Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago
Original comment by fangyid...@gmail.com
on 14 Jul 2010 at 1:16
Having pretty print would be a great feature for the library.
Original comment by jfden...@gmail.com
on 17 Sep 2010 at 12:46
It would indeed be useful. Will this be integrated ?
Original comment by sebastie...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2010 at 7:24
I do not have the bandwidth to shepherd this patch. For anyone interested in
using it, I've attached my source code. You can use it by replacing the source
in an existing project.
Original comment by ato...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2010 at 7:55
Attachments:
Your patch has some strange differences with the trunk in SVN, a couple of
methods are removed... are you sure you used the trunk to make your changes ?
Original comment by sebastie...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2010 at 10:51
The strange differences are entirely possible, once I gave up on the idea of
submitting a patch, I might have gotten creative. I did use the trunk as it was
about 6 months ago.
Original comment by ato...@gmail.com
on 6 Oct 2010 at 11:12
Pretty printing is a nice feature for this lib, but I argue that this should be
implemented as a stand alone component using the lexer to read JSON and then
write the output according to some configuration. It should not be that hard to
implement nor would it have to be expensive for the VM.
The only change to the core that makes sense to me is to replace #toJSONString
to use a PrintWriter rather than a StringBuffer (why isn't this a
StringBuilder?) in order to make it a true streaming API.
Original comment by karl.wet...@gmail.com
on 7 Oct 2010 at 11:02
Well I ended up needing a JSON library and I liked this one but I needed it
pretty-printed good thing the source was here so I could customize it...
Im posting the code here hope u guys find it useful =)
Changes I made:
Added a class named:
---> JSONPrettyPrint.java
Added 2 methods at JSONValue.java named:
---> writePrettyJSONString
---> toPrettyJSONString
Added 2 methods at JSONArray.java named:
---> writePrettyJSONString
---> toPrettyJSONString
the output should be something like this:
{
"k3":["lv1","lv2"],
"k1":"v1",
"k2":
{
"mk1":"mv1",
"mk2":["lv1","lv2"]
}
}
or even like this:
{
"k3":["lv1","lv2"],
"k1":"v1",
"k2":
{
"mk1":"mv1",
"mk2":["lv1","lv2"]
}
"k3":[
{
"zk1":"zv1",
"zk2":"zv2"
}]
}
another change I made is that '/' is not considered an escape character in
Java, so I commented the code that turns it into '\/' because it was messing
all my stuff here
Original comment by fawi...@gmail.com
on 25 Nov 2010 at 5:58
Attachments:
I also need the pretty printing for json string.
So not to change/extend the json-simple classes, I created a new type of
java.io.Writer that adds indentation.
Attaching the source here.
To use it:
Writer writer = new JSonWriter(); // this is the new writter that adds
indentation.
jsonObject.writeJSONString(writer);
Original comment by eladta...@gmail.com
on 28 Nov 2011 at 4:44
Attachments:
I think the writer approach is great. Good work. I hope pretty printing becomes
a standard in JSON Simple. I have reviewed many JSON libraries and this is the
best for it's flexibility and easy of use. Pretty printing was my only gripe.
Original comment by celo...@gmail.com
on 29 Nov 2011 at 1:36
Thank you all for the help. May consider it in future release.
Original comment by fangyid...@gmail.com
on 29 Nov 2011 at 3:31
JSonWriter is a cool solution! This is all what I want to have. Thank you very
much for the work.
Original comment by pattre...@gmail.com
on 22 Aug 2012 at 7:44
I guess if after three years no one has added a few newlines and an indent
counter, it's not going to happen... Too bad---it looked like a nice little
library.
Original comment by garretdw...@gmail.com
on 28 Jan 2013 at 9:04
+1 for the JSONWriter, it should be added to the project
Original comment by julianf...@gmail.com
on 3 Sep 2013 at 4:09
In one line:
String niceFormattedJson = JsonWriter.formatJson(jsonString)
The json-io libray (https://github.com/jdereg/json-io) is a small (75K) library
with no other dependencies than the JDK.
In addition to pretty-printing JSON, you can serialize Java objects (entire
Java object graphs with cycles) to JSON, as well as read them in.
Original comment by jdereg@gmail.com
on 24 Feb 2014 at 6:18
Thank you thanks a lot
Original comment by physt...@gmail.com
on 4 Mar 2014 at 6:38
Thank you for your solution, Elad. Unfortunately, it's not aware of special
characters which are part of strings, but it's still helpful.
jdereg, ironically, the json-io library depends on gson, which is the 200K
library I was using before I tried to switch to json-simple.
Original comment by bluej...@gmail.com
on 3 Sep 2014 at 5:14
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
ato...@gmail.com
on 21 Apr 2010 at 5:28Attachments: