ObjectMap and ObjectList

The {@link oaj.ObjectMap} and {@link oaj.ObjectList} classes are generic Java representations of JSON objects and arrays. These classes can be used to create "unstructured" models for serialization (as opposed to "structured" models consisting of beans). If you want to quickly generate JSON/XML/HTML from generic maps/collections, or parse JSON/XML/HTML into generic maps/collections, these classes work well.

These classes extend directly from the following JCF classes:

The ObjectMap and ObjectList classes are very similar to the JSONObject and JSONArray classes found in other libraries. However, the names were chosen because the concepts of Maps and Lists are already familiar to Java programmers, and these classes can be used with any of the serializers or parsers.

These object can be serialized in one of two ways:

  1. Using the provided {@link oaj.ObjectMap#serializeTo(java.io.Writer)} or {@link oaj.ObjectList#serializeTo(java.io.Writer)} methods.
  2. Passing them to one of the {@link oaj.serializer.Serializer} serialize methods.
  3. Simply calling the {@link oaj.ObjectMap#toString()} or {@link oaj.ObjectList#toString()} methods which will serialize it as Simplified JSON.

Any valid JSON can be parsed into an unstructured model consisting of generic {@link oaj.ObjectMap} and {@link oaj.ObjectList} objects. (In theory, any valid XML can also be parsed into an unstructured model, although this has not been officially 'tested')

// Parse an arbitrary JSON document into an unstructered data model // consisting of ObjectMaps, ObjectLists, and java primitive objects. Parser parser = JsonParser.DEFAULT; String json = "{a:{name:'John Smith',age:21},b:{name:'Joe Smith',age:42}}"; ObjectMap m = parser.parse(json, ObjectMap.class); // Use ObjectMap API to extract data from the unstructured model. int johnSmithAge = m.getObjectMap("a").getInt("age"); // Convert it back into JSON. json = JsonSerializer.DEFAULT.serialize(m); // Or convert it to XML. String xml = XmlSerializer.DEFAULT.serialize(m); // Or just use toString(). json = m.toString();

The ObjectMap and ObjectList classes have many convenience features:

// Convert the map to a bean. MyBean m = objectMap.cast(MyBean.class); // Find entries by multiple keys. MyBean m = objectMap.find(MyBean.class, "key1", "key2"); // Fluent-style appenders. objectMap.append("key1", "val1").append("key2", "val2"); // REST-like functions for manipulating nodes in the data structure using URL-like notation. objectMap.getAt("foo/bar/myBean", MyBean.class); objectMap.putAt("foo/bar/myBean", MyBean.class); objectMap.postAt("foo/bar/myListOfBeans", MyBean.class); objectMap.deleteAt("foo/bar/myBean"); // Copy with inclusion or exclusion. ObjectMap m2 = objectMap.include("key1", "key2", "key3"); ObjectMap m3 = objectMap.exclude("key1", "key2", "key3"); // Serialize using another serializer. String xml = objectMap.serializeTo(XmlSerializer.DEFAULT); // Nested maps. objectMap.setInner(objectMapInner);

As a general rule, if you do not specify a target type during parsing, or if the target type cannot be determined through reflection, the parsers automatically generate ObjectMaps and ObjectLists.