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I have a list of items send from a PHP file to unity using WWW.
The WWW.text looks like:
[
{
"playerId": "1",
"playerLoc": "Powai"
},
{
"playerId": "2",
"playerLoc": "Andheri"
},
{
"playerId": "3",
"playerLoc": "Churchgate"
}
]
Where I trim the extra [] from the string. When I try to parse it using Boomlagoon.JSON, only the first object is retrieved. I found out that I have to deserialize() the list and have imported MiniJSON.
But I am confused how to deserialize() this list. I want to loop through every JSON object and retrieve data. How can I do this in Unity using C#?
The class I am using is
public class player
{
public string playerId { get; set; }
public string playerLoc { get; set; }
public string playerNick { get; set; }
}
After trimming the [] I am able to parse the json using MiniJSON. But it is returning only the first KeyValuePair.
IDictionary<string, object> players = Json.Deserialize(serviceData) as IDictionary<string, object>;
foreach (KeyValuePair<string, object> kvp in players)
{
Debug.Log(string.Format("Key = {0}, Value = {1}", kvp.Key, kvp.Value));
}
Thanks!
Unity added JsonUtility to their API after 5.3.3 Update. Forget about all the 3rd party libraries unless you are doing something more complicated. JsonUtility is faster than other Json libraries. Update to Unity 5.3.3 version or above then try the solution below.
JsonUtility is a lightweight API. Only simple types are supported. It does not support collections such as Dictionary. One exception is List. It supports List and List array!
If you need to serialize a Dictionary or do something other than simply serializing and deserializing simple datatypes, use a third-party API. Otherwise, continue reading.
Example class to serialize:
[Serializable]
public class Player
{
public string playerId;
public string playerLoc;
public string playerNick;
}
1. ONE DATA OBJECT (NON-ARRAY JSON)
Serializing Part A:
Serialize to Json with the public static string ToJson(object obj); method.
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance.playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance.playerNick = "Random Nick";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{"playerId":"8484239823","playerLoc":"Powai","playerNick":"Random Nick"}
Serializing Part B:
Serialize to Json with the public static string ToJson(object obj, bool prettyPrint); method overload. Simply passing true to the JsonUtility.ToJson function will format the data. Compare the output below to the output above.
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance.playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance.playerNick = "Random Nick";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance, true);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{
"playerId": "8484239823",
"playerLoc": "Powai",
"playerNick": "Random Nick"
}
Deserializing Part A:
Deserialize json with the public static T FromJson(string json); method overload.
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
Player player = JsonUtility.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
Debug.Log(player.playerLoc);
Deserializing Part B:
Deserialize json with the public static object FromJson(string json, Type type); method overload.
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
Player player = (Player)JsonUtility.FromJson(jsonString, typeof(Player));
Debug.Log(player.playerLoc);
Deserializing Part C:
Deserialize json with the public static void FromJsonOverwrite(string json, object objectToOverwrite); method. When JsonUtility.FromJsonOverwrite is used, no new instance of that Object you are deserializing to will be created. It will simply re-use the instance you pass in and overwrite its values.
This is efficient and should be used if possible.
Player playerInstance;
void Start()
{
//Must create instance once
playerInstance = new Player();
deserialize();
}
void deserialize()
{
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
//Overwrite the values in the existing class instance "playerInstance". Less memory Allocation
JsonUtility.FromJsonOverwrite(jsonString, playerInstance);
Debug.Log(playerInstance.playerLoc);
}
2. MULTIPLE DATA(ARRAY JSON)
Your Json contains multiple data objects. For example playerId appeared more than once. Unity's JsonUtility does not support array as it is still new but you can use a helper class from this person to get array working with JsonUtility.
Create a class called JsonHelper. Copy the JsonHelper directly from below.
public static class JsonHelper
{
public static T[] FromJson<T>(string json)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = JsonUtility.FromJson<Wrapper<T>>(json);
return wrapper.Items;
}
public static string ToJson<T>(T[] array)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = new Wrapper<T>();
wrapper.Items = array;
return JsonUtility.ToJson(wrapper);
}
public static string ToJson<T>(T[] array, bool prettyPrint)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = new Wrapper<T>();
wrapper.Items = array;
return JsonUtility.ToJson(wrapper, prettyPrint);
}
[Serializable]
private class Wrapper<T>
{
public T[] Items;
}
}
Serializing Json Array:
Player[] playerInstance = new Player[2];
playerInstance[0] = new Player();
playerInstance[0].playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance[0].playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance[0].playerNick = "Random Nick";
playerInstance[1] = new Player();
playerInstance[1].playerId = "512343283";
playerInstance[1].playerLoc = "User2";
playerInstance[1].playerNick = "Rand Nick 2";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonHelper.ToJson(playerInstance, true);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{
"Items": [
{
"playerId": "8484239823",
"playerLoc": "Powai",
"playerNick": "Random Nick"
},
{
"playerId": "512343283",
"playerLoc": "User2",
"playerNick": "Rand Nick 2"
}
]
}
Deserializing Json Array:
string jsonString = "{\r\n \"Items\": [\r\n {\r\n \"playerId\": \"8484239823\",\r\n \"playerLoc\": \"Powai\",\r\n \"playerNick\": \"Random Nick\"\r\n },\r\n {\r\n \"playerId\": \"512343283\",\r\n \"playerLoc\": \"User2\",\r\n \"playerNick\": \"Rand Nick 2\"\r\n }\r\n ]\r\n}";
Player[] player = JsonHelper.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
Debug.Log(player[0].playerLoc);
Debug.Log(player[1].playerLoc);
Output:
Powai
User2
If this is a Json array from the server and you did not create it by hand:
You may have to Add {"Items": in front of the received string then add } at the end of it.
I made a simple function for this:
string fixJson(string value)
{
value = "{\"Items\":" + value + "}";
return value;
}
then you can use it:
string jsonString = fixJson(yourJsonFromServer);
Player[] player = JsonHelper.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
3.Deserialize json string without class && De-serializing Json with numeric properties
This is a Json that starts with a number or numeric properties.
For example:
{
"USD" : {"15m" : 1740.01, "last" : 1740.01, "buy" : 1740.01, "sell" : 1744.74, "symbol" : "$"},
"ISK" : {"15m" : 179479.11, "last" : 179479.11, "buy" : 179479.11, "sell" : 179967, "symbol" : "kr"},
"NZD" : {"15m" : 2522.84, "last" : 2522.84, "buy" : 2522.84, "sell" : 2529.69, "symbol" : "$"}
}
Unity's JsonUtility does not support this because the "15m" property starts with a number. A class variable cannot start with an integer.
Download SimpleJSON.cs from Unity's wiki.
To get the "15m" property of USD:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["USD"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
To get the "15m" property of ISK:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["ISK"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
To get the "15m" property of NZD:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["NZD"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
The rest of the Json properties that doesn't start with a numeric digit can be handled by Unity's JsonUtility.
4.TROUBLESHOOTING JsonUtility:
Problems when serializing with JsonUtility.ToJson?
Getting empty string or "{}" with JsonUtility.ToJson?
A. Make sure that the class is not an array. If it is, use the helper class above with JsonHelper.ToJson instead of JsonUtility.ToJson.
B. Add [Serializable] to the top of the class you are serializing.
C. Remove property from the class. For example, in the variable, public string playerId { get; set; } remove { get; set; }. Unity cannot serialize this.
Problems when deserializing with JsonUtility.FromJson?
A. If you get Null, make sure that the Json is not a Json array. If it is, use the helper class above with JsonHelper.FromJson instead of JsonUtility.FromJson.
B. If you get NullReferenceException while deserializing, add [Serializable] to the top of the class.
C.Any other problems, verify that your json is valid. Go to this site here and paste the json. It should show you if the json is valid. It should also generate the proper class with the Json. Just make sure to remove remove { get; set; } from each variable and also add [Serializable] to the top of each class generated.
Newtonsoft.Json:
If for some reason Newtonsoft.Json must be used then as of February 2022 it may now be obtained directly from Unity from here: com.unity.nuget.newtonsoft-json#3.0. Just add com.unity.nuget.newtonsoft-json via the package manager. For details see Install official via UPM by kalle (jag).
You can also check out the forked version for Unity from SaladLab /
Json.Net.Unity3D. Note that you may experience crash if certain feature is used. Be careful.
To answer your question:
Your original data is
[{"playerId":"1","playerLoc":"Powai"},{"playerId":"2","playerLoc":"Andheri"},{"playerId":"3","playerLoc":"Churchgate"}]
Add {"Items": in front of it then add } at the end of it.
Code to do this:
serviceData = "{\"Items\":" + serviceData + "}";
Now you have:
{"Items":[{"playerId":"1","playerLoc":"Powai"},{"playerId":"2","playerLoc":"Andheri"},{"playerId":"3","playerLoc":"Churchgate"}]}
To serialize the multiple data from php as arrays, you can now do
public player[] playerInstance;
playerInstance = JsonHelper.FromJson<player>(serviceData);
playerInstance[0] is your first data
playerInstance[1] is your second data
playerInstance[2] is your third data
or data inside the class with playerInstance[0].playerLoc, playerInstance[1].playerLoc, playerInstance[2].playerLoc ......
You can use playerInstance.Length to check the length before accessing it.
NOTE: Remove { get; set; } from the player class. If you have { get; set; }, it won't work. Unity's JsonUtility does NOT work with class members that are defined as properties.
Assume you got a JSON like this
[
{
"type": "qrcode",
"symbol": [
{
"seq": 0,
"data": "HelloWorld9887725216",
"error": null
}
]
}
]
To parse the above JSON in unity, you can create JSON model like this.
[System.Serializable]
public class QrCodeResult
{
public QRCodeData[] result;
}
[System.Serializable]
public class Symbol
{
public int seq;
public string data;
public string error;
}
[System.Serializable]
public class QRCodeData
{
public string type;
public Symbol[] symbol;
}
And then simply parse in the following manner...
var myObject = JsonUtility.FromJson<QrCodeResult>("{\"result\":" + jsonString.ToString() + "}");
Now you can modify the JSON/CODE according to your need.
https://docs.unity3d.com/Manual/JSONSerialization.html
Unity <= 2019
Narottam Goyal had a good idea of wrapping the array in a json object, and then deserializing into a struct.
The following uses Generics to solve this for arrays of all type, as opposed to making a new class everytime.
[System.Serializable]
private struct JsonArrayWrapper<T> {
public T wrap_result;
}
public static T ParseJsonArray<T>(string json) {
var temp = JsonUtility.FromJson<JsonArrayWrapper<T>>("{\"wrap_result\":" + json + "}");
return temp.wrap_result;
}
It can be used in the following way:
string[] options = ParseJsonArray<string[]>(someArrayOfStringsJson);
Unity 2020
In Unity 2020 there is an official newtonsoft package which is a far better json library.
you have to add [System.Serializable] to PlayerItem class ,like this:
using System;
[System.Serializable]
public class PlayerItem {
public string playerId;
public string playerLoc;
public string playerNick;
}
To Read JSON File, refer this simple example
Your JSON File (StreamingAssets/Player.json)
{
"Name": "MyName",
"Level": 4
}
C# Script
public class Demo
{
public void ReadJSON()
{
string path = Application.streamingAssetsPath + "/Player.json";
string JSONString = File.ReadAllText(path);
Player player = JsonUtility.FromJson<Player>(JSONString);
Debug.Log(player.Name);
}
}
[System.Serializable]
public class Player
{
public string Name;
public int Level;
}
Like #Maximiliangerhardt said, MiniJson do not have the capability to deserialize properly. I used JsonFx and works like a charm. Works with the []
player[] p = JsonReader.Deserialize<player[]>(serviceData);
Debug.Log(p[0].playerId +" "+ p[0].playerLoc+"--"+ p[1].playerId + " " + p[1].playerLoc+"--"+ p[2].playerId + " " + p[2].playerLoc);
You can use Newtonsoft.Json just add Newtonsoft.dll to your project and use below script
using System;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using UnityEngine;
public class NewBehaviourScript : MonoBehaviour
{
[Serializable]
public class Person
{
public string id;
public string name;
}
public Person[] person;
private void Start()
{
var myjson = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(person);
print(myjson);
}
}
another solution is using JsonHelper
using System;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using UnityEngine;
public class NewBehaviourScript : MonoBehaviour
{
[Serializable]
public class Person
{
public string id;
public string name;
}
public Person[] person;
private void Start()
{
var myjson = JsonHelper.ToJson(person);
print(myjson);
}
}
Don't trim the [] and you should be fine. [] identify a JSON array which is exactly what you require to be able to iterate its elements.
IF you are using Vector3 this is what i did
1- I create a class Name it Player
using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using UnityEngine;
[Serializable]
public class Player
{
public Vector3[] Position;
}
2- then i call it like this
if ( _ispressed == true)
{
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.Position = newPos;
string jsonData = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance);
reference.Child("Position" + Random.Range(0, 1000000)).SetRawJsonValueAsync(jsonData);
Debug.Log(jsonData);
_ispressed = false;
}
3- and this is the result
"Position":[
{"x":-2.8567452430725099,"y":-2.4323320388793947,"z":0.0}]}
I have a list of items send from a PHP file to unity using WWW.
The WWW.text looks like:
[
{
"playerId": "1",
"playerLoc": "Powai"
},
{
"playerId": "2",
"playerLoc": "Andheri"
},
{
"playerId": "3",
"playerLoc": "Churchgate"
}
]
Where I trim the extra [] from the string. When I try to parse it using Boomlagoon.JSON, only the first object is retrieved. I found out that I have to deserialize() the list and have imported MiniJSON.
But I am confused how to deserialize() this list. I want to loop through every JSON object and retrieve data. How can I do this in Unity using C#?
The class I am using is
public class player
{
public string playerId { get; set; }
public string playerLoc { get; set; }
public string playerNick { get; set; }
}
After trimming the [] I am able to parse the json using MiniJSON. But it is returning only the first KeyValuePair.
IDictionary<string, object> players = Json.Deserialize(serviceData) as IDictionary<string, object>;
foreach (KeyValuePair<string, object> kvp in players)
{
Debug.Log(string.Format("Key = {0}, Value = {1}", kvp.Key, kvp.Value));
}
Thanks!
Unity added JsonUtility to their API after 5.3.3 Update. Forget about all the 3rd party libraries unless you are doing something more complicated. JsonUtility is faster than other Json libraries. Update to Unity 5.3.3 version or above then try the solution below.
JsonUtility is a lightweight API. Only simple types are supported. It does not support collections such as Dictionary. One exception is List. It supports List and List array!
If you need to serialize a Dictionary or do something other than simply serializing and deserializing simple datatypes, use a third-party API. Otherwise, continue reading.
Example class to serialize:
[Serializable]
public class Player
{
public string playerId;
public string playerLoc;
public string playerNick;
}
1. ONE DATA OBJECT (NON-ARRAY JSON)
Serializing Part A:
Serialize to Json with the public static string ToJson(object obj); method.
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance.playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance.playerNick = "Random Nick";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{"playerId":"8484239823","playerLoc":"Powai","playerNick":"Random Nick"}
Serializing Part B:
Serialize to Json with the public static string ToJson(object obj, bool prettyPrint); method overload. Simply passing true to the JsonUtility.ToJson function will format the data. Compare the output below to the output above.
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance.playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance.playerNick = "Random Nick";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance, true);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{
"playerId": "8484239823",
"playerLoc": "Powai",
"playerNick": "Random Nick"
}
Deserializing Part A:
Deserialize json with the public static T FromJson(string json); method overload.
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
Player player = JsonUtility.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
Debug.Log(player.playerLoc);
Deserializing Part B:
Deserialize json with the public static object FromJson(string json, Type type); method overload.
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
Player player = (Player)JsonUtility.FromJson(jsonString, typeof(Player));
Debug.Log(player.playerLoc);
Deserializing Part C:
Deserialize json with the public static void FromJsonOverwrite(string json, object objectToOverwrite); method. When JsonUtility.FromJsonOverwrite is used, no new instance of that Object you are deserializing to will be created. It will simply re-use the instance you pass in and overwrite its values.
This is efficient and should be used if possible.
Player playerInstance;
void Start()
{
//Must create instance once
playerInstance = new Player();
deserialize();
}
void deserialize()
{
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
//Overwrite the values in the existing class instance "playerInstance". Less memory Allocation
JsonUtility.FromJsonOverwrite(jsonString, playerInstance);
Debug.Log(playerInstance.playerLoc);
}
2. MULTIPLE DATA(ARRAY JSON)
Your Json contains multiple data objects. For example playerId appeared more than once. Unity's JsonUtility does not support array as it is still new but you can use a helper class from this person to get array working with JsonUtility.
Create a class called JsonHelper. Copy the JsonHelper directly from below.
public static class JsonHelper
{
public static T[] FromJson<T>(string json)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = JsonUtility.FromJson<Wrapper<T>>(json);
return wrapper.Items;
}
public static string ToJson<T>(T[] array)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = new Wrapper<T>();
wrapper.Items = array;
return JsonUtility.ToJson(wrapper);
}
public static string ToJson<T>(T[] array, bool prettyPrint)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = new Wrapper<T>();
wrapper.Items = array;
return JsonUtility.ToJson(wrapper, prettyPrint);
}
[Serializable]
private class Wrapper<T>
{
public T[] Items;
}
}
Serializing Json Array:
Player[] playerInstance = new Player[2];
playerInstance[0] = new Player();
playerInstance[0].playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance[0].playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance[0].playerNick = "Random Nick";
playerInstance[1] = new Player();
playerInstance[1].playerId = "512343283";
playerInstance[1].playerLoc = "User2";
playerInstance[1].playerNick = "Rand Nick 2";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonHelper.ToJson(playerInstance, true);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{
"Items": [
{
"playerId": "8484239823",
"playerLoc": "Powai",
"playerNick": "Random Nick"
},
{
"playerId": "512343283",
"playerLoc": "User2",
"playerNick": "Rand Nick 2"
}
]
}
Deserializing Json Array:
string jsonString = "{\r\n \"Items\": [\r\n {\r\n \"playerId\": \"8484239823\",\r\n \"playerLoc\": \"Powai\",\r\n \"playerNick\": \"Random Nick\"\r\n },\r\n {\r\n \"playerId\": \"512343283\",\r\n \"playerLoc\": \"User2\",\r\n \"playerNick\": \"Rand Nick 2\"\r\n }\r\n ]\r\n}";
Player[] player = JsonHelper.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
Debug.Log(player[0].playerLoc);
Debug.Log(player[1].playerLoc);
Output:
Powai
User2
If this is a Json array from the server and you did not create it by hand:
You may have to Add {"Items": in front of the received string then add } at the end of it.
I made a simple function for this:
string fixJson(string value)
{
value = "{\"Items\":" + value + "}";
return value;
}
then you can use it:
string jsonString = fixJson(yourJsonFromServer);
Player[] player = JsonHelper.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
3.Deserialize json string without class && De-serializing Json with numeric properties
This is a Json that starts with a number or numeric properties.
For example:
{
"USD" : {"15m" : 1740.01, "last" : 1740.01, "buy" : 1740.01, "sell" : 1744.74, "symbol" : "$"},
"ISK" : {"15m" : 179479.11, "last" : 179479.11, "buy" : 179479.11, "sell" : 179967, "symbol" : "kr"},
"NZD" : {"15m" : 2522.84, "last" : 2522.84, "buy" : 2522.84, "sell" : 2529.69, "symbol" : "$"}
}
Unity's JsonUtility does not support this because the "15m" property starts with a number. A class variable cannot start with an integer.
Download SimpleJSON.cs from Unity's wiki.
To get the "15m" property of USD:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["USD"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
To get the "15m" property of ISK:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["ISK"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
To get the "15m" property of NZD:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["NZD"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
The rest of the Json properties that doesn't start with a numeric digit can be handled by Unity's JsonUtility.
4.TROUBLESHOOTING JsonUtility:
Problems when serializing with JsonUtility.ToJson?
Getting empty string or "{}" with JsonUtility.ToJson?
A. Make sure that the class is not an array. If it is, use the helper class above with JsonHelper.ToJson instead of JsonUtility.ToJson.
B. Add [Serializable] to the top of the class you are serializing.
C. Remove property from the class. For example, in the variable, public string playerId { get; set; } remove { get; set; }. Unity cannot serialize this.
Problems when deserializing with JsonUtility.FromJson?
A. If you get Null, make sure that the Json is not a Json array. If it is, use the helper class above with JsonHelper.FromJson instead of JsonUtility.FromJson.
B. If you get NullReferenceException while deserializing, add [Serializable] to the top of the class.
C.Any other problems, verify that your json is valid. Go to this site here and paste the json. It should show you if the json is valid. It should also generate the proper class with the Json. Just make sure to remove remove { get; set; } from each variable and also add [Serializable] to the top of each class generated.
Newtonsoft.Json:
If for some reason Newtonsoft.Json must be used then as of February 2022 it may now be obtained directly from Unity from here: com.unity.nuget.newtonsoft-json#3.0. Just add com.unity.nuget.newtonsoft-json via the package manager. For details see Install official via UPM by kalle (jag).
You can also check out the forked version for Unity from SaladLab /
Json.Net.Unity3D. Note that you may experience crash if certain feature is used. Be careful.
To answer your question:
Your original data is
[{"playerId":"1","playerLoc":"Powai"},{"playerId":"2","playerLoc":"Andheri"},{"playerId":"3","playerLoc":"Churchgate"}]
Add {"Items": in front of it then add } at the end of it.
Code to do this:
serviceData = "{\"Items\":" + serviceData + "}";
Now you have:
{"Items":[{"playerId":"1","playerLoc":"Powai"},{"playerId":"2","playerLoc":"Andheri"},{"playerId":"3","playerLoc":"Churchgate"}]}
To serialize the multiple data from php as arrays, you can now do
public player[] playerInstance;
playerInstance = JsonHelper.FromJson<player>(serviceData);
playerInstance[0] is your first data
playerInstance[1] is your second data
playerInstance[2] is your third data
or data inside the class with playerInstance[0].playerLoc, playerInstance[1].playerLoc, playerInstance[2].playerLoc ......
You can use playerInstance.Length to check the length before accessing it.
NOTE: Remove { get; set; } from the player class. If you have { get; set; }, it won't work. Unity's JsonUtility does NOT work with class members that are defined as properties.
Assume you got a JSON like this
[
{
"type": "qrcode",
"symbol": [
{
"seq": 0,
"data": "HelloWorld9887725216",
"error": null
}
]
}
]
To parse the above JSON in unity, you can create JSON model like this.
[System.Serializable]
public class QrCodeResult
{
public QRCodeData[] result;
}
[System.Serializable]
public class Symbol
{
public int seq;
public string data;
public string error;
}
[System.Serializable]
public class QRCodeData
{
public string type;
public Symbol[] symbol;
}
And then simply parse in the following manner...
var myObject = JsonUtility.FromJson<QrCodeResult>("{\"result\":" + jsonString.ToString() + "}");
Now you can modify the JSON/CODE according to your need.
https://docs.unity3d.com/Manual/JSONSerialization.html
Unity <= 2019
Narottam Goyal had a good idea of wrapping the array in a json object, and then deserializing into a struct.
The following uses Generics to solve this for arrays of all type, as opposed to making a new class everytime.
[System.Serializable]
private struct JsonArrayWrapper<T> {
public T wrap_result;
}
public static T ParseJsonArray<T>(string json) {
var temp = JsonUtility.FromJson<JsonArrayWrapper<T>>("{\"wrap_result\":" + json + "}");
return temp.wrap_result;
}
It can be used in the following way:
string[] options = ParseJsonArray<string[]>(someArrayOfStringsJson);
Unity 2020
In Unity 2020 there is an official newtonsoft package which is a far better json library.
you have to add [System.Serializable] to PlayerItem class ,like this:
using System;
[System.Serializable]
public class PlayerItem {
public string playerId;
public string playerLoc;
public string playerNick;
}
To Read JSON File, refer this simple example
Your JSON File (StreamingAssets/Player.json)
{
"Name": "MyName",
"Level": 4
}
C# Script
public class Demo
{
public void ReadJSON()
{
string path = Application.streamingAssetsPath + "/Player.json";
string JSONString = File.ReadAllText(path);
Player player = JsonUtility.FromJson<Player>(JSONString);
Debug.Log(player.Name);
}
}
[System.Serializable]
public class Player
{
public string Name;
public int Level;
}
Like #Maximiliangerhardt said, MiniJson do not have the capability to deserialize properly. I used JsonFx and works like a charm. Works with the []
player[] p = JsonReader.Deserialize<player[]>(serviceData);
Debug.Log(p[0].playerId +" "+ p[0].playerLoc+"--"+ p[1].playerId + " " + p[1].playerLoc+"--"+ p[2].playerId + " " + p[2].playerLoc);
You can use Newtonsoft.Json just add Newtonsoft.dll to your project and use below script
using System;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using UnityEngine;
public class NewBehaviourScript : MonoBehaviour
{
[Serializable]
public class Person
{
public string id;
public string name;
}
public Person[] person;
private void Start()
{
var myjson = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(person);
print(myjson);
}
}
another solution is using JsonHelper
using System;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using UnityEngine;
public class NewBehaviourScript : MonoBehaviour
{
[Serializable]
public class Person
{
public string id;
public string name;
}
public Person[] person;
private void Start()
{
var myjson = JsonHelper.ToJson(person);
print(myjson);
}
}
Don't trim the [] and you should be fine. [] identify a JSON array which is exactly what you require to be able to iterate its elements.
IF you are using Vector3 this is what i did
1- I create a class Name it Player
using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using UnityEngine;
[Serializable]
public class Player
{
public Vector3[] Position;
}
2- then i call it like this
if ( _ispressed == true)
{
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.Position = newPos;
string jsonData = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance);
reference.Child("Position" + Random.Range(0, 1000000)).SetRawJsonValueAsync(jsonData);
Debug.Log(jsonData);
_ispressed = false;
}
3- and this is the result
"Position":[
{"x":-2.8567452430725099,"y":-2.4323320388793947,"z":0.0}]}
I have a list of items send from a PHP file to unity using WWW.
The WWW.text looks like:
[
{
"playerId": "1",
"playerLoc": "Powai"
},
{
"playerId": "2",
"playerLoc": "Andheri"
},
{
"playerId": "3",
"playerLoc": "Churchgate"
}
]
Where I trim the extra [] from the string. When I try to parse it using Boomlagoon.JSON, only the first object is retrieved. I found out that I have to deserialize() the list and have imported MiniJSON.
But I am confused how to deserialize() this list. I want to loop through every JSON object and retrieve data. How can I do this in Unity using C#?
The class I am using is
public class player
{
public string playerId { get; set; }
public string playerLoc { get; set; }
public string playerNick { get; set; }
}
After trimming the [] I am able to parse the json using MiniJSON. But it is returning only the first KeyValuePair.
IDictionary<string, object> players = Json.Deserialize(serviceData) as IDictionary<string, object>;
foreach (KeyValuePair<string, object> kvp in players)
{
Debug.Log(string.Format("Key = {0}, Value = {1}", kvp.Key, kvp.Value));
}
Thanks!
Unity added JsonUtility to their API after 5.3.3 Update. Forget about all the 3rd party libraries unless you are doing something more complicated. JsonUtility is faster than other Json libraries. Update to Unity 5.3.3 version or above then try the solution below.
JsonUtility is a lightweight API. Only simple types are supported. It does not support collections such as Dictionary. One exception is List. It supports List and List array!
If you need to serialize a Dictionary or do something other than simply serializing and deserializing simple datatypes, use a third-party API. Otherwise, continue reading.
Example class to serialize:
[Serializable]
public class Player
{
public string playerId;
public string playerLoc;
public string playerNick;
}
1. ONE DATA OBJECT (NON-ARRAY JSON)
Serializing Part A:
Serialize to Json with the public static string ToJson(object obj); method.
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance.playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance.playerNick = "Random Nick";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{"playerId":"8484239823","playerLoc":"Powai","playerNick":"Random Nick"}
Serializing Part B:
Serialize to Json with the public static string ToJson(object obj, bool prettyPrint); method overload. Simply passing true to the JsonUtility.ToJson function will format the data. Compare the output below to the output above.
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance.playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance.playerNick = "Random Nick";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance, true);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{
"playerId": "8484239823",
"playerLoc": "Powai",
"playerNick": "Random Nick"
}
Deserializing Part A:
Deserialize json with the public static T FromJson(string json); method overload.
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
Player player = JsonUtility.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
Debug.Log(player.playerLoc);
Deserializing Part B:
Deserialize json with the public static object FromJson(string json, Type type); method overload.
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
Player player = (Player)JsonUtility.FromJson(jsonString, typeof(Player));
Debug.Log(player.playerLoc);
Deserializing Part C:
Deserialize json with the public static void FromJsonOverwrite(string json, object objectToOverwrite); method. When JsonUtility.FromJsonOverwrite is used, no new instance of that Object you are deserializing to will be created. It will simply re-use the instance you pass in and overwrite its values.
This is efficient and should be used if possible.
Player playerInstance;
void Start()
{
//Must create instance once
playerInstance = new Player();
deserialize();
}
void deserialize()
{
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
//Overwrite the values in the existing class instance "playerInstance". Less memory Allocation
JsonUtility.FromJsonOverwrite(jsonString, playerInstance);
Debug.Log(playerInstance.playerLoc);
}
2. MULTIPLE DATA(ARRAY JSON)
Your Json contains multiple data objects. For example playerId appeared more than once. Unity's JsonUtility does not support array as it is still new but you can use a helper class from this person to get array working with JsonUtility.
Create a class called JsonHelper. Copy the JsonHelper directly from below.
public static class JsonHelper
{
public static T[] FromJson<T>(string json)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = JsonUtility.FromJson<Wrapper<T>>(json);
return wrapper.Items;
}
public static string ToJson<T>(T[] array)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = new Wrapper<T>();
wrapper.Items = array;
return JsonUtility.ToJson(wrapper);
}
public static string ToJson<T>(T[] array, bool prettyPrint)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = new Wrapper<T>();
wrapper.Items = array;
return JsonUtility.ToJson(wrapper, prettyPrint);
}
[Serializable]
private class Wrapper<T>
{
public T[] Items;
}
}
Serializing Json Array:
Player[] playerInstance = new Player[2];
playerInstance[0] = new Player();
playerInstance[0].playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance[0].playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance[0].playerNick = "Random Nick";
playerInstance[1] = new Player();
playerInstance[1].playerId = "512343283";
playerInstance[1].playerLoc = "User2";
playerInstance[1].playerNick = "Rand Nick 2";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonHelper.ToJson(playerInstance, true);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{
"Items": [
{
"playerId": "8484239823",
"playerLoc": "Powai",
"playerNick": "Random Nick"
},
{
"playerId": "512343283",
"playerLoc": "User2",
"playerNick": "Rand Nick 2"
}
]
}
Deserializing Json Array:
string jsonString = "{\r\n \"Items\": [\r\n {\r\n \"playerId\": \"8484239823\",\r\n \"playerLoc\": \"Powai\",\r\n \"playerNick\": \"Random Nick\"\r\n },\r\n {\r\n \"playerId\": \"512343283\",\r\n \"playerLoc\": \"User2\",\r\n \"playerNick\": \"Rand Nick 2\"\r\n }\r\n ]\r\n}";
Player[] player = JsonHelper.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
Debug.Log(player[0].playerLoc);
Debug.Log(player[1].playerLoc);
Output:
Powai
User2
If this is a Json array from the server and you did not create it by hand:
You may have to Add {"Items": in front of the received string then add } at the end of it.
I made a simple function for this:
string fixJson(string value)
{
value = "{\"Items\":" + value + "}";
return value;
}
then you can use it:
string jsonString = fixJson(yourJsonFromServer);
Player[] player = JsonHelper.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
3.Deserialize json string without class && De-serializing Json with numeric properties
This is a Json that starts with a number or numeric properties.
For example:
{
"USD" : {"15m" : 1740.01, "last" : 1740.01, "buy" : 1740.01, "sell" : 1744.74, "symbol" : "$"},
"ISK" : {"15m" : 179479.11, "last" : 179479.11, "buy" : 179479.11, "sell" : 179967, "symbol" : "kr"},
"NZD" : {"15m" : 2522.84, "last" : 2522.84, "buy" : 2522.84, "sell" : 2529.69, "symbol" : "$"}
}
Unity's JsonUtility does not support this because the "15m" property starts with a number. A class variable cannot start with an integer.
Download SimpleJSON.cs from Unity's wiki.
To get the "15m" property of USD:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["USD"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
To get the "15m" property of ISK:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["ISK"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
To get the "15m" property of NZD:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["NZD"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
The rest of the Json properties that doesn't start with a numeric digit can be handled by Unity's JsonUtility.
4.TROUBLESHOOTING JsonUtility:
Problems when serializing with JsonUtility.ToJson?
Getting empty string or "{}" with JsonUtility.ToJson?
A. Make sure that the class is not an array. If it is, use the helper class above with JsonHelper.ToJson instead of JsonUtility.ToJson.
B. Add [Serializable] to the top of the class you are serializing.
C. Remove property from the class. For example, in the variable, public string playerId { get; set; } remove { get; set; }. Unity cannot serialize this.
Problems when deserializing with JsonUtility.FromJson?
A. If you get Null, make sure that the Json is not a Json array. If it is, use the helper class above with JsonHelper.FromJson instead of JsonUtility.FromJson.
B. If you get NullReferenceException while deserializing, add [Serializable] to the top of the class.
C.Any other problems, verify that your json is valid. Go to this site here and paste the json. It should show you if the json is valid. It should also generate the proper class with the Json. Just make sure to remove remove { get; set; } from each variable and also add [Serializable] to the top of each class generated.
Newtonsoft.Json:
If for some reason Newtonsoft.Json must be used then as of February 2022 it may now be obtained directly from Unity from here: com.unity.nuget.newtonsoft-json#3.0. Just add com.unity.nuget.newtonsoft-json via the package manager. For details see Install official via UPM by kalle (jag).
You can also check out the forked version for Unity from SaladLab /
Json.Net.Unity3D. Note that you may experience crash if certain feature is used. Be careful.
To answer your question:
Your original data is
[{"playerId":"1","playerLoc":"Powai"},{"playerId":"2","playerLoc":"Andheri"},{"playerId":"3","playerLoc":"Churchgate"}]
Add {"Items": in front of it then add } at the end of it.
Code to do this:
serviceData = "{\"Items\":" + serviceData + "}";
Now you have:
{"Items":[{"playerId":"1","playerLoc":"Powai"},{"playerId":"2","playerLoc":"Andheri"},{"playerId":"3","playerLoc":"Churchgate"}]}
To serialize the multiple data from php as arrays, you can now do
public player[] playerInstance;
playerInstance = JsonHelper.FromJson<player>(serviceData);
playerInstance[0] is your first data
playerInstance[1] is your second data
playerInstance[2] is your third data
or data inside the class with playerInstance[0].playerLoc, playerInstance[1].playerLoc, playerInstance[2].playerLoc ......
You can use playerInstance.Length to check the length before accessing it.
NOTE: Remove { get; set; } from the player class. If you have { get; set; }, it won't work. Unity's JsonUtility does NOT work with class members that are defined as properties.
Assume you got a JSON like this
[
{
"type": "qrcode",
"symbol": [
{
"seq": 0,
"data": "HelloWorld9887725216",
"error": null
}
]
}
]
To parse the above JSON in unity, you can create JSON model like this.
[System.Serializable]
public class QrCodeResult
{
public QRCodeData[] result;
}
[System.Serializable]
public class Symbol
{
public int seq;
public string data;
public string error;
}
[System.Serializable]
public class QRCodeData
{
public string type;
public Symbol[] symbol;
}
And then simply parse in the following manner...
var myObject = JsonUtility.FromJson<QrCodeResult>("{\"result\":" + jsonString.ToString() + "}");
Now you can modify the JSON/CODE according to your need.
https://docs.unity3d.com/Manual/JSONSerialization.html
Unity <= 2019
Narottam Goyal had a good idea of wrapping the array in a json object, and then deserializing into a struct.
The following uses Generics to solve this for arrays of all type, as opposed to making a new class everytime.
[System.Serializable]
private struct JsonArrayWrapper<T> {
public T wrap_result;
}
public static T ParseJsonArray<T>(string json) {
var temp = JsonUtility.FromJson<JsonArrayWrapper<T>>("{\"wrap_result\":" + json + "}");
return temp.wrap_result;
}
It can be used in the following way:
string[] options = ParseJsonArray<string[]>(someArrayOfStringsJson);
Unity 2020
In Unity 2020 there is an official newtonsoft package which is a far better json library.
you have to add [System.Serializable] to PlayerItem class ,like this:
using System;
[System.Serializable]
public class PlayerItem {
public string playerId;
public string playerLoc;
public string playerNick;
}
To Read JSON File, refer this simple example
Your JSON File (StreamingAssets/Player.json)
{
"Name": "MyName",
"Level": 4
}
C# Script
public class Demo
{
public void ReadJSON()
{
string path = Application.streamingAssetsPath + "/Player.json";
string JSONString = File.ReadAllText(path);
Player player = JsonUtility.FromJson<Player>(JSONString);
Debug.Log(player.Name);
}
}
[System.Serializable]
public class Player
{
public string Name;
public int Level;
}
Like #Maximiliangerhardt said, MiniJson do not have the capability to deserialize properly. I used JsonFx and works like a charm. Works with the []
player[] p = JsonReader.Deserialize<player[]>(serviceData);
Debug.Log(p[0].playerId +" "+ p[0].playerLoc+"--"+ p[1].playerId + " " + p[1].playerLoc+"--"+ p[2].playerId + " " + p[2].playerLoc);
You can use Newtonsoft.Json just add Newtonsoft.dll to your project and use below script
using System;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using UnityEngine;
public class NewBehaviourScript : MonoBehaviour
{
[Serializable]
public class Person
{
public string id;
public string name;
}
public Person[] person;
private void Start()
{
var myjson = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(person);
print(myjson);
}
}
another solution is using JsonHelper
using System;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using UnityEngine;
public class NewBehaviourScript : MonoBehaviour
{
[Serializable]
public class Person
{
public string id;
public string name;
}
public Person[] person;
private void Start()
{
var myjson = JsonHelper.ToJson(person);
print(myjson);
}
}
Don't trim the [] and you should be fine. [] identify a JSON array which is exactly what you require to be able to iterate its elements.
IF you are using Vector3 this is what i did
1- I create a class Name it Player
using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using UnityEngine;
[Serializable]
public class Player
{
public Vector3[] Position;
}
2- then i call it like this
if ( _ispressed == true)
{
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.Position = newPos;
string jsonData = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance);
reference.Child("Position" + Random.Range(0, 1000000)).SetRawJsonValueAsync(jsonData);
Debug.Log(jsonData);
_ispressed = false;
}
3- and this is the result
"Position":[
{"x":-2.8567452430725099,"y":-2.4323320388793947,"z":0.0}]}
I have a list of items send from a PHP file to unity using WWW.
The WWW.text looks like:
[
{
"playerId": "1",
"playerLoc": "Powai"
},
{
"playerId": "2",
"playerLoc": "Andheri"
},
{
"playerId": "3",
"playerLoc": "Churchgate"
}
]
Where I trim the extra [] from the string. When I try to parse it using Boomlagoon.JSON, only the first object is retrieved. I found out that I have to deserialize() the list and have imported MiniJSON.
But I am confused how to deserialize() this list. I want to loop through every JSON object and retrieve data. How can I do this in Unity using C#?
The class I am using is
public class player
{
public string playerId { get; set; }
public string playerLoc { get; set; }
public string playerNick { get; set; }
}
After trimming the [] I am able to parse the json using MiniJSON. But it is returning only the first KeyValuePair.
IDictionary<string, object> players = Json.Deserialize(serviceData) as IDictionary<string, object>;
foreach (KeyValuePair<string, object> kvp in players)
{
Debug.Log(string.Format("Key = {0}, Value = {1}", kvp.Key, kvp.Value));
}
Thanks!
Unity added JsonUtility to their API after 5.3.3 Update. Forget about all the 3rd party libraries unless you are doing something more complicated. JsonUtility is faster than other Json libraries. Update to Unity 5.3.3 version or above then try the solution below.
JsonUtility is a lightweight API. Only simple types are supported. It does not support collections such as Dictionary. One exception is List. It supports List and List array!
If you need to serialize a Dictionary or do something other than simply serializing and deserializing simple datatypes, use a third-party API. Otherwise, continue reading.
Example class to serialize:
[Serializable]
public class Player
{
public string playerId;
public string playerLoc;
public string playerNick;
}
1. ONE DATA OBJECT (NON-ARRAY JSON)
Serializing Part A:
Serialize to Json with the public static string ToJson(object obj); method.
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance.playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance.playerNick = "Random Nick";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{"playerId":"8484239823","playerLoc":"Powai","playerNick":"Random Nick"}
Serializing Part B:
Serialize to Json with the public static string ToJson(object obj, bool prettyPrint); method overload. Simply passing true to the JsonUtility.ToJson function will format the data. Compare the output below to the output above.
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance.playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance.playerNick = "Random Nick";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance, true);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{
"playerId": "8484239823",
"playerLoc": "Powai",
"playerNick": "Random Nick"
}
Deserializing Part A:
Deserialize json with the public static T FromJson(string json); method overload.
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
Player player = JsonUtility.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
Debug.Log(player.playerLoc);
Deserializing Part B:
Deserialize json with the public static object FromJson(string json, Type type); method overload.
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
Player player = (Player)JsonUtility.FromJson(jsonString, typeof(Player));
Debug.Log(player.playerLoc);
Deserializing Part C:
Deserialize json with the public static void FromJsonOverwrite(string json, object objectToOverwrite); method. When JsonUtility.FromJsonOverwrite is used, no new instance of that Object you are deserializing to will be created. It will simply re-use the instance you pass in and overwrite its values.
This is efficient and should be used if possible.
Player playerInstance;
void Start()
{
//Must create instance once
playerInstance = new Player();
deserialize();
}
void deserialize()
{
string jsonString = "{\"playerId\":\"8484239823\",\"playerLoc\":\"Powai\",\"playerNick\":\"Random Nick\"}";
//Overwrite the values in the existing class instance "playerInstance". Less memory Allocation
JsonUtility.FromJsonOverwrite(jsonString, playerInstance);
Debug.Log(playerInstance.playerLoc);
}
2. MULTIPLE DATA(ARRAY JSON)
Your Json contains multiple data objects. For example playerId appeared more than once. Unity's JsonUtility does not support array as it is still new but you can use a helper class from this person to get array working with JsonUtility.
Create a class called JsonHelper. Copy the JsonHelper directly from below.
public static class JsonHelper
{
public static T[] FromJson<T>(string json)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = JsonUtility.FromJson<Wrapper<T>>(json);
return wrapper.Items;
}
public static string ToJson<T>(T[] array)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = new Wrapper<T>();
wrapper.Items = array;
return JsonUtility.ToJson(wrapper);
}
public static string ToJson<T>(T[] array, bool prettyPrint)
{
Wrapper<T> wrapper = new Wrapper<T>();
wrapper.Items = array;
return JsonUtility.ToJson(wrapper, prettyPrint);
}
[Serializable]
private class Wrapper<T>
{
public T[] Items;
}
}
Serializing Json Array:
Player[] playerInstance = new Player[2];
playerInstance[0] = new Player();
playerInstance[0].playerId = "8484239823";
playerInstance[0].playerLoc = "Powai";
playerInstance[0].playerNick = "Random Nick";
playerInstance[1] = new Player();
playerInstance[1].playerId = "512343283";
playerInstance[1].playerLoc = "User2";
playerInstance[1].playerNick = "Rand Nick 2";
//Convert to JSON
string playerToJson = JsonHelper.ToJson(playerInstance, true);
Debug.Log(playerToJson);
Output:
{
"Items": [
{
"playerId": "8484239823",
"playerLoc": "Powai",
"playerNick": "Random Nick"
},
{
"playerId": "512343283",
"playerLoc": "User2",
"playerNick": "Rand Nick 2"
}
]
}
Deserializing Json Array:
string jsonString = "{\r\n \"Items\": [\r\n {\r\n \"playerId\": \"8484239823\",\r\n \"playerLoc\": \"Powai\",\r\n \"playerNick\": \"Random Nick\"\r\n },\r\n {\r\n \"playerId\": \"512343283\",\r\n \"playerLoc\": \"User2\",\r\n \"playerNick\": \"Rand Nick 2\"\r\n }\r\n ]\r\n}";
Player[] player = JsonHelper.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
Debug.Log(player[0].playerLoc);
Debug.Log(player[1].playerLoc);
Output:
Powai
User2
If this is a Json array from the server and you did not create it by hand:
You may have to Add {"Items": in front of the received string then add } at the end of it.
I made a simple function for this:
string fixJson(string value)
{
value = "{\"Items\":" + value + "}";
return value;
}
then you can use it:
string jsonString = fixJson(yourJsonFromServer);
Player[] player = JsonHelper.FromJson<Player>(jsonString);
3.Deserialize json string without class && De-serializing Json with numeric properties
This is a Json that starts with a number or numeric properties.
For example:
{
"USD" : {"15m" : 1740.01, "last" : 1740.01, "buy" : 1740.01, "sell" : 1744.74, "symbol" : "$"},
"ISK" : {"15m" : 179479.11, "last" : 179479.11, "buy" : 179479.11, "sell" : 179967, "symbol" : "kr"},
"NZD" : {"15m" : 2522.84, "last" : 2522.84, "buy" : 2522.84, "sell" : 2529.69, "symbol" : "$"}
}
Unity's JsonUtility does not support this because the "15m" property starts with a number. A class variable cannot start with an integer.
Download SimpleJSON.cs from Unity's wiki.
To get the "15m" property of USD:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["USD"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
To get the "15m" property of ISK:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["ISK"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
To get the "15m" property of NZD:
var N = JSON.Parse(yourJsonString);
string price = N["NZD"]["15m"].Value;
Debug.Log(price);
The rest of the Json properties that doesn't start with a numeric digit can be handled by Unity's JsonUtility.
4.TROUBLESHOOTING JsonUtility:
Problems when serializing with JsonUtility.ToJson?
Getting empty string or "{}" with JsonUtility.ToJson?
A. Make sure that the class is not an array. If it is, use the helper class above with JsonHelper.ToJson instead of JsonUtility.ToJson.
B. Add [Serializable] to the top of the class you are serializing.
C. Remove property from the class. For example, in the variable, public string playerId { get; set; } remove { get; set; }. Unity cannot serialize this.
Problems when deserializing with JsonUtility.FromJson?
A. If you get Null, make sure that the Json is not a Json array. If it is, use the helper class above with JsonHelper.FromJson instead of JsonUtility.FromJson.
B. If you get NullReferenceException while deserializing, add [Serializable] to the top of the class.
C.Any other problems, verify that your json is valid. Go to this site here and paste the json. It should show you if the json is valid. It should also generate the proper class with the Json. Just make sure to remove remove { get; set; } from each variable and also add [Serializable] to the top of each class generated.
Newtonsoft.Json:
If for some reason Newtonsoft.Json must be used then as of February 2022 it may now be obtained directly from Unity from here: com.unity.nuget.newtonsoft-json#3.0. Just add com.unity.nuget.newtonsoft-json via the package manager. For details see Install official via UPM by kalle (jag).
You can also check out the forked version for Unity from SaladLab /
Json.Net.Unity3D. Note that you may experience crash if certain feature is used. Be careful.
To answer your question:
Your original data is
[{"playerId":"1","playerLoc":"Powai"},{"playerId":"2","playerLoc":"Andheri"},{"playerId":"3","playerLoc":"Churchgate"}]
Add {"Items": in front of it then add } at the end of it.
Code to do this:
serviceData = "{\"Items\":" + serviceData + "}";
Now you have:
{"Items":[{"playerId":"1","playerLoc":"Powai"},{"playerId":"2","playerLoc":"Andheri"},{"playerId":"3","playerLoc":"Churchgate"}]}
To serialize the multiple data from php as arrays, you can now do
public player[] playerInstance;
playerInstance = JsonHelper.FromJson<player>(serviceData);
playerInstance[0] is your first data
playerInstance[1] is your second data
playerInstance[2] is your third data
or data inside the class with playerInstance[0].playerLoc, playerInstance[1].playerLoc, playerInstance[2].playerLoc ......
You can use playerInstance.Length to check the length before accessing it.
NOTE: Remove { get; set; } from the player class. If you have { get; set; }, it won't work. Unity's JsonUtility does NOT work with class members that are defined as properties.
Assume you got a JSON like this
[
{
"type": "qrcode",
"symbol": [
{
"seq": 0,
"data": "HelloWorld9887725216",
"error": null
}
]
}
]
To parse the above JSON in unity, you can create JSON model like this.
[System.Serializable]
public class QrCodeResult
{
public QRCodeData[] result;
}
[System.Serializable]
public class Symbol
{
public int seq;
public string data;
public string error;
}
[System.Serializable]
public class QRCodeData
{
public string type;
public Symbol[] symbol;
}
And then simply parse in the following manner...
var myObject = JsonUtility.FromJson<QrCodeResult>("{\"result\":" + jsonString.ToString() + "}");
Now you can modify the JSON/CODE according to your need.
https://docs.unity3d.com/Manual/JSONSerialization.html
Unity <= 2019
Narottam Goyal had a good idea of wrapping the array in a json object, and then deserializing into a struct.
The following uses Generics to solve this for arrays of all type, as opposed to making a new class everytime.
[System.Serializable]
private struct JsonArrayWrapper<T> {
public T wrap_result;
}
public static T ParseJsonArray<T>(string json) {
var temp = JsonUtility.FromJson<JsonArrayWrapper<T>>("{\"wrap_result\":" + json + "}");
return temp.wrap_result;
}
It can be used in the following way:
string[] options = ParseJsonArray<string[]>(someArrayOfStringsJson);
Unity 2020
In Unity 2020 there is an official newtonsoft package which is a far better json library.
you have to add [System.Serializable] to PlayerItem class ,like this:
using System;
[System.Serializable]
public class PlayerItem {
public string playerId;
public string playerLoc;
public string playerNick;
}
To Read JSON File, refer this simple example
Your JSON File (StreamingAssets/Player.json)
{
"Name": "MyName",
"Level": 4
}
C# Script
public class Demo
{
public void ReadJSON()
{
string path = Application.streamingAssetsPath + "/Player.json";
string JSONString = File.ReadAllText(path);
Player player = JsonUtility.FromJson<Player>(JSONString);
Debug.Log(player.Name);
}
}
[System.Serializable]
public class Player
{
public string Name;
public int Level;
}
Like #Maximiliangerhardt said, MiniJson do not have the capability to deserialize properly. I used JsonFx and works like a charm. Works with the []
player[] p = JsonReader.Deserialize<player[]>(serviceData);
Debug.Log(p[0].playerId +" "+ p[0].playerLoc+"--"+ p[1].playerId + " " + p[1].playerLoc+"--"+ p[2].playerId + " " + p[2].playerLoc);
You can use Newtonsoft.Json just add Newtonsoft.dll to your project and use below script
using System;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using UnityEngine;
public class NewBehaviourScript : MonoBehaviour
{
[Serializable]
public class Person
{
public string id;
public string name;
}
public Person[] person;
private void Start()
{
var myjson = JsonConvert.SerializeObject(person);
print(myjson);
}
}
another solution is using JsonHelper
using System;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
using UnityEngine;
public class NewBehaviourScript : MonoBehaviour
{
[Serializable]
public class Person
{
public string id;
public string name;
}
public Person[] person;
private void Start()
{
var myjson = JsonHelper.ToJson(person);
print(myjson);
}
}
Don't trim the [] and you should be fine. [] identify a JSON array which is exactly what you require to be able to iterate its elements.
IF you are using Vector3 this is what i did
1- I create a class Name it Player
using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using UnityEngine;
[Serializable]
public class Player
{
public Vector3[] Position;
}
2- then i call it like this
if ( _ispressed == true)
{
Player playerInstance = new Player();
playerInstance.Position = newPos;
string jsonData = JsonUtility.ToJson(playerInstance);
reference.Child("Position" + Random.Range(0, 1000000)).SetRawJsonValueAsync(jsonData);
Debug.Log(jsonData);
_ispressed = false;
}
3- and this is the result
"Position":[
{"x":-2.8567452430725099,"y":-2.4323320388793947,"z":0.0}]}
I have a question about inserting a json formatted string into a json structure and having the final version be a combined JSON formatted string that can be serialized into a JSON structure. I am using the newtonsofts Json.NET
I have the following JSON structure:
public class ResponseJson
{
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "header")]
public ResponseHeader responseHeader { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "results")]
public string responseResults { get; set; }
}
public class ResponseHeader
{
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "name")]
public string name { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "version")]
public string version { get; set; }
}
In the code, I do the following:
ResponseJson responseJson = new ResponseJson();
responseJson.responseHeader = new ResponseHeader()
{
name = A_NAME,
version = A_VERSION
};
responseJson.responseResults = resultJson;
return JsonConvert.SerializeObject(responseJson, new JsonSerializerSettings { NullValueHandling = NullValueHandling.Ignore });
resultJson is a properly formatted JSON string (in this case, an array of objects, but could be anything JSON formatted). Right now, if i execute the code, I get the following (which is expected, since "results" is declared as a string):
{
"header":
{
"name":"abcd",
"version":"1.0"
},
"results":
"[{\"data\":{\"level\":\"100\"},\"code\":{\"value\":\"JBC\",\"type\":\"ev\"},\"time\":{\"start\":\"20\",\"end\":\"101\"}}]"
}
what I do need as an output is:
{
"header":
{
"name":"abcd",
"version":"1.0"
},
"results":
[
{
"data":
{
"level":"100"
},
"code":
{
"value":"JBC",
"type":"ev"
},
"time":
{
"start":"20",
"end":"101"
}
}
]
}
While you don't explain how you create your resultJson variable, it's implied from your code that you are double-serializing your results: you compute an array of "result" classes, serialize them to a JSON string, store the string in your ResponseJson class, and them serialize that in turn. The embedded JSON string then gets escaped as per the JSON standard, which is what you are seeing.
You need to avoid double-serializing your data, for instance by using the following data model:
public class ResponseJson<T>
{
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "header")]
public ResponseHeader responseHeader { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "results")]
public T responseResults { get; set; }
}
public static class ResponseJson
{
public static ResponseJson<T> Create<T>(T responseResults, ResponseHeader responseHeader)
{
return new ResponseJson<T> { responseResults = responseResults, responseHeader = responseHeader };
}
}
public class ResponseHeader
{
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "name")]
public string name { get; set; }
[JsonProperty(PropertyName = "version")]
public string version { get; set; }
}
Then you would do:
var results = GetResults(); // Get your result data
var responseJson = ResponseJson.Create(results, new ResponseHeader()
{
name = A_NAME,
version = A_VERSION
});
return JsonConvert.SerializeObject(responseJson, new JsonSerializerSettings { NullValueHandling = NullValueHandling.Ignore });
If for whatever reason you must embed a previously serialized JSON string as JSON rather than as a string literal, you'll need to re-parse it back to a JToken:
string resultJson = GetResultJson(); // Get result json string.
var responseJson = ResponseJson.Create(JToken.Parse(resultJson), new ResponseHeader()
{
name = A_NAME,
version = A_VERSION
});
return JsonConvert.SerializeObject(responseJson, new JsonSerializerSettings { NullValueHandling = NullValueHandling.Ignore });
Json.NET will include the JToken in your outer JSON as nested JSON rather than as a string literal.