Reputation: 10916
I'm using Restsharp to deserialize some webservice responses, however, the problem is that sometimes this webservices sends back a json response with a few more fields. I've manage to come around this so far by adding all possible field to my matching model, but this web service will keep adding/removing fields from its response.
Eg:
Json response that works:
{
"name": "Daniel",
"age": 25
}
Matching model:
public class Person
{
public string name { get; set; }
public int age { get; set; }
}
This works fine: Person person = deserializer.Deserialize<Person>(response);
Now suppose the json response was:
{
"name": "Daniel",
"age": 25,
"birthdate": "11/10/1988"
}
See the new field bithdate? Now everything goes wrong. Is there a way to tell to restsharp to ignore those fields that are not in the model?
Upvotes: 3
Views: 5711
Reputation: 39319
If there's that much variation in the fields you're getting back, perhaps the best approach is to skip the static DTOs and deserialize to a dynamic
. This gist provides an example of how to do this with RestSharp by creating a custom deserializer:
// ReSharper disable CheckNamespace
namespace RestSharp.Deserializers
// ReSharper restore CheckNamespace
{
public class DynamicJsonDeserializer : IDeserializer
{
public string RootElement { get; set; }
public string Namespace { get; set; }
public string DateFormat { get; set; }
public T Deserialize<T>(RestResponse response) where T : new()
{
return JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<dynamic>(response.Content);
}
}
}
Usage:
// Override default RestSharp JSON deserializer
client = new RestClient();
client.AddHandler("application/json", new DynamicJsonDeserializer());
var response = client.Execute<dynamic>(new RestRequest("http://dummy/users/42"));
// Data returned as dynamic object!
dynamic user = response.Data.User;
A simpler alternative is to use Flurl.Http (disclaimer: I'm the author), an HTTP client lib that deserializes to dynamic
by default when generic arguments are not provided:
dynamic d = await "http://api.foo.com".GetJsonAsync();
In both cases, the actual deserialization is performed by Json.NET. With RestSharp you'll need to add the package to your project (though there's a good chance you have it already); Flurl.Http has a dependency on it.
Upvotes: 2