘John Doe‘
Notice the result is a plain map and can be handled like a normal Groovy object instance. JsonSlurper
parses the given JSON as defined by the ECMA-404 JSON Interchange Standard plus support for JavaScript comments and dates.
In addition to maps JsonSlurper
supports JSON arrays which are being converted to lists.
def jsonSlurper = new JsonSlurper() def object = jsonSlurper.parseText(‘{ "myList": [4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42] }‘) assert object instanceof Map assert object.myList instanceof List assert object.myList == [4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42]
The JSON standard supports the following primitive data types: string, number, object, true
, false
and null
. JsonSlurper
converts these JSON types into corresponding Groovy types.
def jsonSlurper = new JsonSlurper() def object = jsonSlurper.parseText ‘‘‘ { "simple": 123, "fraction": 123.66, "exponential": 123e12 }‘‘‘ assert object instanceof Map assert object.simple.class == Integer assert object.fraction.class == BigDecimal assert object.exponential.class == BigDecimal
As JsonSlurper
is returning pure Groovy object instances without any special JSON classes in the back, its usage is transparent. In fact, JsonSlurper
results conform to GPath expressions. GPath is a powerful expression language that is supported by multiple slurpers for different data formats (XmlSlurper
for XML being one example).
For more details please have a look at the section on GPath expressions. |
The following table gives an overview of the JSON types and the corresponding Groovy data types:
JSON | Groovy |
---|---|
string |
|
number |
|
object |
|
array |
|
true |
|
false |
|
null |
|
date |
|
Whenever a value in JSON is null , JsonSlurper supplements it with the Groovy null value. This is in contrast to other JSON parsers that represent a null value with a library-provided singleton object. |
JsonSlurper
comes with a couple of parser implementations. Each parser fits different requirements, it could well be that for certain scenarios the JsonSlurper
default parser is not the best bet for all situations. Here is an overview of the shipped parser implementations:
The JsonParserCharArray
parser basically takes a JSON string and operates on the underlying character array. During value conversion it copies character sub-arrays (a mechanism known as "chopping") and operates on them.
The JsonFastParser
is a special variant of the JsonParserCharArray
and is the fastest parser. However, it is not the default parser for a reason. JsonFastParser
is a so-called index-overlay parser. During parsing of the given JSON String
it tries as hard as possible to avoid creating new char arrays or String
instances. It keeps pointers to the underlying original character array only. In addition, it defers object creation as late as possible. If parsed maps are put into long-term caches care must be taken as the map objects might not be created and still consist of pointer to the original char buffer only. However, JsonFastParser
comes with a special chop mode which dices up the char buffer early to keep a small copy of the original buffer. Recommendation is to use the JsonFastParser
for JSON buffers under 2MB and keeping the long-term cache restriction in mind.
The JsonParserLax
is a special variant of the JsonParserCharArray
parser. It has similar performance characteristics as JsonFastParser
but differs in that it isn’t exclusively relying on the ECMA-404 JSON grammar. For example it allows for comments, no quote strings etc.
The JsonParserUsingCharacterSource
is a special parser for very large files. It uses a technique called "character windowing" to parse large JSON files (large means files over 2MB size in this case) with constant performance characteristics.
The default parser implementation for JsonSlurper
is JsonParserCharArray
. The JsonParserType
enumeration contains constants for the parser implementations described above:
Implementation | Constant |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Changing the parser implementation is as easy as setting the JsonParserType
with a call to JsonSlurper#setType()
.
def jsonSlurper = new JsonSlurper(type: JsonParserType.INDEX_OVERLAY) def object = jsonSlurper.parseText(‘{ "myList": [4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42] }‘) assert object instanceof Map assert object.myList instanceof List assert object.myList == [4, 8, 15, 16, 23, 42]
JsonOutput
is responsible for serialising Groovy objects into JSON strings. It can be seen as companion object to JsonSlurper, being a JSON parser.
JsonOutput
comes with overloaded, static toJson
methods. Each toJson
implementation takes a different parameter type. The static method can either be used directly or by importing the methods with a static import statement.
The result of a toJson
call is a String
containing the JSON code.
def json = JsonOutput.toJson([name: ‘John Doe‘, age: 42]) assert json == ‘{"name":"John Doe","age":42}‘
JsonOutput
does not only support primitive, maps or list data types to be serialized to JSON, it goes further and even has support for serialising POGOs, that is, plain-old Groovy objects.
class Person { String name } def json = JsonOutput.toJson([ new Person(name: ‘John‘), new Person(name: ‘Max‘) ]) assert json == ‘[{"name":"John"},{"name":"Max"}]‘
As we saw in previous examples, the JSON output is not pretty printed per default. However, the prettyPrint
method in JsonSlurper
comes to rescue for this task.
def json = JsonOutput.toJson([name: ‘John Doe‘, age: 42]) assert json == ‘{"name":"John Doe","age":42}‘ assert JsonOutput.prettyPrint(json) == ‘‘‘{ "name": "John Doe", "age": 42 }‘‘‘.stripIndent()
prettyPrint
takes a String
as single parameter. It must not be used in conjunction with the other JsonOutput
methods, it can be applied on arbitrary JSON String
instances.
Another way to create JSON from Groovy is to use the JsonBuilder
or StreamingJsonBuilder
. Both builders provide a DSL which allows to formulate an object graph which is then converted to JSON at some point.
For more details on builders, have a look at the builders chapter which covers both JSON builders in great depth. |
[JSON] Parsing and producing JSON
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原文地址:http://www.cnblogs.com/MasterMonkInTemple/p/4592335.html