Reputation: 1601
I am using AWS Lambda to get JSON from the open weather api and return it.
Here is my code:
var http = require('http');
exports.handler = function(event, context) {
var url = "http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/weather?id=2172797&appid=b1b15e88fa797225412429c1c50c122a";
http.get(url, function(res) {
// Continuously update stream with data
var body = '';
res.on('data', function(d) {
body += d;
});
res.on('end', function() {
context.succeed(body);
});
res.on('error', function(e) {
context.fail("Got error: " + e.message);
});
});
}
It works and returns the JSON, but it is adding backslashes before every " like so:
"{\"coord\":{\"lon\":145.77,\"lat\":-16.92},\"weather\":[{\"id\":803,\"main\":\"Clouds\",\"description\":\"broken clouds\",\"icon\":\"04d\"}],\"base\":\"cmc stations\",\"main\":{\"temp\":303.15,\"pressure\":1008,\"humidity\":74,\"temp_min\":303.15,\"temp_max\":303.15},\"wind\":{\"speed\":3.1,\"deg\":320},\"clouds\":{\"all\":75},\"dt\":1458518400,\"sys\":{\"type\":1,\"id\":8166,\"message\":0.0025,\"country\":\"AU\",\"sunrise\":1458505258,\"sunset\":1458548812},\"id\":2172797,\"name\":\"Cairns\",\"cod\":200}"
This is stopping my over service using (SwiftJSON) detecting this as valid JSON.
Can anyone tell me how to make the API information come out as correctly formatted JSON?
I tried .replace
like so:
res.on('end', function() {
result = body.replace('\\', '');
context.succeed(result);
});
It did not change anything. Still had the same output.
Upvotes: 8
Views: 10932
Reputation: 51
If using Java, the response can be a user defined object as below
class Handler implements RequestHandler<SQSEvent, CustomObject> {
public CustomObject handleRequest(SQSEvent event, Context context) {
return new CustomObject();
}
}
Sample code can be found here.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 21
In case of Java, just return a JSONObject. Looks like when returning string it is trying to do some transformation and ends up escaping all the quotes.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 413
You can use:
res.on('end', function() {
context.succeed(body.replace(/\\/g, '') );
To replace \ with nothing..
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 36573
You're posting it as a string.
Try context.succeed(JSON.parse(result))
From the docs
The result provided must be JSON.stringify compatible. If AWS Lambda fails to stringify or encounters another error, an unhandled exception is thrown, with the X-Amz-Function-Error response header set to Unhandled.
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/latest/dg/nodejs-prog-model-context.html
So essentially it's taking your json string as a string and calling JSON.stringify on it...thus escaping all the quotes as you're seeing. Pass the parsed JSON object to succeed and it should not have this issue
Upvotes: 18