Accessing Json in Javascript - javascript

'[{"SponsorID":382,"SponsorName":"Test Name","MonthEndReport":true,"AccountingManager":"Me","UnboundProperties":[],"State":16}]'
When I try to access the above like this:
for (var i = 0; i < data.length; i++) {
alert(data[i]);
}
It spells out each thing, such as [, {, ", S, and etc.
I also tried doing data[i].SponsorName but obviously got undefined. How should I be accessing this?

You need to parse the JSON string, preferably with JSON.parse. The JSON API is built into more modern browsers and can be provided to older browsers by including Crockford's JSON script. Crockford's script will detect if the browser already provides the API and adds it if not.
With that in place, if your JSON is in a string variable named response, you can:
var parsedResponse = JSON.parse( response );
//run your iterating code on parsedResponse

You would first need to eval() or more ideally JSON.parse() the JSON string in to a Javascript object. This assumes you trust the source of the JSON.
var jsonobj = JSON.parse(data);
// Now view the object's structure
console.dir(jsonobj);
Here's what it looks like after being evaluated and printed out:

var array = JSON.parse('[{"SponsorID":382,"SponsorName":"Test Name","MonthEndReport":true,"AccountingManager":"Me","UnboundProperties":[],"State":16}]')
array[0].AccountingManager; // "me"
Or everyone's favorite library, since IE7 and below don't have native support:
$.parseJSON('[{"SponsorID":382,"SponsorName":"Test Name","MonthEndReport":true,"AccountingManager":"Me","UnboundProperties":[],"State":16}]')

You parsed the Json string first, right?
var data = '[{"SponsorID":382,"SponsorName":"Test Name","MonthEndReport":true,"AccountingManager":"Me","UnboundProperties":[],"State":16}]';
data = JSON.parse(data);
alert(data.SponsorName);
JSON.parse, when available, is the preferred method over "eval" because of security and performance issues.

You've got a JSON array followed by an object:
var data = [{"SponsorID":382,"SponsorName":"Test Name","MonthEndReport":true,"AccountingManager":"Me","UnboundProperties":[],"State":16}];
alert(data[0].SponsorID);

Related

How to take off an URL from this string? [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Safely turning a JSON string into an object
(28 answers)
Closed 7 years ago.
I want to parse a JSON string in JavaScript. The response is something like
var response = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
How can I get the values result and count from this?
The standard way to parse JSON in JavaScript is JSON.parse()
The JSON API was introduced with ES5 (2011) and has since been implemented in >99% of browsers by market share, and Node.js. Its usage is simple:
const json = '{ "fruit": "pineapple", "fingers": 10 }';
const obj = JSON.parse(json);
console.log(obj.fruit, obj.fingers);
The only time you won't be able to use JSON.parse() is if you are programming for an ancient browser, such as IE 7 (2006), IE 6 (2001), Firefox 3 (2008), Safari 3.x (2009), etc. Alternatively, you may be in an esoteric JavaScript environment that doesn't include the standard APIs. In these cases, use json2.js, the reference implementation of JSON written by Douglas Crockford, the inventor of JSON. That library will provide an implementation of JSON.parse().
When processing extremely large JSON files, JSON.parse() may choke because of its synchronous nature and design. To resolve this, the JSON website recommends third-party libraries such as Oboe.js and clarinet, which provide streaming JSON parsing.
jQuery once had a $.parseJSON() function, but it was deprecated with jQuery 3.0. In any case, for a long time, it was nothing more than a wrapper around JSON.parse().
WARNING!
This answer stems from an ancient era of JavaScript programming during which there was no builtin way to parse JSON. The advice given here is no longer applicable and probably dangerous. From a modern perspective, parsing JSON by involving jQuery or calling eval() is nonsense. Unless you need to support IE 7 or Firefox 3.0, the correct way to parse JSON is JSON.parse().
First of all, you have to make sure that the JSON code is valid.
After that, I would recommend using a JavaScript library such as jQuery or Prototype if you can because these things are handled well in those libraries.
On the other hand, if you don't want to use a library and you can vouch for the validity of the JSON object, I would simply wrap the string in an anonymous function and use the eval function.
This is not recommended if you are getting the JSON object from another source that isn't absolutely trusted because the eval function allows for renegade code if you will.
Here is an example of using the eval function:
var strJSON = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
var objJSON = eval("(function(){return " + strJSON + ";})()");
alert(objJSON.result);
alert(objJSON.count);
If you control what browser is being used or you are not worried people with an older browser, you can always use the JSON.parse method.
This is really the ideal solution for the future.
If you are getting this from an outside site it might be helpful to use jQuery's getJSON. If it's a list you can iterate through it with $.each
$.getJSON(url, function (json) {
alert(json.result);
$.each(json.list, function (i, fb) {
alert(fb.result);
});
});
If you want to use JSON 3 for older browsers, you can load it conditionally with:
<script>
window.JSON ||
document.write('<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/json3/3.2.4/json3.min.js"><\/scr'+'ipt>');
</script>
Now the standard window.JSON object is available to you no matter what browser a client is running.
The following example will make it clear:
let contactJSON = '{"name":"John Doe","age":"11"}';
let contact = JSON.parse(contactJSON);
console.log(contact.name + ", " + contact.age);
// Output: John Doe, 11
If you pass a string variable (a well-formed JSON string) to JSON.parse from MVC #Viewbag that has doublequote, '"', as quotes, you need to process it before JSON.parse (jsonstring)
var jsonstring = '#ViewBag.jsonstring';
jsonstring = jsonstring.replace(/"/g, '"');
You can either use the eval function as in some other answers. (Don't forget the extra braces.) You will know why when you dig deeper), or simply use the jQuery function parseJSON:
var response = '{"result":true , "count":1}';
var parsedJSON = $.parseJSON(response);
OR
You can use this below code.
var response = '{"result":true , "count":1}';
var jsonObject = JSON.parse(response);
And you can access the fields using jsonObject.result and jsonObject.count.
Update:
If your output is undefined then you need to follow THIS answer. Maybe your json string has an array format. You need to access the json object properties like this
var response = '[{"result":true , "count":1}]'; // <~ Array with [] tag
var jsonObject = JSON.parse(response);
console.log(jsonObject[0].result); //Output true
console.log(jsonObject[0].count); //Output 1
The easiest way using parse() method:
var response = '{"a":true,"b":1}';
var JsonObject= JSON.parse(response);
this is an example of how to get values:
var myResponseResult = JsonObject.a;
var myResponseCount = JsonObject.b;
JSON.parse() converts any JSON String passed into the function, to a JSON object.
For better understanding, press F12 to open the Inspect Element of your browser, and go to the console to write the following commands:
var response = '{"result":true,"count":1}'; // Sample JSON object (string form)
JSON.parse(response); // Converts passed string to a JSON object.
Now run the command:
console.log(JSON.parse(response));
You'll get output as Object {result: true, count: 1}.
In order to use that object, you can assign it to the variable, let's say obj:
var obj = JSON.parse(response);
Now by using obj and the dot(.) operator you can access properties of the JSON Object.
Try to run the command
console.log(obj.result);
Without using a library you can use eval - the only time you should use. It's safer to use a library though.
eg...
var response = '{"result":true , "count":1}';
var parsedJSON = eval('('+response+')');
var result=parsedJSON.result;
var count=parsedJSON.count;
alert('result:'+result+' count:'+count);
If you like
var response = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
var JsonObject= JSON.parse(response);
you can access the JSON elements by JsonObject with (.) dot:
JsonObject.result;
JsonObject.count;
I thought JSON.parse(myObject) would work. But depending on the browsers, it might be worth using eval('('+myObject+')'). The only issue I can recommend watching out for is the multi-level list in JSON.
An easy way to do it:
var data = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
var json = eval("[" +data+ "]")[0]; // ;)
If you use Dojo Toolkit:
require(["dojo/json"], function(JSON){
JSON.parse('{"hello":"world"}', true);
});
As mentioned by numerous others, most browsers support JSON.parse and JSON.stringify.
Now, I'd also like to add that if you are using AngularJS (which I highly recommend), then it also provides the functionality that you require:
var myJson = '{"result": true, "count": 1}';
var obj = angular.fromJson(myJson);//equivalent to JSON.parse(myJson)
var backToJson = angular.toJson(obj);//equivalent to JSON.stringify(obj)
I just wanted to add the stuff about AngularJS to provide another option. NOTE that AngularJS doesn't officially support Internet Explorer 8 (and older versions, for that matter), though through experience most of the stuff seems to work pretty well.
If you use jQuery, it is simple:
var response = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
var obj = $.parseJSON(response);
alert(obj.result); //true
alert(obj.count); //1

How to get JSON object's property? [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Safely turning a JSON string into an object
(28 answers)
Closed 7 years ago.
I want to parse a JSON string in JavaScript. The response is something like
var response = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
How can I get the values result and count from this?
The standard way to parse JSON in JavaScript is JSON.parse()
The JSON API was introduced with ES5 (2011) and has since been implemented in >99% of browsers by market share, and Node.js. Its usage is simple:
const json = '{ "fruit": "pineapple", "fingers": 10 }';
const obj = JSON.parse(json);
console.log(obj.fruit, obj.fingers);
The only time you won't be able to use JSON.parse() is if you are programming for an ancient browser, such as IE 7 (2006), IE 6 (2001), Firefox 3 (2008), Safari 3.x (2009), etc. Alternatively, you may be in an esoteric JavaScript environment that doesn't include the standard APIs. In these cases, use json2.js, the reference implementation of JSON written by Douglas Crockford, the inventor of JSON. That library will provide an implementation of JSON.parse().
When processing extremely large JSON files, JSON.parse() may choke because of its synchronous nature and design. To resolve this, the JSON website recommends third-party libraries such as Oboe.js and clarinet, which provide streaming JSON parsing.
jQuery once had a $.parseJSON() function, but it was deprecated with jQuery 3.0. In any case, for a long time, it was nothing more than a wrapper around JSON.parse().
WARNING!
This answer stems from an ancient era of JavaScript programming during which there was no builtin way to parse JSON. The advice given here is no longer applicable and probably dangerous. From a modern perspective, parsing JSON by involving jQuery or calling eval() is nonsense. Unless you need to support IE 7 or Firefox 3.0, the correct way to parse JSON is JSON.parse().
First of all, you have to make sure that the JSON code is valid.
After that, I would recommend using a JavaScript library such as jQuery or Prototype if you can because these things are handled well in those libraries.
On the other hand, if you don't want to use a library and you can vouch for the validity of the JSON object, I would simply wrap the string in an anonymous function and use the eval function.
This is not recommended if you are getting the JSON object from another source that isn't absolutely trusted because the eval function allows for renegade code if you will.
Here is an example of using the eval function:
var strJSON = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
var objJSON = eval("(function(){return " + strJSON + ";})()");
alert(objJSON.result);
alert(objJSON.count);
If you control what browser is being used or you are not worried people with an older browser, you can always use the JSON.parse method.
This is really the ideal solution for the future.
If you are getting this from an outside site it might be helpful to use jQuery's getJSON. If it's a list you can iterate through it with $.each
$.getJSON(url, function (json) {
alert(json.result);
$.each(json.list, function (i, fb) {
alert(fb.result);
});
});
If you want to use JSON 3 for older browsers, you can load it conditionally with:
<script>
window.JSON ||
document.write('<script src="//cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/json3/3.2.4/json3.min.js"><\/scr'+'ipt>');
</script>
Now the standard window.JSON object is available to you no matter what browser a client is running.
The following example will make it clear:
let contactJSON = '{"name":"John Doe","age":"11"}';
let contact = JSON.parse(contactJSON);
console.log(contact.name + ", " + contact.age);
// Output: John Doe, 11
If you pass a string variable (a well-formed JSON string) to JSON.parse from MVC #Viewbag that has doublequote, '"', as quotes, you need to process it before JSON.parse (jsonstring)
var jsonstring = '#ViewBag.jsonstring';
jsonstring = jsonstring.replace(/"/g, '"');
You can either use the eval function as in some other answers. (Don't forget the extra braces.) You will know why when you dig deeper), or simply use the jQuery function parseJSON:
var response = '{"result":true , "count":1}';
var parsedJSON = $.parseJSON(response);
OR
You can use this below code.
var response = '{"result":true , "count":1}';
var jsonObject = JSON.parse(response);
And you can access the fields using jsonObject.result and jsonObject.count.
Update:
If your output is undefined then you need to follow THIS answer. Maybe your json string has an array format. You need to access the json object properties like this
var response = '[{"result":true , "count":1}]'; // <~ Array with [] tag
var jsonObject = JSON.parse(response);
console.log(jsonObject[0].result); //Output true
console.log(jsonObject[0].count); //Output 1
The easiest way using parse() method:
var response = '{"a":true,"b":1}';
var JsonObject= JSON.parse(response);
this is an example of how to get values:
var myResponseResult = JsonObject.a;
var myResponseCount = JsonObject.b;
JSON.parse() converts any JSON String passed into the function, to a JSON object.
For better understanding, press F12 to open the Inspect Element of your browser, and go to the console to write the following commands:
var response = '{"result":true,"count":1}'; // Sample JSON object (string form)
JSON.parse(response); // Converts passed string to a JSON object.
Now run the command:
console.log(JSON.parse(response));
You'll get output as Object {result: true, count: 1}.
In order to use that object, you can assign it to the variable, let's say obj:
var obj = JSON.parse(response);
Now by using obj and the dot(.) operator you can access properties of the JSON Object.
Try to run the command
console.log(obj.result);
Without using a library you can use eval - the only time you should use. It's safer to use a library though.
eg...
var response = '{"result":true , "count":1}';
var parsedJSON = eval('('+response+')');
var result=parsedJSON.result;
var count=parsedJSON.count;
alert('result:'+result+' count:'+count);
If you like
var response = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
var JsonObject= JSON.parse(response);
you can access the JSON elements by JsonObject with (.) dot:
JsonObject.result;
JsonObject.count;
I thought JSON.parse(myObject) would work. But depending on the browsers, it might be worth using eval('('+myObject+')'). The only issue I can recommend watching out for is the multi-level list in JSON.
An easy way to do it:
var data = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
var json = eval("[" +data+ "]")[0]; // ;)
If you use Dojo Toolkit:
require(["dojo/json"], function(JSON){
JSON.parse('{"hello":"world"}', true);
});
As mentioned by numerous others, most browsers support JSON.parse and JSON.stringify.
Now, I'd also like to add that if you are using AngularJS (which I highly recommend), then it also provides the functionality that you require:
var myJson = '{"result": true, "count": 1}';
var obj = angular.fromJson(myJson);//equivalent to JSON.parse(myJson)
var backToJson = angular.toJson(obj);//equivalent to JSON.stringify(obj)
I just wanted to add the stuff about AngularJS to provide another option. NOTE that AngularJS doesn't officially support Internet Explorer 8 (and older versions, for that matter), though through experience most of the stuff seems to work pretty well.
If you use jQuery, it is simple:
var response = '{"result":true,"count":1}';
var obj = $.parseJSON(response);
alert(obj.result); //true
alert(obj.count); //1

JSON.parse doesn't seem to parse object data?

I am communicating between iframes, but json.parsing to a var then using document.write to dump it doesn't contain anything. But if I alert(e.data), it does.
<script>
window.onmessage = function(e) {
var j = JSON.parse(e.data);
document.write(j);
}
</script>
<script>window.postMessage("[1, 5, 'false']", '*');</script>
For a correctly parse of a string into a JSON object strings keys and values must be wrapped by quotes "
JSON.parse() is defined in ECMA-262, fifth edition, almost any browser supports it.
How to use it?
var json = '{"prop":"first","prop2":1}';
var o = JSON.parse(json);
If you're using jquery, it has a parse json function $.parseJSON, but its slower than native JSON.parse, so it's better to use the jquery function if the JSON object is not available.
var json = '{"prop":"first","prop2":1}';
var o = JSON && JSON.parse(json) || $.parseJSON(json);

How to get data from JSON response?

I am using plain JavaScript on my project. How can I get the value of the following example with the category? I need to detect whether it comes back true or false.
{
"category": "true"
}
I can get the entire object, but I just want to pull out the value of category.
from comment...
The JSON data is returned from the server based on a form submission. It keeps saying myObject is undefined. How can do I pass this so my JavaScript can read the response?
from comment...
I can get myObject using this: if (form.XHR.status === 200) {var data = form.XHR.response;}, but if I try to do data.myObject it says it's undefined.
You need to parse the JSON before you can access it as an object...
if (form.XHR.status === 200) {
var data = form.XHR.response;
var parsed = JSON.parse(data);
alert(parsed.category);
}
Why is this needed? It's because JSON is not JavaScript. The two terms are not synonymous.
JSON is a textual data interchange format. It needs to be parsed into the data structures of whatever language it's been given to. In your case, the language is JavaScript, so you need to parse it into JavaScript data.
When it is received form the xhr response, it is received in the form in which all textual data is handled in JavaScript. That is as a string. As a string, you can't directly access the values represented.
JavaScript has a built in parser called JSON.parse. This was used in the example above to do the necessary conversion.
Some older browsers don't support JSON.parse. If you're supporting those browsers, you can find a JavaScript parser at http://json.org .
First of all you need a variable to refer it:
var obj = {
"category": "true"
};
Then can you say e.g:
alert(obj.category);
var myObject = { "category": "true"};
alert (myObject.category);
But you likely want:
var myObject = { "category": true};
...if you're going to be testing for true/false:
if (myObject.category) {
// category is true, so do your stuff here.
}
You can access json object data using '.' or [key] like this :
var obj = {
"category": "true"
};
console.log(obj.category);
// Or
console.log(obj["category"]);
Here is the DEMO
For anyone who arrives here banging their head against the wall, make sure to see if you need to access a parent object which wraps all the delivered data:
console.log(response['id'])
may not work, because a parent entity must be accessed first:
console.log(response.session['id'])
If you console log your response and it is wrapped in {} you probably need to do this.

Parsing an error message in JSON fails

Titanium SDK version: 1.6.1
iPhone SDK version: 4.2
I get this response back from the API I am consuming and I want a popup
to show up on each error. For example: Desc can't be blank. I am using JavaScript.
This is the output in JSON.
{"desc":"can't be blank","value_1":"can't be blank"}
I tried this but it outputs every character, one by one.
for (var thekey = 0; thekey < response.length; thekey++) {
alert(response[thekey]);
};
How can I output the errors?
If the response is a string you'll need to decode it to an object before you can do anything with it. Right now you're just looping through a string and printing each character.
You'll also probably want to use
for (var key in responseObject) {
var value = responseObject[key];
}
since it will be an object and your keys aren't numeric.
You have to first parse JSON into a JavaScript object, using JSON.parse:
response = JSON.parse(response);
The JSON object might not be available in older browsers, you have to include json2.js then.
You cannot use a normal for loop to iterate over an object. You have to use for...in:
for (var thekey in response) {
if(response.hasOwnProperty(thekey)) {
alert(response[thekey]);
}
}
The properties of the object are desc and value_1, you cannot access them with numerical keys.

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