Jayway JsonPath (1.0.0)
===============
**A Java DSL for reading JSON documents.**
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Jayway JsonPath is a Java port of [Stefan Goessner JsonPath implementation](http://goessner.net/articles/JsonPath/).
News
----
26 Sep 2014 - JsonPath 1.0.0 was released
Getting Started
---------------
JsonPath is available at the Central Maven Repository. Maven users add this to your POM.
```xml
com.jayway.jsonpathjson-path1.0.0
```
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. |
| `.` | Dot-notated child |
| `['' (, '')]` | Bracket-notated child or children |
| `[ (, )]` | Array index or indexes |
| `[start:end]` | Array slice operator |
| `[?()]` | Filter expression. Expression must evaluate to a boolean value. |
Path Examples
-------------
Given the json
```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
}
},
"expensive": 10
}
```
| JsonPath (click link to try)| 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 |
| $.store.book[?(@.price < 10)] | All books in store cheaper than 10 |
| $..book[?(@.price <= $['expensive'])] | All books in store that are not "expensive" |
| $..* | Give me every thing |
Reading a Document
------------------
The simplest most straight forward way to use JsonPath is via the static read API.
```java
String json = "...";
List authors = JsonPath.read(json, "$.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 author0 = JsonPath.read(document, "$.store.book[0].author");
String author1 = JsonPath.read(document, "$.store.book[1].author");
```
JsonPath also provides a fluent API. This is also the most flexible one.
```java
String json = "...";
ReadContext ctx = JsonPath.parse(json);
List authorsOfBooksWithISBN = ctx.read("$.store.book[?(@.isbn)].author");
List