Jason is an easy-to-use JSON library for Go.
Jason is designed to be convenient for reading arbitrary JSON while still honoring the strictness of the language. Inspired by other libraries and improved to work well for common use cases. It currently focuses on reading JSON data rather than creating it. API Documentation can be found on godoc.org.
go get github.com/antonholmquist/jason
import (
"github.com/antonholmquist/jason"
)
The following golang values are used to represent JSON data types. It is consistent with how encoding/json
uses primitive types.
bool
, for JSON booleansjson.Number/float64/int64
, for JSON numbersstring
, for JSON strings[]*Value
, for JSON arraysmap[string]*Value
, for JSON objectsnil
for JSON null
Create object from bytes. Returns an error if the bytes are not valid JSON.
v, err := jason.NewObjectFromBytes(b)
If the root object is unknown or not an object, use NewValueFromBytes
instead. It can then be typecasted using one of the conversion methods provided by the library, for instance Array()
or String()
.
v, err := jason.NewValueFromBytes(b)
Create value from a io.reader. Returns an error if the string couldn't be parsed.
v, err := jason.NewObjectFromReader(res.Body)
Reading values is easy. If the key path is invalid or type doesn't match, it will return an error and the default value.
name, err := v.GetString("name")
age, err := v.GetInt64("age")
verified, err := v.GetBoolean("verified")
education, err := v.GetObject("education")
friends, err := v.GetObjectArray("friends")
interests, err := v.GetStringArray("interests")
Reading nested values is easy. If the path is invalid or type doesn't match, it will return the default value and an error.
name, err := v.GetString("person", "name")
age, err := v.GetInt64("person", "age")
verified, err := v.GetBoolean("person", "verified")
education, err := v.GetObject("person", "education")
friends, err := v.GetObjectArray("person", "friends")
Looping through an array is done with GetValueArray()
or GetObjectArray()
. It returns an error if the value at that keypath is null (or something else than an array).
friends, err := person.GetObjectArray("friends")
for _, friend := range friends {
name, err := friend.GetString("name")
age, err := friend.GetNumber("age")
}
Looping through an object is easy. GetObject()
returns an error if the value at that keypath is null (or something else than an object).
person, err := person.GetObject("person")
for key, value := range person.Map() {
...
}
Example project:
package main
import (
"github.com/antonholmquist/jason"
"log"
)
func main() {
exampleJSON := `{
"name": "Walter White",
"age": 51,
"children": [
"junior",
"holly"
],
"other": {
"occupation": "chemist",
"years": 23
}
}`
v, _ := jason.NewObjectFromBytes([]byte(exampleJSON))
name, _ := v.GetString("name")
age, _ := v.GetNumber("age")
occupation, _ := v.GetString("other", "occupation")
years, _ := v.GetNumber("other", "years")
log.Println("age:", age)
log.Println("name:", name)
log.Println("occupation:", occupation)
log.Println("years:", years)
children, _ := v.GetStringArray("children")
for i, child := range children {
log.Printf("child %d: %s", i, child)
}
others, _ := v.GetObject("other")
for _, value := range others.Map() {
s, sErr := value.String()
n, nErr := value.Number()
if sErr == nil {
log.Println("string value: ", s)
} else if nErr == nil {
log.Println("number value: ", n)
}
}
}
Documentation can be found a godoc:
https://godoc.org/github.com/antonholmquist/jason
To run the project tests:
go test
Go 1.1 and up.
I remebered it from an email one of our projects managers sent a couple of years ago.
"Don't worry. We can handle both XML and Jason"
Anton Holmquist, http://twitter.com/antonholmquist