Reputation: 17825
I'm trying to put a json in a javascript file in java, but when I write the json to a string, the string doesn't appear to be a valid json for javascript; it is missing some escapes. (This is happening in a string in the json which I formatted as a faux json.)
For example, this would be a valid json in my javascript file:
{
"message":
"the following books failed: [{\"book\": \"The Horse and his Boy\",\"author\": \"C.S. Lewis\"}, {\"book\": \"The Left Hand of Darkness\",\"author\": \"Ursula K. le Guin\"}, ]"
}
Here's what I get, though, where the double quotes aren't escaped:
{
"message":
"The following books failed: [{"book": "The Horse and his Boy","author": "C.S. Lewis"}, {"book": "The Left Hand of Darkness","author": "Ursula K. le Guin"}, ]"
}
I get the second result when I do this:
new ObjectMapper().writer().writeValueAsString(booksMessage);
But when I write it directly to a file with jackson, I get the first, good result:
new ObjectMapper().writer().writeValue(fileToWriteTo, booksMessage);
So why does jackson escape differently when writing to a file, and how do I get it to escape like that for me when writing to a string?
Upvotes: 15
Views: 39985
Reputation: 3830
I'm very late to the party but I faced a similar problem and I realized it was not a problem with Jackson or my data. It was Java. I was reading from a JSON file and then trying to write it into a template HTML file.
I had a line my original JSON like yours, something like:
{"field" : "This field contains what looks like another JSON field: {\"abc\": \"value\"}"}
And when I wrote the above to a string, the backslash before the quotes in abc and value disappeared. I noticed that the contextual help for String.replaceAll mentioned something about Matcher.quoteReplacement. I went from this:
template = template.replaceAll("%template%", jsonDataString);
to this:
Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile("%template%");
Matcher matcher = Pattern.matcher(template);
matcher.replaceAll(matcher.quoteReplacement(jsonDataString));
Problem solved.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 17825
I added
booksJson = Pattern.compile("\\\\").matcher(booksJson).replaceAll("\\\\\\\\");
which escapes all the escape characters. That way when I write it to file and it removes the escapes, I still have the escapes I need. So turns out my real question was how to write to file without Java escapes being removed.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 19905
The writeValue()
methods of the ObjectWriter
class encode the input text.
You don't need to write to a file. An alternative approach for getting the same string could be:
StringWriter sw = new StringWriter();
new ObjectMapper().writer().writeValue(sw, booksMessage);
String result = sw.toString();
Upvotes: 6