I have a 2 MB JSON object that I'm hoping to parse with jQuery. I dumped the whole object into a file named "timeline.js" and I'm hoping to parse through it as a dataset to grab records as needed.
My dataset started as an XML file, but I read that JSON would be more efficient as I'm using jQuery to pull the data and place it in the DOM.
Below is the first record of my object. How would I parse this object to grab the record with a 'profileid' of 1016?
{
timeline:{
record:[
{
profileid:1016,
title:'Adam',
parentprofileid:0,
type:'Person',
minzoomlevel:29,
maxzoomlevel:66,
isapproxstart:1,
isapproxend:1,
startdate:-4181,
enddate:-3251,
shortdescription:'Name means "red" or "man" he is...',
article:'<div><span>The first member of...',
status:22,
scriptures:{
scripture:[
{
profileid:1016,
scripturetext:'Genesis 2:7',
referencetext:'Birth'
},
{
profileid:1016,
scripturetext:'Genesis 5:4',
referencetext:'Death'
}
]
}
},
jQuery parseJSON works fine, however is unnecessary when using jQuery AJAX and set the dataType to JSON (it is already parsed by jQuery after receiving the data).
However, I guess your actual question is how to find the record with the profileid of e.g. 1016. Since all items are in an array, the only way to find it, is to loop the array and check what profileId is set for the current item. For example:
for(var i in items){
if(items[i].profileid == 1016){
//execute whatever you want to do.
}
}
Make use of :jQuery.parseJSON( json ) - Takes a well-formed JSON string and returns the resulting JavaScript object.
Example
var obj = jQuery.parseJSON('{"name":"John"}');
alert( obj.name === "John" );
Related
I've been trying to load certain Json with Ajax GET request and then parsing it.
However when trying to access the Json key from HTML script tag it was undefined.
In order to debug this issue, I logged all the keys of Json in console as well as the Json itself. Therefore i utilized this function:
function getInv() {
$.get( "/inventory/", function( data ) {
var invList = data.split(",, "); // Explanation is below
console.log(invList[0]) // Just testing with first object
console.log(Object.keys(invList[0]));
});
}
getInv();
Purpose of data.split(",, "):
Since my backend script uses different programming language, I had to interpret it to the one suitable for Javascript.
There also were multiple Json objects, So i separated them with ",, " and then split them in Javascript in order to create a list of Json objects.
After calling the function, Following output was present:
Although the interesting part is that after pasting Json object in console like this:
This was the output:
So basically, in script tag, i was unable to access object's keys, although once i used it manually in console, all keys could be accessed.
What could be the purpose behind this? It seems quite strange that different outputs are given. Perhaps invList[0] is not Json object at all in the script tag? Thanks!
data.split() returns an array of strings, not objects. You need to use JSON.parse() to parse the JSON string to the corresponding objects.
function getInv() {
$.get( "/inventory/", function( data ) {
var invList = data.split(",, ");
console.log(invList[0]) // Just testing with first object
var obj = JSON.parse(invList[0]);
console.log(Object.keys(obj));
});
}
You can use .map() to parse all of them, then you'll get an array of objects like you were expecting:
var invList = data.split(",, ").map(JSON.parse);
var saurabhjson= JSON.stringify(data)
above returns this json
saurabhjson {"recordId":5555,"Key":"5656"}
if print the first array in console it get undefined value
console.log("saurabhjson[0].recordId",saurabhjson[0].recordId);
i want to do some check like this
if(saurabhjson[0].recordId == 5555) {
$('#div_ajaxResponse2').text("another success");
}
As the method suggests JSON.stringify(data). It converts a js object to a jsonstring now if you want a key out of this string it can't be done before parsing it to json.
So i don't get it why do you need to stringify it.
And another thing is you have a js object not an array of objects. so you need to use this on data itself:
console.log("data.recordId",data.recordId);
You are probably mixing a few things there.
When you do var saurabhjson= JSON.stringify(data), that saurabhjson variable is a string, not an object, so you can't access its elements like you are trying to do.
Try accessing data directly instead, without using JSON.stringify():
console.log("data.recordId",data.recordId);
This is my Ajax response from database :
{
"docs": [{
"_id":"5be81e62-f91d-4185-bef5-2eabdf048578",
"_rev":"6-171639a97982fd7d04a81ed070b2e752",
"profile_id":"5be81e62-f91d-4185-bef5-2eabdf048578",
"name":"omar"
}],
"bookmark": "g2wAAAABaANkAB9kYmNvcmVAZGI1LmplbmV2ZXIuY2xvdWRhbnQubmV0bAAAAAJuBAAAAADAbgQA_____2poAkY_8AAAAAAAAGEBag"
}
I want to convert it to jQuery for Example :
var JsonData = jQuery.parseJSON(responseData.Value);
alert(JsonData.docs._id);
But the alert message show : undefined
Need your help please and thanks.
docs is an array. An arrays store multiple docs in a single variable.
You need to tell the runtime which doc you want to attain the _id property of.
In your case there is only one doc so you can access the first using an index initializer:
alert(JsonData.docs[0]._id);
The [0] part pulls the first doc from the array.
I am getting response in below format for every product and in a single call there can be many products. I am trying to access this data via jQuery but I'm not able to access it.
Productdata['someid'] = { "Product Json data"}
I am using below syntax in jQuery but not getting the data. Please suggest.
alert(Productdata['someid']);
Its not going as JSON format .
JSON is a key : value pair format ;
so your Productdata should be in below format:
Productdata = { 'someid' : "Product Json data"}
A Json like this
var data={"name":"somebody"};
To call
return data.name
Or
return data["name"]
The problem here is that JavaScript does not support associative arrays (scroll down to "Associative arrays, no way!"). It has some internal workarounds which make it appear as if it does, but really all it does is just adding the keys as properties.
So you would most likely be able to access it using Productdata.someid = ....
EDIT:
So assuming you have the following JSON string: {"id":"123"} (which is valid JSON), you can use it like this:
var jsonString = '{"id":"123"}';
var parsedJSON = $.parseJSON(jsonString);
var productID = "product_" + parsedJSON.id;
Does this help?
Some useful links: JSON format checker to make sure the JSON is valid.
Unfortunately I wasn't allowed to add more than 2 links, so the jQuery parseJSON function link is still in the comment below.
I am working on an app that heavily uses JavaScript. I am attempting to include some object-oriented practices. In this attempt, I have created a basic class like such:
function Item() { this.init(); }
Item.prototype = {
init: function () {
this.data = {
id: 0,
name: "",
description: ""
}
},
save: function() {
alert("Saving...");
$.ajax({
url: getUrl(),
type: "POST",
data: JSON.stringify(this.data),
contentType: "application/json"
});
}
}
I am creating Item instances in my app and then saving them to local storage like such:
Item item = new Item();
window.localStorage.setItem("itemKey", JSON.stringify(item));
On another page, or at another time, I am retriving that item from local storage like such:
var item = window.localStorage.getItem("itemKey");
item = JSON.parse(item);
item.save();
Unfortunately, the "save" function does not seem to get reached. In the console window, there is an error that says:
*save_Click
(anonymous function)
onclick*
I have a hunch that the "(anonymous function)" is the console window's way of saying "calling item.save(), but item is an anonymous type, so I am trying to access an anonymous function". My problem is, I'm not sure how to convert "var item" into an Item class instance again. Can someone please show me?
Short answer:
Functions cannot be serialized into JSON.
Explanation:
JSON is a cross-platform serialization scheme based on a subset of JS literal syntax. This being the case, it can only store certain things. Per http://www.json.org/ :
Objects: An object is an unordered set of name/value pairs. An object begins with { (left brace) and ends with } (right brace). Each name is followed by : (colon) and the name/value pairs are separated by , (comma).
Arrays: An array is an ordered collection of values. An array begins with [ (left bracket) and ends with ] (right bracket). Values are separated by , (comma).
values: A value can be a string in double quotes, or a number, or true or false or null, or an object or an array. These structures can be nested.
Functions cannot be serialized into JSON because another non-JS platform would not be able to unserialize and use it. Consider the example in reverse. Say I had a PHP object at my server which contained properties and methods. If I serialized that object with PHP's json_encode() and methods were included in the output, how would my JavaScript ever be able to parse and understand PHP code in the methods, let alone use those methods?
What you are seeing in your resulting JSON is the toString() value of the function on the platform you're using. The JSON serilizer calls toString() on anything being serialized which isn't proper for JSON.
I believe your solution is to stop storing instances in JSON/local storage. Rather, save pertinent data for an instance which you set back to a new instance when you need.
I know this question is answered already, however I stumbled upon this by accident and wanted to share a solution to this problem, if anyone is interested.
instead of doing this:
var item = window.localStorage.getItem("itemKey");
item = JSON.parse(item);
item.save();
do something like this:
// get serialized JSON
var itemData = window.localStorage.getItem("itemKey");
//instantiate new Item object
var item = new Item();
// extend item with data
$.extend(item, JSON.parse(itemData));
// this should now work
item.save();
this will work so long as the function you are wanting to call (ie, save()) is prototypal and not an instance method (often times the case, and is indeed the case in the OP's original question.
the $.extend method is a utility method of jquery, but it is trivial to roll your own.
You cant do that, how can javascript possibly knows that item have a save function ? json doesnt allow functions as datas. just read the json spec , you cant save functions.
what you need to do is to create a serialize and deserialize method in the hash you want to stock. that will specifiy what to export and how you can "wake up" an object after parsing the corresponding json string.
You can only store plain Objects in DOMstorages (cookies, urlparams..., everything that needs [de]serialisation through JSON.stringify/JSON.parse). So what you did when sending the ajax data
ajaxsend(this.data);
also applies to string serialisation. You can only store the data, not the instance attributes (like prototype, constructor etc.). So use
savestring(JSON.stringify(item.data));
which is possible because item.data is such a plain Object. And when restoring it, you will only get that plain data Object back. In your case it's easy to reconstruct a Item instance from plain data, because your Items hold their values (only) in a public available property:
var item = new Item;
item.data = JSON.parse(getjsonstring());
Disclaimer
Not a full time time J.S. Developer, answer may have some minor bugs:
Long Boring Explanation
As mentioned by #JAAulde, your object cannot be serialized into JSON, because has functions, the technique that you are using doesn't allow it.
Many people forget or ignore that the objects that are used in an application, may not be exactly the same as saved / restored from storage.
Short & quick Answer
Since you already encapsulate the data members of your object into a single field,
you may want to try something like this:
// create J.S. object from prototype
Item item = new Item();
// assign values as you app. logic requires
item.data.name = "John Doe";
item.data.description = "Cool developer, office ladies, love him";
// encoded item into a JSON style string, not stored yet
var encodedItem = JSON.stringify(item.data)
// store string as a JSON string
window.localStorage.setItem("itemKey", encodedItem);
// do several stuff
// recover item from storage as JSON encoded string
var encodedItem = window.localStorage.getItem("itemKey");
// transform into J.S. object
item.data = JSON.parse(encodedItem);
// do other stuff
Cheers.