public final class Gson extends Object
toJson(Object)
or
fromJson(String, Class)
methods on it. Gson instances are
Thread-safe so you can reuse them freely across multiple threads.
You can create a Gson instance by invoking new Gson()
if the default
configuration is all you need. You can also use GsonBuilder
to build
a Gson instance with various configuration options such as versioning
support, pretty printing, custom JsonSerializer
s,
JsonDeserializer
s, and InstanceCreator
s.
Here is an example of how Gson is used for a simple Class:
Gson gson = new Gson(); // Or use new GsonBuilder().create(); MyType target = new MyType(); String json = gson.toJson(target); // serializes target to Json MyType target2 = gson.fromJson(json, MyType.class); // deserializes json into // target2
If the object that your are serializing/deserializing is a
ParameterizedType
(i.e. contains at least one type parameter and may
be an array) then you must use the toJson(Object, Type)
or
fromJson(String, Type)
method. Here is an example for serializing
and deserializing a ParameterizedType
:
Type listType = new TypeToken<List<String>>() { }.getType(); List<String> target = new LinkedList<String>(); target.add("blah"); Gson gson = new Gson(); String json = gson.toJson(target, listType); List<String> target2 = gson.fromJson(json, listType);
See the Gson User Guide for a more complete set of examples.
TypeToken
Constructor and Description |
---|
Gson()
Constructs a Gson object with default configuration.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
Excluder |
excluder() |
FieldNamingStrategy |
fieldNamingStrategy() |
<T> T |
fromJson(JsonElement json,
Class<T> classOfT)
This method deserializes the Json read from the specified parse tree into an
object of the specified type.
|
<T> T |
fromJson(JsonElement json,
Type typeOfT)
This method deserializes the Json read from the specified parse tree into an
object of the specified type.
|
<T> T |
fromJson(JsonReader reader,
Type typeOfT)
Reads the next JSON value from
reader and convert it to an object of
type typeOfT . |
<T> T |
fromJson(Reader json,
Class<T> classOfT)
This method deserializes the Json read from the specified reader into an
object of the specified class.
|
<T> T |
fromJson(Reader json,
Type typeOfT)
This method deserializes the Json read from the specified reader into an
object of the specified type.
|
<T> T |
fromJson(String json,
Class<T> classOfT)
This method deserializes the specified Json into an object of the specified
class.
|
<T> T |
fromJson(String json,
Type typeOfT)
This method deserializes the specified Json into an object of the specified
type.
|
<T> TypeAdapter<T> |
getAdapter(Class<T> type)
Returns the type adapter for type.
|
<T> TypeAdapter<T> |
getAdapter(TypeToken<T> type)
Returns the type adapter for type.
|
<T> TypeAdapter<T> |
getDelegateAdapter(TypeAdapterFactory skipPast,
TypeToken<T> type)
This method is used to get an alternate type adapter for the specified type.
|
boolean |
htmlSafe() |
GsonBuilder |
newBuilder()
Returns a new GsonBuilder containing all custom factories and configuration
used by the current instance.
|
JsonReader |
newJsonReader(Reader reader)
Returns a new JSON reader configured for the settings on this Gson instance.
|
JsonWriter |
newJsonWriter(Writer writer)
Returns a new JSON writer configured for the settings on this Gson instance.
|
boolean |
serializeNulls() |
String |
toJson(JsonElement jsonElement)
Converts a tree of
JsonElement s into its equivalent JSON
representation. |
void |
toJson(JsonElement jsonElement,
Appendable writer)
Writes out the equivalent JSON for a tree of
JsonElement s. |
void |
toJson(JsonElement jsonElement,
JsonWriter writer)
Writes the JSON for
jsonElement to writer . |
String |
toJson(Object src)
This method serializes the specified object into its equivalent Json
representation.
|
void |
toJson(Object src,
Appendable writer)
This method serializes the specified object into its equivalent Json
representation.
|
String |
toJson(Object src,
Type typeOfSrc)
This method serializes the specified object, including those of generic
types, into its equivalent Json representation.
|
void |
toJson(Object src,
Type typeOfSrc,
Appendable writer)
This method serializes the specified object, including those of generic
types, into its equivalent Json representation.
|
void |
toJson(Object src,
Type typeOfSrc,
JsonWriter writer)
Writes the JSON representation of
src of type typeOfSrc to
writer . |
JsonElement |
toJsonTree(Object src)
This method serializes the specified object into its equivalent
representation as a tree of
JsonElement s. |
JsonElement |
toJsonTree(Object src,
Type typeOfSrc)
This method serializes the specified object, including those of generic
types, into its equivalent representation as a tree of
JsonElement s. |
String |
toString() |
public Gson()
toJson
methods is in compact
representation. This means that all the unneeded white-space is removed. You
can change this behavior with GsonBuilder.setPrettyPrinting()
.GsonBuilder.serializeNulls()
.Map
, URL
, URI
,
Locale
, Date
, BigDecimal
, and
BigInteger
classes. If you would prefer to change the default
representation, you can do so by registering a type adapter through
GsonBuilder.registerTypeAdapter(Type, Object)
.DateFormat.DEFAULT
. This
format ignores the millisecond portion of the date during serialization. You
can change this by invoking GsonBuilder.setDateFormat(int)
or
GsonBuilder.setDateFormat(String)
.Expose
annotation. You can enable
Gson to serialize/deserialize only those fields marked with this annotation
through GsonBuilder.excludeFieldsWithoutExposeAnnotation()
.Since
annotation. You can enable
Gson to use this annotation through
GsonBuilder.setVersion(double)
.versionNumber
will be output as
"versionNumber"
in Json. The same rules are applied
for mapping incoming Json to the Java classes. You can change this policy
through GsonBuilder.setFieldNamingPolicy(FieldNamingPolicy)
.transient
or static
fields from consideration for serialization and deserialization. You can
change this behavior through
GsonBuilder.excludeFieldsWithModifiers(int...)
.public GsonBuilder newBuilder()
public Excluder excluder()
public FieldNamingStrategy fieldNamingStrategy()
public boolean serializeNulls()
public boolean htmlSafe()
public <T> TypeAdapter<T> getAdapter(TypeToken<T> type)
IllegalArgumentException
- if this GSON cannot serialize and
deserialize type
.public <T> TypeAdapter<T> getDelegateAdapter(TypeAdapterFactory skipPast, TypeToken<T> type)
TypeAdapterFactory
that you may have registered. This features is
typically used when you want to register a type adapter that does a little
bit of work but then delegates further processing to the Gson default type
adapter. Here is an example:
Let's say we want to write a type adapter that counts the number of objects
being read from or written to JSON. We can achieve this by writing a type
adapter factory that uses the getDelegateAdapter
method:
{ @code class StatsTypeAdapterFactory implements TypeAdapterFactory { public int numReads = 0; public int numWrites = 0; publicTypeAdapter create(Gson gson, TypeToken type) { final TypeAdapter delegate = gson.getDelegateAdapter(this, type); return new TypeAdapter () { public void write(JsonWriter out, T value) throws IOException { ++numWrites; delegate.write(out, value); } public T read(JsonReader in) throws IOException { ++numReads; return delegate.read(in); } }; } } }
This factory can now be used like this:
{ @code StatsTypeAdapterFactory stats = new StatsTypeAdapterFactory(); Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().registerTypeAdapterFactory(stats).create(); // Call gson.toJson() and fromJson methods on objects System.out.println("Num JSON reads" + stats.numReads); System.out.println("Num JSON writes" + stats.numWrites); }
Note that this call will skip all factories registered before
skipPast
. In case of multiple TypeAdapterFactories registered it is
up to the caller of this function to insure that the order of registration
does not prevent this method from reaching a factory they would expect to
reply from this call. Note that since you can not override type adapter
factories for String and Java primitive types, our stats factory will not
count the number of String or primitives that will be read or written.
skipPast
- The type adapter factory that needs to be skipped while
searching for a matching type adapter. In most cases, you
should just pass this (the type adapter factory from
where getDelegateAdapter(io.github.wysohn.gsoncopy.TypeAdapterFactory, io.github.wysohn.gsoncopy.reflect.TypeToken<T>)
method is being invoked).type
- Type for which the delegate adapter is being searched for.public <T> TypeAdapter<T> getAdapter(Class<T> type)
IllegalArgumentException
- if this GSON cannot serialize and
deserialize type
.public JsonElement toJsonTree(Object src)
JsonElement
s. This method should be used
when the specified object is not a generic type. This method uses
Object.getClass()
to get the type for the specified object, but the
getClass()
loses the generic type information because of the Type
Erasure feature of Java. Note that this method works fine if the any of the
object fields are of generic type, just the object itself should not be of a
generic type. If the object is of generic type, use
toJsonTree(Object, Type)
instead.src
- the object for which Json representation is to be created setting
for Gsonsrc
.public JsonElement toJsonTree(Object src, Type typeOfSrc)
JsonElement
s.
This method must be used if the specified object is a generic type. For
non-generic objects, use toJsonTree(Object)
instead.src
- the object for which JSON representation is to be createdtypeOfSrc
- The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this
type by using the
TypeToken
class. For
example, to get the type for Collection<Foo>
, you
should use:
Type typeOfSrc = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() { }.getType();
src
public String toJson(Object src)
Object.getClass()
to get the type for
the specified object, but the getClass()
loses the generic type
information because of the Type Erasure feature of Java. Note that this
method works fine if the any of the object fields are of generic type, just
the object itself should not be of a generic type. If the object is of
generic type, use toJson(Object, Type)
instead. If you want to write
out the object to a Writer
, use toJson(Object, Appendable)
instead.src
- the object for which Json representation is to be created setting
for Gsonsrc
.public String toJson(Object src, Type typeOfSrc)
toJson(Object)
instead. If you want to write out the object to a
Appendable
, use toJson(Object, Type, Appendable)
instead.src
- the object for which JSON representation is to be createdtypeOfSrc
- The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this
type by using the
TypeToken
class. For
example, to get the type for Collection<Foo>
, you
should use:
Type typeOfSrc = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() { }.getType();
src
public void toJson(Object src, Appendable writer) throws JsonIOException
Object.getClass()
to get the type for
the specified object, but the getClass()
loses the generic type
information because of the Type Erasure feature of Java. Note that this
method works fine if the any of the object fields are of generic type, just
the object itself should not be of a generic type. If the object is of
generic type, use toJson(Object, Type, Appendable)
instead.src
- the object for which Json representation is to be created
setting for Gsonwriter
- Writer to which the Json representation needs to be writtenJsonIOException
- if there was a problem writing to the writerpublic void toJson(Object src, Type typeOfSrc, Appendable writer) throws JsonIOException
toJson(Object, Appendable)
instead.src
- the object for which JSON representation is to be createdtypeOfSrc
- The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this
type by using the
TypeToken
class. For
example, to get the type for Collection<Foo>
, you
should use:
Type typeOfSrc = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() { }.getType();
writer
- Writer to which the Json representation of src needs to be
written.JsonIOException
- if there was a problem writing to the writerpublic void toJson(Object src, Type typeOfSrc, JsonWriter writer) throws JsonIOException
src
of type typeOfSrc
to
writer
.JsonIOException
- if there was a problem writing to the writerpublic String toJson(JsonElement jsonElement)
JsonElement
s into its equivalent JSON
representation.jsonElement
- root of a tree of JsonElement
spublic void toJson(JsonElement jsonElement, Appendable writer) throws JsonIOException
JsonElement
s.jsonElement
- root of a tree of JsonElement
swriter
- Writer to which the Json representation needs to be
writtenJsonIOException
- if there was a problem writing to the writerpublic JsonWriter newJsonWriter(Writer writer) throws IOException
IOException
public JsonReader newJsonReader(Reader reader)
public void toJson(JsonElement jsonElement, JsonWriter writer) throws JsonIOException
jsonElement
to writer
.JsonIOException
- if there was a problem writing to the writerpublic <T> T fromJson(String json, Class<T> classOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException
fromJson(String, Type)
. If you have the Json in a
Reader
instead of a String, use fromJson(Reader, Class)
instead.T
- the type of the desired objectjson
- the string from which the object is to be deserializedclassOfT
- the class of Tnull
if
json
is null
or if json
is empty.JsonSyntaxException
- if json is not a valid representation for an
object of type classOfTpublic <T> T fromJson(String json, Type typeOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException
fromJson(String, Class)
instead. If you
have the Json in a Reader
instead of a String, use
fromJson(Reader, Type)
instead.T
- the type of the desired objectjson
- the string from which the object is to be deserializedtypeOfT
- The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this type
by using the TypeToken
class. For example, to get the type for
Collection<Foo>
, you should use:
Type typeOfT = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() { }.getType();
null
if
json
is null
.JsonParseException
- if json is not a valid representation for an
object of type typeOfTJsonSyntaxException
- if json is not a valid representation for an
object of typepublic <T> T fromJson(Reader json, Class<T> classOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException, JsonIOException
fromJson(Reader, Type)
. If you
have the Json in a String form instead of a Reader
, use
fromJson(String, Class)
instead.T
- the type of the desired objectjson
- the reader producing the Json from which the object is to be
deserialized.classOfT
- the class of Tnull
if
json
is at EOF.JsonIOException
- if there was a problem reading from the ReaderJsonSyntaxException
- if json is not a valid representation for an
object of typepublic <T> T fromJson(Reader json, Type typeOfT) throws JsonIOException, JsonSyntaxException
fromJson(Reader, Class)
instead. If you have the Json in a String
form instead of a Reader
, use fromJson(String, Type)
instead.T
- the type of the desired objectjson
- the reader producing Json from which the object is to be
deserializedtypeOfT
- The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this type
by using the TypeToken
class. For example, to get the type for
Collection<Foo>
, you should use:
Type typeOfT = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() { }.getType();
null
if
json
is at EOF.JsonIOException
- if there was a problem reading from the ReaderJsonSyntaxException
- if json is not a valid representation for an
object of typepublic <T> T fromJson(JsonReader reader, Type typeOfT) throws JsonIOException, JsonSyntaxException
reader
and convert it to an object of
type typeOfT
. Returns null
, if the reader
is at EOF.
Since Type is not parameterized by T, this method is type unsafe and should
be used carefullyJsonIOException
- if there was a problem writing to the ReaderJsonSyntaxException
- if json is not a valid representation for an
object of typepublic <T> T fromJson(JsonElement json, Class<T> classOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException
fromJson(JsonElement, Type)
.T
- the type of the desired objectjson
- the root of the parse tree of JsonElement
s from which
the object is to be deserializedclassOfT
- The class of Tnull
if
json
is null
.JsonSyntaxException
- if json is not a valid representation for an
object of type typeOfTpublic <T> T fromJson(JsonElement json, Type typeOfT) throws JsonSyntaxException
fromJson(JsonElement, Class)
instead.T
- the type of the desired objectjson
- the root of the parse tree of JsonElement
s from which
the object is to be deserializedtypeOfT
- The specific genericized type of src. You can obtain this type
by using the TypeToken
class. For example, to get the type for
Collection<Foo>
, you should use:
Type typeOfT = new TypeToken<Collection<Foo>>() { }.getType();
null
if
json
is null
.JsonSyntaxException
- if json is not a valid representation for an
object of type typeOfT