Reputation: 842
I'm a new Java programmer coming from a background in Python. I have weather data that's being collected/returned as a JSON with nested keys in it, and I don't understand how pull the values out in this situation. I'm sure this question has been asked before, but I swear I've Googled a great deal and I can't seem to find an answer. Right now I'm using json-simple, but I tried switching to Jackson and still couldn't figure out how to do this. Since Jackson/Gson seem to be the most used libraries, I'd would love to see an example using one of those libraries. Below is a sample of the data, followed by the code I've written so far.
{
"response": {
"features": {
"history": 1
}
},
"history": {
"date": {
"pretty": "April 13, 2010",
"year": "2010",
"mon": "04",
"mday": "13",
"hour": "12",
"min": "00",
"tzname": "America/Los_Angeles"
},
...
}
}
Main function
public class Tester {
public static void main(String args[]) throws MalformedURLException, IOException, ParseException {
WundergroundAPI wu = new WundergroundAPI("*******60fedd095");
JSONObject json = wu.historical("San_Francisco", "CA", "20100413");
System.out.println(json.toString());
System.out.println();
//This only returns 1 level. Further .get() calls throw an exception
System.out.println(json.get("history"));
}
}
The function 'historical' calls another function that returns a JSONObject
public static JSONObject readJsonFromUrl(URL url) throws MalformedURLException, IOException, ParseException {
InputStream inputStream = url.openStream();
try {
JSONParser parser = new JSONParser();
BufferedReader buffReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(inputStream, Charset.forName("UTF-8")));
String jsonText = readAll(buffReader);
JSONObject json = (JSONObject) parser.parse(jsonText);
return json;
} finally {
inputStream.close();
}
}
Upvotes: 54
Views: 122854
Reputation: 116502
With Jackson's tree model (JsonNode
), you have both "literal" accessor methods (get
), which returns null
for missing value, and "safe" accessors (path
), which allow you to traverse "missing" nodes. So, for example:
JsonNode root = mapper.readTree(inputSource);
int h = root.path("response").path("history").getValueAsInt();
which would return the value at the given path, or, if the path is missing, 0 (default value).
But more conveniently, you can just use JSON pointer expression:
int h = root.at("/response/history").getValueAsInt();
There are other ways too, and often it is more convenient to model your structure as a Plain Old Java Object (POJO). Your content could fit something like:
public class Wrapper {
public Response response;
}
public class Response {
public Map<String,Integer> features; // or maybe Map<String,Object>
public List<HistoryItem> history;
}
public class HistoryItem {
public MyDate date; // or just Map<String,String>
// ... and so forth
}
and if so, you would traverse the resulting objects just like any Java object.
Upvotes: 126
Reputation: 111
Use Jsonpath
Integer h = JsonPath.parse(json).read("$.response.repository.history", Integer.class);
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 345
Try jpath API. It's xpath equivalent for JSON Data. You can read data by providing the jpath which will traverse the JSON data and return the requested value.
This Java class is the implementation as well as it has example codes on how to call the APIs.
https://github.com/satyapaul/jpath/blob/master/JSONDataReader.java
Readme -
https://github.com/satyapaul/jpath/blob/master/README.md
Example:
JSON Data:
{
"data": [{
"id": "13652355666_10154605514815667",
"uid": "442637379090660",
"userName": "fanffair",
"userFullName": "fanffair",
"userAction": "recommends",
"pageid": "usatoday",
"fanPageName": "USA TODAY",
"description": "A missing Indonesian man was found inside a massive python on the island of Sulawesi, according to local authorities and news reports. ",
"catid": "NewsAndMedia",
"type": "link",
"name": "Indonesian man swallowed whole by python",
"picture": "https:\/\/external.xx.fbcdn.net\/safe_image.php?d=AQBQf3loH5-XP6hH&w=130&h=130&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gannett-cdn.com%2F-mm-%2F1bb682d12cfc4d1c1423ac6202f4a4e2205298e7%2Fc%3D0-5-1821-1034%26r%3Dx633%26c%3D1200x630%2Flocal%2F-%2Fmedia%2F2017%2F03%2F29%2FUSATODAY%2FUSATODAY%2F636263764866290525-Screen-Shot-2017-03-29-at-9.27.47-AM.jpg&cfs=1&_nc_hash=AQDssV84Gt83dH2A",
"full_picture": "https:\/\/external.xx.fbcdn.net\/safe_image.php?d=AQBQf3loH5-XP6hH&w=130&h=130&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.gannett-cdn.com%2F-mm-%2F1bb682d12cfc4d1c1423ac6202f4a4e2205298e7%2Fc%3D0-5-1821-1034%26r%3Dx633%26c%3D1200x630%2Flocal%2F-%2Fmedia%2F2017%2F03%2F29%2FUSATODAY%2FUSATODAY%2F636263764866290525-Screen-Shot-2017-03-29-at-9.27.47-AM.jpg&cfs=1&_nc_hash=AQDssV84Gt83dH2A",
"message": "Akbar Salubiro was reported missing after he failed to return from harvesting palm oil.",
"link": "http:\/\/www.usatoday.com\/story\/news\/nation-now\/2017\/03\/29\/missing-indonesian-man-swallowed-whole-reticulated-python\/99771300\/",
"source": "",
"likes": {
"summary": {
"total_count": "500"
}
},
"comments": {
"summary": {
"total_count": "61"
}
},
"shares": {
"count": "4"
}
}]
}
Code snippet:
String jPath = "/data[Array][1]/likes[Object]/summary[Object]/total_count[String]";
String value = JSONDataReader.getStringValue(jPath, jsonData);
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 31
Check out Jackson's ObjectMapper. You can create a class to model your JSON then use ObjectMapper's readValue method to 'deserialize' your JSON String into an instance of your model class. And vice-versa.
Upvotes: 1