I get the following: How to make it as a valid JSON?
{{
"id": "123",
"name": "Kaizen",
"living": {
"city": "Sydney",
"state": "NSW"
},
"Country": {
"name": "Australia",
"region": "APAC"
}
}}
It looks like a valid JSON except for the opening and closing bracket.
You can simply cut it out:
string jsonString = yourServerClient.GetData();
jsonString = jsonString.Trim();
jsonString = jsonString.Substring(1, jsonString.Length - 2);
var jsonObj = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject(jsonString);
However, I would recommend you to refuse using any incorrect or invalid data sources - it is the road to hell.
You can never expect what they do next, and you definitely do not want to spend much of your time every time they change their service, and rewrite (and worsen) your code such that it now supports their incorrect format.
Related
so I want to be able to extract and ID based on whether that object has a particular property. I NEED this to be done via Regex. Here is an example of the JSON I am working with:
{
"workspaceid": ws01,
"data": {
"workspacetitle": "My Workspace"
},
"collections": {
"projects": [{
"id": 01,
"data": {
"title": "My Project 01",
"enddateperiod": "2020-02-20T23:59:59",
"profilecomplete": true,
"synced": false
},
"lists": {
"projectcode": [{
"id": pcodered,
"data": {
"code": "myproject123",
"name": "OffshoreProject"
}
}]
}
}, {
"id": 02,
"data": {
"title": "My Project 02",
"enddateperiod": "2020-02-20T23:59:59",
"profilecomplete": false,
"synced": false
},
"lists": {
"projectcode": [{
"id": pcodered,
"data": {
"code": "myproject123",
"name": "OffshoreProject"
}
}]
}
}]
}}
So what I want to extract is the ID of the project whose profile is not complete ("profilecomplete":false). So in this case, I want to select Project 2's id (which is 02).
How can I do this via Regex? I've managed to remove all of the whitespace and new lines as well so the JSON is essentially all one long line. Would it be easier to extract the Regex like this? Either way, I could use some help on how to get this ID.
NOTE: The format of the JSON cannot change.
This one works
/"id": ([^,]*?)(?=,[^{]*{[^}]*"profilecomplete": false)/
Explanations :
Read all these chars first "id":[space]
Then read in a group chars that aren't ","
And then a lookahead : you expect "," then chars that aren't "{", then "{"; and finally, before matching the closing "}", you want to read "profilecomplete": false
But I agree that a JSON parser would have been my preferred option!
Using Jtoken.FromObject results in double curly brackets which results in a JSON parse error, here is a simple example
object jtokenObject = new { Data = JToken.FromObject(new {Name="some name"}) };
Console.WriteLine(jtokenObject);
//{ Data = {{ "Name": "some name"}} }
JToken anotherToken = JToken.FromObject(jtokenObject);
Console.WriteLine(anotherToken);
//{{ "Data": { "Name": "some name" }}}
Does anyone know about a quick fix that does not require converting to string and removing or serializing / deserializing?
I'm working on a regular expression and I just can't figure out what the problem is. I've tried several helping sites like http://derekslager.com/blog/posts/2007/09/a-better-dotnet-regular-expression-tester.ashx and http://gskinner.com/RegExr/ but somehow when I put the tested regular expression in c# it is not processed correctly
I'm working on a JSON string I can receive from JIRA. The heavily stripped down and beautified version of this JSON string is as follows:
{
"fields": {
"progress": {
"progress": 0,
"total": 0
},
"summary": "Webhook listener is working",
"timetracking": {},
"resolution": null,
"resolutiondate": null,
"timespent": null,
"reporter": {
"self": "http://removed.com/rest/api/2/user?username=removed",
"name": "removed#nothere.com",
"emailAddress": "removed#nothere.com",
"avatarUrls": {
"16x16": "http://www.gravatar.com/avatar/88994b13ab4916972ff1861f9cccd4ed?d=mm&s=16",
"24x24": "http://www.gravatar.com/avatar/88994b13ab4916972ff1861f9cccd4ed?d=mm&s=24",
"32x32": "http://www.gravatar.com/avatar/88994b13ab4916972ff1861f9cccd4ed?d=mm&s=32",
"48x48": "http://www.gravatar.com/avatar/88994b13ab4916972ff1861f9cccd4ed?d=mm&s=48"
},
"displayName": "Wubinator]",
"active": true
},
"updated": "2013-08-20T14:08:00.247+0200",
"created": "2013-07-30T14:41:07.090+0200",
"description": "Say what?",
"customfield_10001": null,
"duedate": null,
"issuelinks": [],
"customfield_10004": "73",
"worklog": {
"startAt": 0,
"maxResults": 0,
"total": 0,
"worklogs": []
},
"project": {
"self": "http://removed.com/rest/api/2/project/EP",
"id": "10000",
"key": "EP",
"name": "EuroPort+ Suite",
"avatarUrls": {
"16x16": "http://removed.com/secure/projectavatar?size=xsmall&pid=10000&avatarId=10208",
"24x24": "http://removed.com/secure/projectavatar?size=small&pid=10000&avatarId=10208",
"32x32": "http://removed.com/secure/projectavatar?size=medium&pid=10000&avatarId=10208",
"48x48": "http://removed.com/secure/projectavatar?pid=10000&avatarId=10208"
}
},
"customfield_10700": null,
"timeestimate": null,
"lastViewed": null,
"timeoriginalestimate": null,
"customfield_10802": null
}
}
I need to convert this JSON to a XML of course this is not directly possible because of the "16x16", "24x24", "32x32" and "48x48" bits inside the json which would be transformed into <16x16 />, <24x24 />, <32x32 /> and <48x48 /> tags which are invalid tags.
The receiver of the XML doesn't even need those avatar urls so I was thinking about stripping out the entire "avatarUrls":"{ ..... }, bit before handing the json over to JSON.NET for converting.
I was thinking about doing this using a regular expression. After some testing on the mentioned websites I came to the following regular expression:
("avatarUrls)(.*?)("displayName")
The Regex.Replace method should remove all found results instead of the third groep (a.k.a. "displayName")
The website http://derekslager.com/blog/posts/2007/09/a-better-dotnet-regular-expression-tester.ashx shows me the correct groups and find results and says that the mentioned regular expression should be used inside C# is:
#"(""avatarUrls)(.*?)(""displayName"")"
So inside C# I wrote the following:
string expression = #"(""avatarUrls)(.*?)(""displayName"")";
string result = Regex.Replace(json, expression, "$3");
return result;
When I look at the result after the RegexReplace nothing has been replaced. Does anyone see what I did wrong here?
I wouldn't use regular expressions to remove these nodes. I'd instead use JSON .Net to remove the nodes you don't want.
I refer to the quote:
Some people, when confronted with a problem, think “I know, I'll use
regular expressions.” Now they have two problems.
Using the answer found here, you could write:
var jsonObject = (JObject)JsonConvert.DeserializeObject(yourJsonString);
removeFields(jsonObject.Root, new[]{"avatarUrls"});
(Note that I was not sure if you wanted to delete both "avatarUrls" nodes.)
There's an overload of Regex.Replace that takes RegexOptions that you may need to look into. For example, for . to matches every character (instead of every character except \n), you'd need to specify RegexOptions.Singleline. Also, it looks like you're trying to replace every match of #"(""avatarUrls)(.*?)(""displayName"")" with $3 is that intended? You might be better off doing something like this:
var match = Regex.Match(json, pattern, options);
while (match.Success) {
// Do stuff with match.Groups(1)
match = match.NextMatch();
}
However... I'm not really sure that's going to replace it in the source string.
The problem is something completely different:
Inside the following string:
{"16x16":"http://www.gravatar.com/avatar/88994b13ab4916972ff1861f9cccd4ed?d=mm&s=16, "32.32"
There is an '&' the magic symbol that indicates a next parameter is started. Therefor no complete JSON is read and therefor it cannot convert it properly. It also indicates why nothing is being replaced inside the regular expression I used because "displayName" is not inside the string, so nothing matches.
i try to slit a text and put it into a dictionary , the problem i my text doesn't have a a clear structure :
text :
{
"about": "where I'm meant to be...",
"bio": "Visit my official blog at:\n\nhttp://ABC.com/ \n\nAdd me on Twitter:\n\nhttp://www.ABC.com/ABC",
"category": "Public figure",
"is_published": true,
"location": {
"street": "",
"city": "Los Angeles",
"state": "CA",
"country": "United States",
"zip": ""
},
"talking_about_count": 254637,
"username": "ABC",
"website": "http://kimkardashian.celebuzz.com/\nhttp://www.twitter.com/kimkardashian\n",
"were_here_count": 0,
"id": "114696805612",
"name": "ABC",
"link": "http://www.ABC.com/ABC",
"likes": 0,
"cover": {
"cover_id": "000000000",
"source": "http://ABC.jpg",
"offset_y": 0,
"offset_x": 200
}
}
As you see i have the "," as a delimiter , the problem is that there some composed objects like the :
"location": {
"street": "",
"city": "Los Angeles",
"state": "CA",
"country": "United States",
"zip": ""
},
that's why I can't use the string.Split(' ');
i heard about the regular expressions but I don't know how to use them
Is there any solution to get those information separated into a dictionary or any other structure
Your data is in a standard format (JSON) and there are parsers already written for it. You can download Json.NET easy through NuGet in Visual Studio.
Regular expressions are a powerful tool that makes pattern matching a lot simpler. For me that's as far as they go. They can be used to create parsers and all sorts of other things, but it's complicated.
So you could create your own JSON parser using regular expressions, but it'll take a lot of time. It would be like building a lockpick when there is a key available.
JavaScriptSerializer may satisfy your needs
using System.Web.Script.Serialization;
var jss = new JavaScriptSerializer();
var dict = jss.Deserialize<Dictionary<string,string>>(jsonText);
Console.WriteLine(dict["some_number"]);
See: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.web.script.serialization.javascriptserializer.aspx
I'm using Json.NET in a .NET 4.0 application in order to convert a JSON RESTful response into XML. I am running into issues converting JSON into XML if a JSON child key has a space.
So far, I am able to convert most JSON responses.
Here are example responses along with the code which I am using to generate the XML.
{
num_reviews: "2",
page_id: "17816",
merchant_id: 7165
}
And here is the response which is causing an error:
[
{
headline: "ant bully",
created_date: "2010/06/12",
merchant_group_id: 10126,
profile_id: 0,
provider_id: 10000,
locale: "en_US",
helpful_score: 1314,
locale_id: 1,
variant: "",
bottomline: "Yes",
name: "Jessie",
page_id: "17816",
review_tags: [
{
Pros: [
"Easy to Learn",
"Engaging Story Line",
"Graphics",
"Good Audio",
"Multiplayer",
"Gameplay"
]
},
{
Describe Yourself: [
"Casual Gamer"
]
},
{
Best Uses: [
"Multiple Players"
]
},
{
Primary use: [
"Personal"
]
}
],
rating: 4,
merchant_id: 7165,
reviewer_type: "Verified Reviewer",
comments: "fun to play"
},
{
headline: "Ok game, but great price!",
created_date: "2010/02/28",
merchant_group_id: 10126,
profile_id: 0,
provider_id: 10000,
locale: "en_US",
helpful_score: 1918,
locale_id: 1,
variant: "",
bottomline: "Yes",
name: "Alleycatsandconmen",
page_id: "17816",
review_tags: [
{
Pros: [
"Easy to Learn",
"Engaging Story Line"
]
},
{
Describe Yourself: [
"Frequent Player"
]
},
{
Primary use: [
"Personal"
]
},
{
Best Uses: [
"Kids"
]
}
],
rating: 3,
merchant_id: 7165,
reviewer_type: "Verified Reviewer",
comments: "This is a cute game for the kids and at a great price. Just don't expect a whole lot."
}
]
So far, I have been considering on creating a mapping of the JSON data to a C# object and generating XML for that class. However, is there a way to keep this dynamic? Or is there a way to treat spaces as %20 encodings?
This question is same as how to validate JSON string before converting to XML in C#
If you have any further queries, please let me know.
You can call XmlConvert.EncodeName, which will escape any invalid characters using _s.
For example, a space would become _x0020_.
You cannot have an XMLElement Name with a space in it. You would need to replace the space with an Underscore or anyother element. If that is not feasible for you, try putting that value as an attribute for that Node.
I hope this makes sense.