JsonPath仓库
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.

285 lines
9.6 KiB

10 years ago
JSONPath (1.0.0)
========
**A Java DSL for reading JSON documents.**
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/jayway/JsonPath.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/jayway/JsonPath)
JSONPath expressions always refer to a JSON structure in the same way as XPath expression are used in combination
with an XML document. The "root member object" in JSONPath is always referred to as `$` regardless if it is an
object or array.
JSONPath expressions can use the dot–notation
`$.store.book[0].title`
or the bracket–notation
`$['store']['book'][0]['title']`
Operators
---------
| Operator | Description |
| :------------------------ | :----------------------------------------------------------------- |
| `$` | The root element to query. This starts all path expressions. |
| `@` | The current node being processed by a filter predicate. |
| `*` | Wildcard. Available anywhere a name or numeric are required. |
| `..` | Deep scan. Available anywhere a name is required. |
| `.<name>` | Dot-notated child |
10 years ago
| `['<name>' (, '<name>')]` | Bracket-notated child or children |
| `[<number> (, <number>)]` | Array index or indexes |
| `[start:end]` | Array slice operator |
| `[?(<expression>)]` | Filter expression. Expression must evaluate to a boolean value. |
Path Examples
-------------
Given the
```javascript
{
"store": {
"book": [
{
"category": "reference",
"author": "Nigel Rees",
"title": "Sayings of the Century",
"price": 8.95
},
{
"category": "fiction",
"author": "Evelyn Waugh",
"title": "Sword of Honour",
"price": 12.99
},
{
"category": "fiction",
"author": "Herman Melville",
"title": "Moby Dick",
"isbn": "0-553-21311-3",
"price": 8.99
},
{
"category": "fiction",
"author": "J. R. R. Tolkien",
"title": "The Lord of the Rings",
"isbn": "0-395-19395-8",
"price": 22.99
}
],
"bicycle": {
"color": "red",
"price": 19.95
}
10 years ago
},
10 years ago
"expensive": 10
}
```
| JSONPath | Result |
| :------- | :----- |
| `$.store.book[*].author` | The authors of all books |
| `$..author` | All authors |
| `$.store.*` | All things, both books and bicycles |
| `$.store..price` | The price of everything |
| `$..book[2]` | The third book |
| `$..book[(@.length-1)]` | The last book |
| `$..book[0,1]` | The first two books |
| `$..book[:2]` | All books from index 0 (inclusive) until index 2 (exclusive) |
| `$..book[1:2]` | All books from index 1 (inclusive) until index 2 (exclusive) |
| `$..book[-2:]` | Last two books |
| `$..book[2:]` | Book number two from tail |
| `$..book[?(@.isbn)]` | All books with an ISBN number |
10 years ago
| `$.store.book[?(@.price < 10)]` | All books in store cheaper than 10 |
10 years ago
| `$..book[?(@.price <= $['expensive'])]` | All books in store that are not "expensive" |
| `$..*` | Give me every thing you got |
10 years ago
Reading a document
------------------
The simplest most straight forward way to use JsonPath is via the static convenience API.
```java
String json = "...";
List<String> authors = JsonPath.read(json, "$.store.book[*].author");
```
If you only want to read once this is OK. In case you need to read an other path as well this is not the way
to go since the document will be parsed every time you call JsonPath.read(...). To avoid the problem you can
parse the json first.
```java
String json = "...";
Object document = Configuration.defaultConfiguration().jsonProvider().parse(json);
String author1 = JsonPath.read(document, "$.store.book[0].author");
String author2 = JsonPath.read(document, "$.store.book[1].author");
```
10 years ago
JsonPath also provides a fluent API that is also the most flexible one.
```java
String json = "...";
ReadContext ctx = JsonPath.parse(json);
List<String> authorsOfBooksWithISBN = ctx.read("$.store.book[?(@.isbn)].author");
List<Map<String, Object>> expensiveBooks = JsonPath
.using(configuration)
.parse(json)
.read("$.store.book[?(@.price > 10)]", List.class);
```
10 years ago
All `read` operations are overloaded and also supports compiled JsonPath objects. This can be useful from a performance perspective if the same path is to be executed
many times.
```
JsonPath compiledPath = JsonPath.compile("$.store.book[1].author");
String author2 = JsonPath.read(document, compiledPath);
```
10 years ago
What is Returned When?
----------------------
10 years ago
When using JsonPath in java its important to know what type you expect in your result. Json path will automatically
try to cast the result to the type expected by the invoker.
```java
//Will throw an java.lang.ClassCastException
List<String> list = JsonPath.parse(json).read("$.store.book[0].author")
//Works fine
String author = JsonPath.parse(json).read("$.store.book[0].author")
```
When evaluating a path you need to understand the concept of when a path is `definite`. A path is not definite if it contains:
* `..` - a deep scan operator
* `?(<expression>)` - an expression
* `[<number>, <number> (, <number>)]` - multiple array indexes
* `['<name>', '<name>' (, '<name>')]` - multiple object properties
Non `definite` paths always returns a list.
By default some simple conversions are provided by the MappingProvider. This allows to specify the return type you want and the MappingProvider will
try to perform the mapping. If a book, in the sample json above, had a long value 'published' you could perform object mapping between `Long` and `Date`
as shown below.
```java
10 years ago
Date date = JsonPath.parse(json).read("$.store.book[0].published", Date.class)
10 years ago
```
If you use the `JacksonJsonProvider` you can even map your JsonPath output directly into POJO's.
```java
Book book = JsonPath.parse(json).read("$.store.book[0]", Book.class)
```
10 years ago
Predicates
----------
10 years ago
There are three different ways to create filter predicates in JsonPath.
###Inline predicates
These are predicates baked right into to your path.
```java
List<Map<String, Object>> books = JsonPath.parse(json).read("$.store.book[?(@.price < 10)]");
```
In the current implementation you can use `&&` to combine multiple predicates `[?(@.price < 10 && @.category == 'fiction')]`. OR operations are not supported yet.
###The Filter API
Predicates can be built using the Filter API as shown below:
```java
import static com.jayway.jsonpath.JsonPath.parse;
import static com.jayway.jsonpath.Criteria.where;
import static com.jayway.jsonpath.Filter.filter;
...
...
10 years ago
Filter cheapFictionFilter = filter(where("category").is("fiction").and("price").lte(10D));
10 years ago
List<Map<String, Object>> books = parse(json).read("$.store.book[?]", cheapFictionFilter);
```
Note the placeholder '?' for the filter in the path. When multiple filters are provided they are applied in order where the number of placeholders must match
the number of provided filters. You can specify multiple predicate placeholders in one filter operation `[?, ?]`, both predicates must match.
###Roll your own
Third option is to implement your own predicates
```java
Predicate booksWithISBN = new Predicate() {
@Override
public boolean apply(PredicateContext ctx) {
return ctx.item(Map.class).containsKey("isbn");
}
};
List<Map<String, Object>> books = reader.read("$.store.book[?].isbn", List.class, booksWithISBN);
```
10 years ago
PATH vs VALUE
-------------
10 years ago
Tweaking Configuration
----------------------
The default JsonProvider is `JsonSmartJsonProvider` backed by [json-smart](https://code.google.com/p/json-smart/), a small and fast JSONParser. If you
prefer Jackson there is a `JacksonJsonProvider` available. There is also an experimental `GsonJsonProvider`.
* JacksonJsonProvider requires `com.fasterxml.jackson.core:jackson-databind:2.4.1.3` on your classpath.
* GsonJsonProvider requires `com.google.code.gson:gson:2.3` on your classpath.
```java
Configuration.setDefaults(new Configuration.Defaults() {
private final JsonProvider jsonProvider = new com.jayway.jsonpath.internal.spi.json.JacksonJsonProvider();
@Override
public JsonProvider jsonProvider() {
return jsonProvider;
}
@Override
10 years ago
public MappingProvider mappingProvider() {
return new DefaultMappingProvider();
}
10 years ago
@Override
public Set<Option> options() {
return EnumSet.noneOf(Option.class);
}
});
```
Binaries
--------
JsonPath is available at the Central Maven Repository. Maven users add this to your POM.
```xml
<dependency>
<groupId>com.jayway.jsonpath</groupId>
<artifactId>json-path</artifactId>
<version>0.9.1</version>
</dependency>
```
Gradle users
```
compile 'com.jayway.jsonpath:json-path:0.9.1'
```
10 years ago
[![Analytics](https://ga-beacon.appspot.com/UA-54945131-1/jsonpath/index)](https://github.com/igrigorik/ga-beacon)