I am trying to output some data from Perl to JSON. I can do a simple output, but would like to structure it better.
I have an array with an id, a start time and an end time. This is the code I am using to output:
print header('application/json');
my $json->{$entry} = \#array;
my $json_text = to_json($json);
print $json_text;
Which returns:
{"Season":[["1","1330065300","1344038401"],["7","1298505601","1312416001"]]}
But I would like to output something more like:
{"Season":0[{"id":1,"DateStart":1330065300,"DateEnd":1344038401},{"id":7,"DateStart":1298505601,"DateEnd":1312416001}]}
Can anyone help on how to better structure my output?
---UPDATE------
Thanks Michael. I have tried to implement your example.
This is the code at the moment:
foreach my $key (keys %$seasons)
{
$seasons->{$key} =
[
map
{
{ id=>$_[0], DateStart=>$_[1], DateEnd=>$_[2] }
} #{$seasons->{$key}}
];
}
But it returns the error (referring to the foreach line):
Not a HASH reference at line 148
$seasons is an arrayref return from a SQL fetchall_arrayref
Any clues?
You basically want to convert an array of arrays to an array of hashes, and you can do this using map. Assuming $data is your structure, this should do it:
for my $key (keys %$data) {
$data->{$key} = [
map {
{ id => $_->[0], DateStart => $_->[1], DateEnd => $_->[2] }
} #{$data->{$key}}
];
}
If you want to output an array of objects with key/value pairs instead of an array of arrays, then put appropriate data into to_json in the first place.
i.e. an array of hashrefs and not an array of arrayrefs.
You can use map to transform the data.
Whenever you're trying something like this, always check CPAN to see if someone has done it before and not try to reinvent the wheel. I found a module called JSON that seems to do exactly what you want.
There's an example on that page that does exactly what you want. Here's a quick paraphrase:
use JSON; # imports encode_json, decode_json, to_json and from_json.
# simple and fast interfaces (expect/generate UTF-8)
my $utf8_encoded_json_text = encode_json \#array;
Can't get easier than that. The best part is that this will work no matter how complex your array structure gets.
Related
I have a chunk of json that has the following format:
{"page":{"size":7,"number":1,"totalPages":1,"totalElements":7,"resultSetId":null,"duration":0},"content":[{"id":"787edc99-e94f-4132-b596-d04fc56596f9","name":"Verification","attributes":{"ruleExecutionClass":"VerificationRule"},"userTags":[],"links":[{"rel":"self","href":"/endpoint/787edc99-e94f-4132-b596-d04fc56596f9","id":"787edc99-e94f-...
Basically the size attribute (in this case) tells me that there are 7 parts to the content section. How do I convert this chunk of json to an array in Perl, and can I do it using the size attribute? Or is there a simpler way like just using decode_json()?
Here is what I have so far:
my $resources = get_that_json_chunk(); # function returns exactly the json you see, except all 7 resources in the content section
my #decoded_json = #$resources;
foreach my $resource (#decoded_json) {
I've also tried something like this:
my $deserialize = from_json( $resources );
my #decoded_json = (#{$deserialize});
I want to iterate over the array and handle the data. I've tried a few different ways because I read a little about array refs, but I keep getting "Not an ARRAY reference" errors and "Can't use string ("{"page":{"size":7,"number":1,"to"...) as an ARRAY ref while "strict refs" in use"
Thank you to Matt Jacob:
my $deserialized = decode_json($resources);
print "$_->{id}\n" for #{$deserialized->{content}};
I'm trying to do something that seems to be very simple, but I can't figure out how to do it in Perl : I want to output a JSON-formatted array of hashes.
The array of hashes in question is actually an array of DBIx::MyParse Items object instances. Here is my code :
use strict;
use DBIx::MyParse;
use JSON::PP;
my $json = JSON::PP->new->ascii->pretty->allow_nonref;
our $parser = DBIx::MyParse->new( database => "test", datadir => "/tmp/myparse" );
our $query = $parser->parse("UPDATE table1 SET field1 = 1;");
$json->convert_blessed(1);
print $json->encode(#{$query} );
And this is what this script outputs :
"SQLCOM_UPDATE"
Which is actually the first element of the array that I want to output as a whole. Here is the content of the array that I see when I step-by-step debug the script :
I would like to have the whole structure in my JSON output. How can I achieve this ?
JSON::encode just expects a single argument, not a list. Use $json->encode( $query ).
I am confused about accessing the contents of some JSON data that I have decoded. Here is an example
I don't understand why this solution works and my own does not. My questions are rephrased below
my $json_raw = getJSON();
my $content = decode_json($json_raw);
print Data::Dumper($content);
At this point my JSON data has been transformed into this
$VAR1 = { 'items' => [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ] };
My guess tells me that, once decoded, the object will be a hash with one element that has the key items and an array reference as the value.
$content{'items'}[0]
where $content{'items'} would obtain the array reference, and the outer $...[0] would access the first element in the array and interpret it as a scalar. However this does not work. I get an error message use of uninitialized value [...]
However, the following does work:
$content->{items}[0]
where $content->{items} yields the array reference and [0] accesses the first element of that array.
Questions
Why does $content{'items'} not return an array reference? I even tried #{content{'items'}}, thinking that, once I got the value from content{'items'}, it would need to be interpreted as an array. But still, I receive the uninitialized array reference.
How can I access the array reference without using the arrow operator?
Beginner's answer to beginner :) Sure not as profesional as should be, but maybe helps you.
use strict; #use this all times
use warnings; #this too - helps a lot!
use JSON;
my $json_str = ' { "items" : [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ] } ';
my $content = decode_json($json_str);
You wrote:
My guess tells me that, once decoded, the object will be a hash with
one element that has the key items and an array reference as the value.
Yes, it is a hash, but the the decode_json returns a reference, in this case, the reference to hash. (from the docs)
expects an UTF-8 (binary) string and tries to parse that
as an UTF-8 encoded JSON text,
returning the resulting reference.
In the line
my $content = decode_json($json_str);
you assigning to an SCALAR variable (not to hash).
Because you know: it is a reference, you can do the next:
printf "reftype:%s\n", ref($content);
#print: reftype:HASH ^
#therefore the +------- is a SCALAR value containing a reference to hash
It is a hashref - you can dump all keys
print "key: $_\n" for keys %{$content}; #or in short %$content
#prints: key: items
also you can assing the value of the "items" (arrayref) to an scalar variable
my $aref = $content->{items}; #$hashref->{key}
#or
#my $aref = ${$content}{items}; #$hash{key}
but NOT
#my $aref = $content{items}; #throws error if "use strict;"
#Global symbol "%content" requires explicit package name at script.pl line 20.
The $content{item} is requesting a value from the hash %content and you never defined/assigned such variable. the $content is an scalar variable not hash variable %content.
{
#in perl 5.20 you can also
use 5.020;
use experimental 'postderef';
print "key-postderef: $_\n" for keys $content->%*;
}
Now step deeper - to the arrayref - again you can print out the reference type
printf "reftype:%s\n", ref($aref);
#reftype:ARRAY
print all elements of array
print "arr-item: $_\n" for #{$aref};
but again NOT
#print "$_\n" for #aref;
#dies: Global symbol "#aref" requires explicit package name at script.pl line 37.
{
#in perl 5.20 you can also
use 5.020;
use experimental 'postderef';
print "aref-postderef: $_\n" for $aref->#*;
}
Here is an simple rule:
my #arr; #array variable
my $arr_ref = \#arr; #scalar - containing a reference to #arr
#{$arr_ref} is the same as #arr
^^^^^^^^^^ - array reference in curly brackets
If you have an $arrayref - use the #{$array_ref} everywhere you want use the array.
my %hash; #hash variable
my $hash_ref = \%hash; #scalar - containing a reference to %hash
%{$hash_ref} is the same as %hash
^^^^^^^^^^^ - hash reference in curly brackets
If you have an $hash_ref - use the %{$hash_ref} everywhere you want use the hash.
For the whole structure, the following
say $content->{items}->[0];
say $content->{items}[0];
say ${$content}{items}->[0];
say ${$content}{items}[0];
say ${$content->{items}}[0];
say ${${$content}{items}}[0];
prints the same value 1.
$content is a hash reference, so you always need to use an arrow to access its contents. $content{items} would refer to a %content hash, which you don't have. That's where you're getting that "use of uninitialized value" error from.
I actually asked a similar question here
The answer:
In Perl, a function can only really return a scalar or a list.
Since hashes can be initialized or assigned from lists (e.g. %foo = (a => 1, b => 2)), I guess you're asking why json_decode returns something like { a => 1, b => 2 } (a reference to an anonymous hash) rather than (a => 1, b => 2) (a list that can be copied into a hash).
I can think of a few good reasons for this:
in Perl, an array or hash always contains scalars. So in something like { "a": { "b": 3 } }, the { "b": 3 } part has to be a scalar; and for consistency, it makes sense for the whole thing to be a scalar in the same way.
if the hash is quite large (many keys at top-level), it's pointless and expensive to iterate over all the elements to convert it into a list, and then build a new hash from that list.
in JSON, the top-level element can be either an object (= Perl hash) or an array (= Perl array). If json_decode returned a list in the former case, it's not clear what it would return in the latter case. After decoding the JSON string, how could you examine the result to know what to do with it? (And it wouldn't be safe to write %foo = json_decode(...) unless you already knew that you had a hash.) So json_decode's behavior works better for any general-purpose library code that has to use it without already knowing very much about the data it's working with.
I have to wonder exactly what you passed as an array to json_decode, because my results differ from yours.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use JSON qw (decode_json);
use Data::Dumper;
my $json = '["1", "2", "3", "4"]';
my $fromJSON = decode_json($json);
print Dumper($fromJSON);
The result is $VAR1 = [ '1', '2', '3', '4' ];
Which is an array ref, where your result is a hash ref
So did you pass in a hash with element items which was a reference to an array?
In my example you would get the array by doing
my #array = #{ $fromJSON };
In yours
my #array = #{ $content->{'items'} }
I don't understand why you dislike the arrow operator so much!
The decode_json function from the JSON module will always return a data reference.
Suppose you have a Perl program like this
use strict;
use warnings;
use JSON;
my $json_data = '{ "items": [ 1, 2, 3, 4 ] }';
my $content = decode_json($json_data);
use Data::Dump;
dd $content;
which outputs this text
{ items => [1 .. 4] }
showing that $content is a hash reference. Then you can access the array reference, as you found, with
dd $content->{items};
which shows
[1 .. 4]
and you can print the first element of the array by writing
print $content->{items}[0], "\n";
which, again as you have found, shows just
1
which is the first element of the array.
As #cjm mentions in a comment, it is imperative that you use strict and use warnings at the start of every Perl program. If you had those in place in the program where you tried to access $content{items}, your program would have failed to compile, and you would have seen the message
Global symbol "%content" requires explicit package name
which is a (poorly-phrased) way of telling you that there is no %content so there can be no items element.
The scalar variable $content is completely independent from the hash variable %content, which you are trying to access when you write $content{items}. %content has never been mentioned before and it is empty, so there is no items element. If you had tried #{$content->{items}} then it would have worked, as would #{${$content}{items}}
If you really have a problem with the arrow operator, then you could write
print ${$content}{items}[0], "\n";
which produces the same output; but I don't understand what is wrong with the original version.
I have a classic JSON problem, and i know that many post are asking about that...
But i doubt that the JSON i try to grab has a correct structure.
The files Begin like that :
[{
"time":"0-12h",
"articles":[
{
"id":1,
"domain_id":22,
"title":"Hi Guys"
}
{
"id":2,
"domain_id":17,
"title":"Hi everyone"
}
]
}]
I have try a lot of combinaison to echo the title :
$data = json_decode($json, true);
echo $data->articles;
Or
echo $data->articles->title;
Or
echo $data->articles[0]->title;
Nothing works... :(
Can you help me ?
Thanks !
The second argument true to json_decode() means it should create associative arrays rather than objects for {} in the JSON. So in addition to dealing with the indexed arrays as Explosion Pills points out, you also need to use array syntax to access the keyed elements:
$data[0]['articles'][0]['title']
If you want to be able to use -> syntax, leave out the second argument or set it to false.
I'm hoping the missing comma in the JSON is an error when transcribing to the question. If not, you also need to fix the code that creates the JSON in the first place.
$data itself is an array. Try
$data[0]->articles[0]->title;
Also the JSON is not valid (missing a comma before the second articles array element).
there is a comma , missing
}
,
{
json_decode with the second parameter true returns an array
print_r($data['articles']);
echo $data['articles'] would output Array
Given an arbitrarily nested data structure, how can I create a new data structure so that all the elements in it have been standardized by applying a function on all the elements depending on the type of the element. For example, I might have
$data = {
name => 'some one',
date => '2010-10-10 12:23:45',
sale => [34, 22, 65],
cust => {
name => 'Jimmy',
addr => '1 Foobar Way',
amnt => 452.024,
item => ['books', 'pens', 'post-it notes']
}
}
and I want to convert all text values to upper case, all dates to UTC date times, find the square of all integers, round down all real numbers and add 1, and so on. So, in effect, I want to apply a different function to each element depending on the type of element.
In reality the data might arrive via a database query, in which case they are already a Perl data structure, or they might start life as a JSON object, in which case I can use JSON::from_json to convert it to a Perl data structure. The idea is to standardize all the values in the data structure based on the value type, and then spit out the Perl data structure back again as a JSON object.
I read the answers to executing a function on every element of a data structure and feel that Data::Rmap might do the trick, but can't figure out how. Seems like Rmap works on all the keys as well, not just the values.
It's crazy straightforward with Data::Rmap you mentioned.
use Data::Rmap qw( rmap );
rmap { $_ = transform($_); } $data;
Regarding the question in the comments:
use Data::Rmap qw( rmap );
use Scalar::Util qw( looks_like_number );
# Transforms $_ in place.
sub transform {
if (looks_like_number($_)) {
if (...) {
$_ *= 2;
}
$_ = 0+$_; # Makes it look like a number to JSON::XS
} else {
...
}
}
&rmap(\&transform, $data);