JSON ​
Inherits: Resource < RefCounted < Object
Helper class for creating and parsing JSON data.
Description
The JSON class enables all data types to be converted to and from a JSON string. This is useful for serializing data, e.g. to save to a file or send over the network.
stringify is used to convert any data type into a JSON string.
parse is used to convert any existing JSON data into a Variant that can be used within Godot. If successfully parsed, use data to retrieve the Variant, and use typeof
to check if the Variant's type is what you expect. JSON Objects are converted into a Dictionary, but JSON data can be used to store Arrays, numbers, Strings and even just a boolean.
Example
var data_to_send = ["a", "b", "c"]
var json_string = JSON.stringify(data_to_send)
# Save data
# ...
# Retrieve data
var json = JSON.new()
var error = json.parse(json_string)
if error == OK:
var data_received = json.data
if typeof(data_received) == TYPE_ARRAY:
print(data_received) # Prints array
else:
print("Unexpected data")
else:
print("JSON Parse Error: ", json.get_error_message(), " in ", json_string, " at line ", json.get_error_line())
Alternatively, you can parse strings using the static parse_string method, but it doesn't handle errors.
var data = JSON.parse_string(json_string) # Returns null if parsing failed.
Note: Both parse methods do not fully comply with the JSON specification:
Trailing commas in arrays or objects are ignored, instead of causing a parser error.
New line and tab characters are accepted in string literals, and are treated like their corresponding escape sequences
\n
and\t
.Numbers are parsed using String.to_float which is generally more lax than the JSON specification.
Certain errors, such as invalid Unicode sequences, do not cause a parser error. Instead, the string is cleansed and an error is logged to the console.
Properties
null |
Methods
get_error_line() const | |
get_error_message() const | |
get_parsed_text() const | |
parse_string(json_string: String) static | |
stringify(data: Variant, indent: String = "", sort_keys: bool = true, full_precision: bool = false) static |
Property Descriptions
Contains the parsed JSON data in Variant form.
Method Descriptions
int get_error_line() const 🔗
Returns 0
if the last call to parse was successful, or the line number where the parse failed.
String get_error_message() const 🔗
Returns an empty string if the last call to parse was successful, or the error message if it failed.
String get_parsed_text() const 🔗
Return the text parsed by parse (requires passing keep_text
to parse).
Error parse(json_text: String, keep_text: bool = false) 🔗
Attempts to parse the json_text
provided.
Returns an Error. If the parse was successful, it returns @GlobalScope.OK and the result can be retrieved using data. If unsuccessful, use get_error_line and get_error_message to identify the source of the failure.
Non-static variant of parse_string, if you want custom error handling.
The optional keep_text
argument instructs the parser to keep a copy of the original text. This text can be obtained later by using the get_parsed_text function and is used when saving the resource (instead of generating new text from data).
Variant parse_string(json_string: String) static 🔗
Attempts to parse the json_string
provided and returns the parsed data. Returns null
if parse failed.
String stringify(data: Variant, indent: String = "", sort_keys: bool = true, full_precision: bool = false) static 🔗
Converts a Variant var to JSON text and returns the result. Useful for serializing data to store or send over the network.
Note: The JSON specification does not define integer or float types, but only a number type. Therefore, converting a Variant to JSON text will convert all numerical values to float types.
Note: If full_precision
is true
, when stringifying floats, the unreliable digits are stringified in addition to the reliable digits to guarantee exact decoding.
The indent
parameter controls if and how something is indented; its contents will be used where there should be an indent in the output. Even spaces like " "
will work. \t
and \n
can also be used for a tab indent, or to make a newline for each indent respectively.
Example output:
## JSON.stringify(my_dictionary)
{"name":"my_dictionary","version":"1.0.0","entities":[{"name":"entity_0","value":"value_0"},{"name":"entity_1","value":"value_1"}]}
## JSON.stringify(my_dictionary, "\t")
{
"name": "my_dictionary",
"version": "1.0.0",
"entities": [
{
"name": "entity_0",
"value": "value_0"
},
{
"name": "entity_1",
"value": "value_1"
}
]
}
## JSON.stringify(my_dictionary, "...")
{
..."name": "my_dictionary",
..."version": "1.0.0",
..."entities": [
......{
........."name": "entity_0",
........."value": "value_0"
......},
......{
........."name": "entity_1",
........."value": "value_1"
......}
...]
}