JSON Control
Properties Methods Events Config Settings Errors
The JSON control can be used to parse and write JSON documents.
Syntax
JSON
Remarks
The JSON control offers a fast and simple way to parse and write information in JSON documents.
Parsing JSON
The JSON control parses JSON documents and verifies that they are well-formed. The results are provided through a set of events.
In addition, the document structure may be queried through an XPath mechanism that supports a subset of the XPath and JSONPath specification.
The parser is optimized for read applications, with a very fast engine that builds internal DOM structures with close to zero heap allocations. Additionally, BuildDOM can be set to False, which reduces the overhead of creating the DOM and offers a fast forward-only parsing implementation that fires events to provide the parsed data.
When parsing a document, events will fire to provide information about the parsed data. After Parse returns the document, it may be navigated by setting XPath if BuildDOM is True (default). If BuildDOM is False, parsed data are accessible only through the events.
The following events will fire during parsing:
If BuildDOM is True (default), XPath may be set after this method returns. XPath may be set to navigate to specific elements within the JSON document. This will be the path to a specified value within the document. Because arrays in JSON only contain values, and no associated object name, an empty name will be used for these values. To reach an array element at position 1, the path must be set to "[1]". In addition, a root element named "json" will be added to each JSON document in the parser.
BuildDOM must be set to True before parsing the document for the XPath functionality to be available.
The XPath property accepts both XPath and JSONPath formats. Please review the following notes on both formats.
XPath
The path is a series of one or more element accessors separated by '/'. The path can be absolute (starting with '/') or relative to the current XPath location.
The following are possible values for an element accessor:
'name' | A particular element name. |
[i] | The i-th subelement of the current element. |
.. | the parent of the current element. |
BuildDOM must be set to True before parsing the document for the XPath functionality to be available.
Simple JSON Document
{ "firstlevel": { "one": "value", "two": ["first", "second"], "three": "value three" } }Example 1. Setting XPath:
Document root | JsonControl.XPath = "/" |
Specific Element | JsonControl.XPath = "/json/firstlevel/one/" |
i-th Child | JsonControl.XPath = "/json/firstlevel/two/[i]/" |
JSONPath
This property implements a subset of the JSONPath notation. This may be set to point to a specific element in the JSON document.The JSONPath is a series of one or more accessors in either dot-notation
$.store.book[0].titleor in bracket-notation, as follows:
$['store']['book'][0]['title']
After setting XPath, the following properties are populated:
- XChildren
- XElement
- XElementType
- XSubTree
- XText
Given the following JSON document:
{ "store": { "book": [ { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": 8.95 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "isbn": "0-553-21311-3", "price": 8.99 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "J. R. R. Tolkien", "title": "The Lord of the Rings", "isbn": "0-395-19395-8", "price": 22.99 } ], "bicycle": { "color": "red", "price": 19.95 } }, }The following code shows several examples.
Get the first book's author:
json.XPath = "$.store.book[0].author";
Console.WriteLine(json.XText);
//Output
//"Nigel Rees"
Select the first book and inspect the children:
json.XPath = "$.store.book[0]";
Console.WriteLine("Child Count: " + json.XChildren.Count);
Console.WriteLine(json.XChildren[1].Name + ": " + json.XChildren[1].XText);
//Output
//Child Count: 4
//author: "Nigel Rees"
Get the price of the second book:
json.XPath = "$['store']['book'][1]['price']";
Console.WriteLine(json.XText);
//Output
//12.99
Get the second to last book's author:
json.XPath = "$['store']['book'][last() - 1]['author']";
Console.WriteLine(json.XText);
Console.WriteLine(json.XPath); //Note that "last() - 1" is resolved to "3".
//Output
//"Herman Melville"
//$['store']['book'][3]['author']
Display the full subtree at the current path:
json.XPath = "$.store.book[0]";
Console.WriteLine(json.XSubTree);
//Output
// {
// "category": "reference",
// "author": "Nigel Rees",
// "title": "Sayings of the Century",
// "price": 8.95
// }
Input Properties
The control will determine the source of the input based on which properties are set.
The order in which the input properties are checked is as follows:
When a valid source is found, the search stops.If parsing multiple documents, call Reset between documents to reset the parser.
Writing JSON
The JSON control also can be used to create a JSON document.
The document is written to the selected output property. In addition, as the document is written, the JSON event will fire. The Text event parameter contains the part of the document currently being written.
Output Properties
The control will determine the destination of the output based on which properties are set.
The order in which the output properties are checked is as follows:
- OutputFile
- OutputData: The output data are written to this property if no other destination is specified.
Example. Writing a JSON Document:
Writing a simple JSON document describing a pet:
Json json = new Json();
json.OutputFile = "C:\\temp\\fido.json";
json.StartObject();
json.PutProperty("name", "fido", 2);
json.PutName("previousOwners");
json.StartArray();
json.PutValue("Steve Widgetson", 2);
json.PutValue("Wanda Widgetson", 2);
json.PutValue("Randy Cooper", 2);
json.PutValue("Linda Glover", 2);
json.EndArray();
json.PutProperty("weightUnit", "lbs", 2);
json.PutProperty("weight", "62", 3);
json.EndObject();
json.Flush();
This example results in the following JSON:
{ "name": "fido", "previousOwners": [ "Steve Widgetson", "Wanda Widgetson", "Randy Cooper", "Linda Glover" ], "weightUnit": "lbs", "weight": 62 }
When writing multiple documents, call Reset between documents to reset the writer.
Modifying JSON
The JSON control also allows for modifying existing JSON documents. After loading a JSON document with Parse the document may be edited. The control supports inserting new values, renaming or overwriting existing values, and removing values. After editing is complete, call Save to output the updated JSON document.
The following methods are applicable when modifying a JSON document:
When Save is called, the modified JSON is written to the specified output location.
Output Properties
The control will determine the destination of the output based on which properties are set.
The order in which the output properties are checked is as follows:
- OutputFile
- OutputData: The output data are written to this property if no other destination is specified.
Example 1. Inserting New Values:
To insert new values in a JSON document, first load the existing document with Parse. Next set XPath to the sibling or parent of the data to be inserted. Call InsertProperty or InsertValue and pass the ValueType and Position parameters to indicate the type of data being inserted and the position.
The ValueType parameter of these methods specifies the type of the value. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Object)
- 1 (Array)
- 2 (String)
- 3 (Number)
- 4 (Bool)
- 5 (Null)
- 6 (Raw)
The Position parameter of these methods specifies the position of Value. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Before the current element)
- 1 (After the current element)
- 2 (The first child of the current element)
- 3 (The last child of the current element)
For example:
Given the following JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", } ] } }
Insert a new property "price" for each book:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]";
json.InsertProperty("price", "8.95", 3, 3); //3 - Number, 3 - Last Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]";
json.InsertProperty("price", "12.99", 3, 3); //3 - Number, 3 - Last Child
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": 8.95 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 } ] } }
To add a new book to the array:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books";
json.InsertValue("", 0, 3); //0 - Object, 3 - Last Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[3]";
json.InsertProperty("category", "fiction", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertProperty("author", "Herman Melville", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertProperty("title", "Moby Dick", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertProperty("price", "8.99", 3, 3); //3 - Number, 3 - Last Child
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": 8.95 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 8.99 } ] } }
To add a new array property to each book:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]";
json.InsertProperty("tags", "", 1, 2); //1 - Array, 2 - First Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]/tags";
json.InsertValue("quotes", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertValue("british", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]";
json.InsertProperty("tags", "", 1, 2); //1 - Array, 2 - First Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/tags";
json.InsertValue("trilogy", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertValue("war", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[3]";
json.InsertProperty("tags", "", 1, 2); //1 - Array, 2 - First Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[3]/tags";
json.InsertValue("classic", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertValue("whales", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "tags": ["quotes", "british"], "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": 8.95 }, { "tags": ["trilogy", "war"], "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "tags": ["classic", "whales"], "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 8.99 } ] } }
Example 2. Removing Values:
To remove existing values, set XPath and call the Remove method. Continuing with example 1, to remove
the first book:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]";
json.Remove();
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "tags": ["trilogy", "war"], "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "tags": ["classic", "whales"], "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 8.99 } ] } }
To remove the "category" properties from each book:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]/category";
json.Remove();
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/category";
json.Remove();
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "tags": ["trilogy", "war"], "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "tags": ["classic", "whales"], "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 8.99 } ] } }
Example 3. Updating Existing Names and Values:
The SetName and SetValue methods may be used to modify existing names and values. Continuing with the preceding JSON in example 2, to rename "tags" to "meta" and update values within the array and prices:
//Rename "tags" to "meta" for 1st book
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]/tags";
json.SetName("meta");
//Update Price
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]/price";
json.SetValue("13.99", 3); //3 - Number
//Rename "tags" to "meta" for 2nd book
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/tags";
json.SetName("meta");
//Update tag "whales" to "revenge"
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/meta/[2]";
json.SetValue("revenge", 2); //2 - String
//Update Price
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/price";
json.SetValue("9.99", 3); //3 - Number
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "meta": ["trilogy", "war"], "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 13.99 }, { "meta": ["classic", "revenge"], "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 9.99 } ] } }
Property List
The following is the full list of the properties of the control with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
BuildDOM | When True, an internal object model of the JSON document is created. |
InputData | This property includes the JSON data to parse. |
InputFile | This property specifies the file to process. |
OutputData | This property includes the output JSON after processing. |
OutputFile | This is the path to a local file where the output will be written. |
Overwrite | This property indicates whether or not the control should overwrite files. |
Validate | This property controls whether documents are validated during parsing. |
XChildCount | The number of records in the XChild arrays. |
XChildElementType | The ElementType property indicates the data type of the element. |
XChildName | The Name property provides the name of the element. |
XChildXText | This property contains the text of the element. |
XElement | This property includes the name of the current element. |
XElementType | This property indicates the data type of the current element. |
XErrorPath | This property includes an XPath to check the server response for errors. |
XParent | The parent of the current element. |
XPath | This property provides a way to point to a specific element in the response. |
XSubTree | This property includes a snapshot of the current element in the document. |
XText | This property includes the text of the current element. |
Method List
The following is the full list of the methods of the control with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
Config | Sets or retrieves a configuration setting. |
EndArray | This method writes the closing bracket of a JSON array. |
EndObject | This method writes the closing brace of a JSON object. |
Flush | This method flushes the parser's or writer's buffers. |
HasXPath | This method determines whether a specific element exists in the document. |
InsertProperty | This method inserts the specified name and value at the selected position. |
InsertValue | This method inserts the specified value at the selected position. |
Parse | This method parses the specified JSON data. |
PutName | This method writes the name of a property. |
PutProperty | This method writes a property and value. |
PutRaw | This method writes a raw JSON fragment. |
PutValue | This method writes a value of a property. |
Remove | This method removes the element or value set in XPath. |
Reset | This method resets the control. |
Save | This method saves the modified JSON document. |
SetName | This method sets a new name for the element specified by XPath. |
SetValue | This method sets a new value for the element specified by XPath. |
StartArray | This method writes the opening bracket of a JSON array. |
StartObject | This event writes the opening brace of a JSON object. |
TryXPath | This method navigates to the specified XPath if it exists. |
Event List
The following is the full list of the events fired by the control with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
Characters | This event is fired for plaintext segments of the input stream. |
EndDocument | This event fires when the end of a JSON document is encountered. |
EndElement | This event is fired when an end-element tag is encountered. |
Error | Fired when information is available about errors during data delivery. |
IgnorableWhitespace | This event is fired when a section of ignorable whitespace is encountered. |
JSON | This event fires with the JSON data being written. |
StartDocument | This event fires when the start of a new JSON document is encountered. |
StartElement | This event is fired when a new element is encountered in the document. |
Config Settings
The following is a list of config settings for the control with short descriptions. Click on the links for further details.
CacheContent | If true, the original JSON is stored internally in a buffer. |
ElementXPath | The XPath value for the current element in the document. |
EscapeForwardSlashes | Whether to escape forward slashes when writing a JSON object. |
InputFormat | Specifies the input format used in JSON streaming. |
PrettyPrint | Determines whether output is on one line or "pretty printed". |
RecordEndDelimiter | The character sequence after the end of a JSON document. |
RecordStartDelimiter | The character sequence before the start of a JSON document. |
StringProcessingOptions | Defines options to use when processing string values. |
XPathNotation | Specifies the expected format when setting XPath. |
BuildDOM Property (JSON Control)
When True, an internal object model of the JSON document is created.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.BuildDOM[=boolean]
Default Value
True
Remarks
Set this property to True when you need to browse the current document through XPath.
Data Type
Boolean
InputData Property (JSON Control)
This property includes the JSON data to parse.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.InputData[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property specifies the JSON to be processed. Set this property before calling Parse.
This may be set to a complete JSON document, or partial data. When setting partial data, call Parse after each chunk of data is set. For instance:
//Parse the following in chunks: { "data": 1}
json.InputData = "{ \"data\""
json.Parse();
json.InputData = ": 1}"
json.Parse();
Input Properties
The control will determine the source of the input based on which properties are set.
The order in which the input properties are checked is as follows:
- InputFile
- InputData
Data Type
String
InputFile Property (JSON Control)
This property specifies the file to process.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.InputFile[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property specifies the file to be processed. Set this property to the full or relative path to the file that will be processed.
After setting this property, call Parse to parse the document.
Input Properties
The control will determine the source of the input based on which properties are set.
The order in which the input properties are checked is as follows:
- InputFile
- InputData
Data Type
String
OutputData Property (JSON Control)
This property includes the output JSON after processing.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.OutputData[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property contains the resultant JSON after processing.
Output Properties
The control will determine the destination of the output based on which properties are set.
The order in which the output properties are checked is as follows:
- OutputFile
- OutputData: The output data are written to this property if no other destination is specified.
Data Type
String
OutputFile Property (JSON Control)
This is the path to a local file where the output will be written.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.OutputFile[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property specifies the file to which the output will be written. This may be set to an absolute or relative path.
Output Properties
The control will determine the destination of the output based on which properties are set.
The order in which the output properties are checked is as follows:
- OutputFile
- OutputData: The output data are written to this property if no other destination is specified.
Data Type
String
Overwrite Property (JSON Control)
This property indicates whether or not the control should overwrite files.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.Overwrite[=boolean]
Default Value
False
Remarks
This property indicates whether or not the control will overwrite OutputFile. If Overwrite is False, an error will be thrown whenever OutputFile exists before an operation. The default value is False.
Data Type
Boolean
Validate Property (JSON Control)
This property controls whether documents are validated during parsing.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.Validate[=boolean]
Default Value
True
Remarks
When (default), the document will be validated during parsing. To disable validation set Validate to . Disabling validation may be useful in cases in which data can still be parsed even if the document is not well formed.
Data Type
Boolean
XChildCount Property (JSON Control)
The number of records in the XChild arrays.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XChildCount[=integer]
Default Value
0
Remarks
This property controls the size of the following arrays:
The array indices start at 0 and end at XChildCount - 1.This property is not available at design time.
Data Type
Integer
XChildElementType Property (JSON Control)
The ElementType property indicates the data type of the element.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XChildElementType(XChildIndex)
Possible Values
etObject(0), etArray(1), etString(2), etNumber(3), etBool(4), etNull(5)
Default Value
0
Remarks
The XChildElementType property indicates the data type of the element.
Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Object)
- 1 (Array)
- 2 (String)
- 3 (Number)
- 4 (Bool)
- 5 (Null)
- 6 (Raw)
The XChildIndex parameter specifies the index of the item in the array. The size of the array is controlled by the XChildCount property.
This property is read-only and not available at design time.
Data Type
Integer
XChildName Property (JSON Control)
The Name property provides the name of the element.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XChildName(XChildIndex)
Default Value
""
Remarks
The XChildName property provides the name of the element. For elements within an array, the XChildName property will be empty.
The XChildIndex parameter specifies the index of the item in the array. The size of the array is controlled by the XChildCount property.
This property is read-only and not available at design time.
Data Type
String
XChildXText Property (JSON Control)
This property contains the text of the element.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XChildXText(XChildIndex)
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property contains the text of the element.
The XChildIndex parameter specifies the index of the item in the array. The size of the array is controlled by the XChildCount property.
This property is read-only and not available at design time.
Data Type
String
XElement Property (JSON Control)
This property includes the name of the current element.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XElement[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property contains the name of the current element. The current element is specified through the XPath property.
Data Type
String
XElementType Property (JSON Control)
This property indicates the data type of the current element.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XElementType
Possible Values
etObject(0), etArray(1), etString(2), etNumber(3), etBool(4), etNull(5)
Default Value
0
Remarks
This property specifies the data type of the current element. After setting XPath, this property is populated. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Object)
- 1 (Array)
- 2 (String)
- 3 (Number)
- 4 (Bool)
- 5 (Null)
- 6 (Raw)
Note: This property is not applicable when parsing a document and BuildDOM is False.
This property is read-only.
Data Type
Integer
XErrorPath Property (JSON Control)
This property includes an XPath to check the server response for errors.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XErrorPath[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property contains an XPath to check the server response for errors. If the XPath exists, an exception will be thrown containing the value of the element at the path.
Data Type
String
XParent Property (JSON Control)
The parent of the current element.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XParent
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property contains the parent of the current element. The current element is specified via the XPath property.
This property is read-only.
Data Type
String
XPath Property (JSON Control)
This property provides a way to point to a specific element in the response.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XPath[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
XPath may be set to navigate to specific elements within the JSON document. This will be the path to a specified value within the document. Because arrays in JSON only contain values, and no associated object name, an empty name will be used for these values. To reach an array element at position 1, the path must be set to "[1]". In addition, a root element named "json" will be added to each JSON document in the parser.
BuildDOM must be set to True before parsing the document for the XPath functionality to be available.
The XPath property accepts both XPath and JSONPath formats. Please review the following notes on both formats.
XPath
The path is a series of one or more element accessors separated by '/'. The path can be absolute (starting with '/') or relative to the current XPath location.
The following are possible values for an element accessor:
'name' | A particular element name. |
[i] | The i-th subelement of the current element. |
.. | the parent of the current element. |
BuildDOM must be set to True before parsing the document for the XPath functionality to be available.
Simple JSON Document
{ "firstlevel": { "one": "value", "two": ["first", "second"], "three": "value three" } }Example 1. Setting XPath:
Document root | JsonControl.XPath = "/" |
Specific Element | JsonControl.XPath = "/json/firstlevel/one/" |
i-th Child | JsonControl.XPath = "/json/firstlevel/two/[i]/" |
JSONPath
This property implements a subset of the JSONPath notation. This may be set to point to a specific element in the JSON document.The JSONPath is a series of one or more accessors in either dot-notation
$.store.book[0].titleor in bracket-notation, as follows:
$['store']['book'][0]['title']
After setting XPath, the following properties are populated:
- XChildren
- XElement
- XElementType
- XSubTree
- XText
Given the following JSON document:
{ "store": { "book": [ { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": 8.95 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "isbn": "0-553-21311-3", "price": 8.99 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "J. R. R. Tolkien", "title": "The Lord of the Rings", "isbn": "0-395-19395-8", "price": 22.99 } ], "bicycle": { "color": "red", "price": 19.95 } }, }The following code shows several examples.
Get the first book's author:
json.XPath = "$.store.book[0].author";
Console.WriteLine(json.XText);
//Output
//"Nigel Rees"
Select the first book and inspect the children:
json.XPath = "$.store.book[0]";
Console.WriteLine("Child Count: " + json.XChildren.Count);
Console.WriteLine(json.XChildren[1].Name + ": " + json.XChildren[1].XText);
//Output
//Child Count: 4
//author: "Nigel Rees"
Get the price of the second book:
json.XPath = "$['store']['book'][1]['price']";
Console.WriteLine(json.XText);
//Output
//12.99
Get the second to last book's author:
json.XPath = "$['store']['book'][last() - 1]['author']";
Console.WriteLine(json.XText);
Console.WriteLine(json.XPath); //Note that "last() - 1" is resolved to "3".
//Output
//"Herman Melville"
//$['store']['book'][3]['author']
Display the full subtree at the current path:
json.XPath = "$.store.book[0]";
Console.WriteLine(json.XSubTree);
//Output
// {
// "category": "reference",
// "author": "Nigel Rees",
// "title": "Sayings of the Century",
// "price": 8.95
// }
Data Type
String
XSubTree Property (JSON Control)
This property includes a snapshot of the current element in the document.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XSubTree
Default Value
""
Remarks
The current element is specified through this property. For this property to work, you must have the CacheContent set to True.
This property is read-only.
Data Type
String
XText Property (JSON Control)
This property includes the text of the current element.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.XText[=string]
Default Value
""
Remarks
This property contains the text of the current element. The current element is specified through the XPath property.
Data Type
String
Config Method (JSON Control)
Sets or retrieves a configuration setting.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.Config ConfigurationString
Remarks
Config is a generic method available in every control. It is used to set and retrieve configuration settings for the control.
These settings are similar in functionality to properties, but they are rarely used. In order to avoid "polluting" the property namespace of the control, access to these internal properties is provided through the Config method.
To set a configuration setting named PROPERTY, you must call Config("PROPERTY=VALUE"), where VALUE is the value of the setting expressed as a string. For boolean values, use the strings "True", "False", "0", "1", "Yes", or "No" (case does not matter).
To read (query) the value of a configuration setting, you must call Config("PROPERTY"). The value will be returned as a string.
EndArray Method (JSON Control)
This method writes the closing bracket of a JSON array.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.EndArray
Remarks
This method writes the closing bracket of a JSON array to the output. An array must already have been opened by calling StartArray.
EndObject Method (JSON Control)
This method writes the closing brace of a JSON object.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.EndObject
Remarks
This method writes the closing brace of a JSON object. An object must have been started previously by calling StartObject.
Flush Method (JSON Control)
This method flushes the parser's or writer's buffers.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.Flush
Remarks
When Flush is called, the component flushes all of its buffers, firing events as necessary.
When parsing, the end state of the JSON is checked. If Validate is also True, the parser verifies that all open elements were closed, returning an error if not.
When writing, the resultant JSON is available in one of the output properties.
Output Properties
The control will determine the destination of the output based on which properties are set.
The order in which the output properties are checked is as follows:
- OutputFile
- OutputData: The output data are written to this property if no other destination is specified.
HasXPath Method (JSON Control)
This method determines whether a specific element exists in the document.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.HasXPath XPath
Remarks
This method determines whether a particular XPath exists within the document. This may be used to check if a path exists before setting it through XPath.
This method returns True if the xpath exists, and False if not.
See XPath for details on the XPath syntax.
InsertProperty Method (JSON Control)
This method inserts the specified name and value at the selected position.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.InsertProperty Name, Value, ValueType, Position
Remarks
This method inserts a property and its corresponding value relative to the element specified by XPath. Before calling this method, a valid JSON document must first be loaded by calling Parse.
The Name parameter specifies the name of the property.
The Value parameter specifies the value of the property.
The ValueType parameter specifies the type of the value. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Object)
- 1 (Array)
- 2 (String)
- 3 (Number)
- 4 (Bool)
- 5 (Null)
- 6 (Raw)
The Position parameter specifies the position of Value relative to the element specified by XPath. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Before the current element)
- 1 (After the current element)
- 2 (The first child of the current element)
- 3 (The last child of the current element)
See Save for details.
InsertValue Method (JSON Control)
This method inserts the specified value at the selected position.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.InsertValue Value, ValueType, Position
Remarks
This method inserts a value relative to the element specified by XPath. Before calling this method, a valid JSON document must first be loaded by calling Parse.
The Value parameter specifies the value of the property.
The ValueType parameter specifies the type of the value. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Object)
- 1 (Array)
- 2 (String)
- 3 (Number)
- 4 (Bool)
- 5 (Null)
- 6 (Raw)
The Position parameter specifies the position of Value relative to the element specified by XPath. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Before the current element)
- 1 (After the current element)
- 2 (The first child of the current element)
- 3 (The last child of the current element)
See Save for details.
Parse Method (JSON Control)
This method parses the specified JSON data.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.Parse
Remarks
This method parses the specified JSON data.
When parsing a document, events will fire to provide information about the parsed data. After Parse returns the document, it may be navigated by setting XPath if BuildDOM is True (default). If BuildDOM is False, parsed data are accessible only through the events.
The following events will fire during parsing:
If BuildDOM is True (default), XPath may be set after this method returns. XPath may be set to navigate to specific elements within the JSON document. This will be the path to a specified value within the document. Because arrays in JSON only contain values, and no associated object name, an empty name will be used for these values. To reach an array element at position 1, the path must be set to "[1]". In addition, a root element named "json" will be added to each JSON document in the parser.
BuildDOM must be set to True before parsing the document for the XPath functionality to be available.
The XPath property accepts both XPath and JSONPath formats. Please review the following notes on both formats.
XPath
The path is a series of one or more element accessors separated by '/'. The path can be absolute (starting with '/') or relative to the current XPath location.
The following are possible values for an element accessor:
'name' | A particular element name. |
[i] | The i-th subelement of the current element. |
.. | the parent of the current element. |
BuildDOM must be set to True before parsing the document for the XPath functionality to be available.
Simple JSON Document
{ "firstlevel": { "one": "value", "two": ["first", "second"], "three": "value three" } }Example 1. Setting XPath:
Document root | JsonControl.XPath = "/" |
Specific Element | JsonControl.XPath = "/json/firstlevel/one/" |
i-th Child | JsonControl.XPath = "/json/firstlevel/two/[i]/" |
JSONPath
This property implements a subset of the JSONPath notation. This may be set to point to a specific element in the JSON document.The JSONPath is a series of one or more accessors in either dot-notation
$.store.book[0].titleor in bracket-notation, as follows:
$['store']['book'][0]['title']
After setting XPath, the following properties are populated:
- XChildren
- XElement
- XElementType
- XSubTree
- XText
Given the following JSON document:
{ "store": { "book": [ { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": 8.95 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "isbn": "0-553-21311-3", "price": 8.99 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "J. R. R. Tolkien", "title": "The Lord of the Rings", "isbn": "0-395-19395-8", "price": 22.99 } ], "bicycle": { "color": "red", "price": 19.95 } }, }The following code shows several examples.
Get the first book's author:
json.XPath = "$.store.book[0].author";
Console.WriteLine(json.XText);
//Output
//"Nigel Rees"
Select the first book and inspect the children:
json.XPath = "$.store.book[0]";
Console.WriteLine("Child Count: " + json.XChildren.Count);
Console.WriteLine(json.XChildren[1].Name + ": " + json.XChildren[1].XText);
//Output
//Child Count: 4
//author: "Nigel Rees"
Get the price of the second book:
json.XPath = "$['store']['book'][1]['price']";
Console.WriteLine(json.XText);
//Output
//12.99
Get the second to last book's author:
json.XPath = "$['store']['book'][last() - 1]['author']";
Console.WriteLine(json.XText);
Console.WriteLine(json.XPath); //Note that "last() - 1" is resolved to "3".
//Output
//"Herman Melville"
//$['store']['book'][3]['author']
Display the full subtree at the current path:
json.XPath = "$.store.book[0]";
Console.WriteLine(json.XSubTree);
//Output
// {
// "category": "reference",
// "author": "Nigel Rees",
// "title": "Sayings of the Century",
// "price": 8.95
// }
Input Properties
The control will determine the source of the input based on which properties are set.
The order in which the input properties are checked is as follows:
When a valid source is found, the search stops.If parsing multiple documents, call Reset between documents to reset the parser.
PutName Method (JSON Control)
This method writes the name of a property.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.PutName Name
Remarks
This method writes the name of a property. The Name parameter specifies the value to write.
PutProperty Method (JSON Control)
This method writes a property and value.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.PutProperty Name, Value, ValueType
Remarks
This method writes a property and its corresponding value to the output.
The Name parameter specifies the name of the property.
The Value parameter specifies the value of the property.
The ValueType parameter specifies the type of the value. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Object)
- 1 (Array)
- 2 (String)
- 3 (Number)
- 4 (Bool)
- 5 (Null)
- 6 (Raw)
PutRaw Method (JSON Control)
This method writes a raw JSON fragment.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.PutRaw Text
Remarks
This method writes raw data to the output. This may be used to write any data of any format directly to the output.
PutValue Method (JSON Control)
This method writes a value of a property.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.PutValue Value, ValueType
Remarks
This method writes the value of a property to the output. The Value parameter specifies the value. The ValueType parameter specifies the type of data. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Object)
- 1 (Array)
- 2 (String)
- 3 (Number)
- 4 (Bool)
- 5 (Null)
- 6 (Raw)
Remove Method (JSON Control)
This method removes the element or value set in XPath.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.Remove
Remarks
This method removes the current object at the specified XPath. This is used when editing previously loaded JSON documents.
See Save for details.
Reset Method (JSON Control)
This method resets the control.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.Reset
Remarks
This method resets the JSON parser.
Save Method (JSON Control)
This method saves the modified JSON document.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.Save
Remarks
This method saves the modified JSON data. This is used after editing a previously loaded JSON document.
After loading a JSON document with Parse the document may be edited. The control supports inserting new values, renaming or overwriting existing values, and removing values. After editing is complete, call Save to output the updated JSON document.
The following methods are applicable when modifying a JSON document:
When Save is called, the modified JSON is written to the specified output location.
Output Properties
The control will determine the destination of the output based on which properties are set.
The order in which the output properties are checked is as follows:
- OutputFile
- OutputData: The output data are written to this property if no other destination is specified.
Example 1. Inserting New Values:
To insert new values in a JSON document, first load the existing document with Parse. Next set XPath to the sibling or parent of the data to be inserted. Call InsertProperty or InsertValue and pass the ValueType and Position parameters to indicate the type of data being inserted and the position.
The ValueType parameter of these methods specifies the type of the value. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Object)
- 1 (Array)
- 2 (String)
- 3 (Number)
- 4 (Bool)
- 5 (Null)
- 6 (Raw)
The Position parameter of these methods specifies the position of Value. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Before the current element)
- 1 (After the current element)
- 2 (The first child of the current element)
- 3 (The last child of the current element)
For example:
Given the following JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", } ] } }
Insert a new property "price" for each book:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]";
json.InsertProperty("price", "8.95", 3, 3); //3 - Number, 3 - Last Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]";
json.InsertProperty("price", "12.99", 3, 3); //3 - Number, 3 - Last Child
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": 8.95 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 } ] } }
To add a new book to the array:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books";
json.InsertValue("", 0, 3); //0 - Object, 3 - Last Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[3]";
json.InsertProperty("category", "fiction", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertProperty("author", "Herman Melville", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertProperty("title", "Moby Dick", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertProperty("price", "8.99", 3, 3); //3 - Number, 3 - Last Child
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": 8.95 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 8.99 } ] } }
To add a new array property to each book:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]";
json.InsertProperty("tags", "", 1, 2); //1 - Array, 2 - First Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]/tags";
json.InsertValue("quotes", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertValue("british", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]";
json.InsertProperty("tags", "", 1, 2); //1 - Array, 2 - First Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/tags";
json.InsertValue("trilogy", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertValue("war", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[3]";
json.InsertProperty("tags", "", 1, 2); //1 - Array, 2 - First Child
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[3]/tags";
json.InsertValue("classic", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.InsertValue("whales", 2, 3); //2 - String, 3 - Last Child
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "tags": ["quotes", "british"], "category": "reference", "author": "Nigel Rees", "title": "Sayings of the Century", "price": 8.95 }, { "tags": ["trilogy", "war"], "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "tags": ["classic", "whales"], "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 8.99 } ] } }
Example 2. Removing Values:
To remove existing values, set XPath and call the Remove method. Continuing with example 1, to remove
the first book:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]";
json.Remove();
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "tags": ["trilogy", "war"], "category": "fiction", "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "tags": ["classic", "whales"], "category": "fiction", "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 8.99 } ] } }
To remove the "category" properties from each book:
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]/category";
json.Remove();
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/category";
json.Remove();
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "tags": ["trilogy", "war"], "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 12.99 }, { "tags": ["classic", "whales"], "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 8.99 } ] } }
Example 3. Updating Existing Names and Values:
The SetName and SetValue methods may be used to modify existing names and values. Continuing with the preceding JSON in example 2, to rename "tags" to "meta" and update values within the array and prices:
//Rename "tags" to "meta" for 1st book
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]/tags";
json.SetName("meta");
//Update Price
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[1]/price";
json.SetValue("13.99", 3); //3 - Number
//Rename "tags" to "meta" for 2nd book
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/tags";
json.SetName("meta");
//Update tag "whales" to "revenge"
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/meta/[2]";
json.SetValue("revenge", 2); //2 - String
//Update Price
json.XPath = "/json/store/books/[2]/price";
json.SetValue("9.99", 3); //3 - Number
json.Save();
Produces the JSON:
{ "store": { "books": [ { "meta": ["trilogy", "war"], "author": "Evelyn Waugh", "title": "Sword of Honour", "price": 13.99 }, { "meta": ["classic", "revenge"], "author": "Herman Melville", "title": "Moby Dick", "price": 9.99 } ] } }
SetName Method (JSON Control)
This method sets a new name for the element specified by XPath.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.SetName Name
Remarks
This method sets a new name for the element specified in XPath. This is used to modify an existing JSON document.
The Name parameter specifies the new name of the element.
See Save for details.
SetValue Method (JSON Control)
This method sets a new value for the element specified by XPath.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.SetValue Value, ValueType
Remarks
This method sets a new value for the element specified in XPath. This is used to modify an existing JSON document.
Value specifies the new value.
ValueType specifies the type of the value. Possible values are as follows:
- 0 (Object)
- 1 (Array)
- 2 (String)
- 3 (Number)
- 4 (Bool)
- 5 (Null)
- 6 (Raw)
See Save for details.
StartArray Method (JSON Control)
This method writes the opening bracket of a JSON array.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.StartArray
Remarks
This method writes the opening bracket of a JSON array to the output. To close the array, call EndArray.
StartObject Method (JSON Control)
This event writes the opening brace of a JSON object.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.StartObject
Remarks
This method writes the opening brace of a JSON object to the output. To close the object, call EndObject.
TryXPath Method (JSON Control)
This method navigates to the specified XPath if it exists.
Syntax
jsoncontrol.TryXPath xpath
Remarks
This method will attempt to navigate to the specified XPath parameter if it exists within the document.
If the XPath exists, the XPath property will be updated and this method returns True.
If the XPath does not exist, the XPath property is not updated and this method returns False.
Characters Event (JSON Control)
This event is fired for plaintext segments of the input stream.
Syntax
Sub jsoncontrol_Characters(Text As String)
Remarks
The Characters event provides the plaintext content of the JSON document (i.e., the text inside the elements). The text is provided through the Text parameter.
The text includes white space as well as end-of-line characters, except for ignorable whitespace, which is fired through the IgnorableWhitespace event.
EndDocument Event (JSON Control)
This event fires when the end of a JSON document is encountered.
Syntax
Sub jsoncontrol_EndDocument()
Remarks
This event fires when parsing of a JSON document ends. This event may fire multiple times if InputFormat is set to a value that accepts multiple JSON documents.
EndElement Event (JSON Control)
This event is fired when an end-element tag is encountered.
Syntax
Sub jsoncontrol_EndElement(Element As String)
Remarks
The EndElement event is fired when the end of an element is found in the document.
The element name is provided by the Element parameter.
Error Event (JSON Control)
Fired when information is available about errors during data delivery.
Syntax
Sub jsoncontrol_Error(ErrorCode As Integer, Description As String)
Remarks
The Error event is fired in case of exceptional conditions during message processing. Normally the control fails with an error.
The ErrorCode parameter contains an error code, and the Description parameter contains a textual description of the error. For a list of valid error codes and their descriptions, please refer to the Error Codes section.
IgnorableWhitespace Event (JSON Control)
This event is fired when a section of ignorable whitespace is encountered.
Syntax
Sub jsoncontrol_IgnorableWhitespace(Text As String)
Remarks
The ignorable whitespace section is provided by the Text parameter.
JSON Event (JSON Control)
This event fires with the JSON data being written.
Syntax
Sub jsoncontrol_JSON(Text As String)
Remarks
This event fires when output data are written.
Text contains the JSON data currently being written.
StartDocument Event (JSON Control)
This event fires when the start of a new JSON document is encountered.
Syntax
Sub jsoncontrol_StartDocument()
Remarks
This event fires when parsing of a JSON document begins. This event may fire multiple times if InputFormat is set to a value that accepts multiple JSON documents.
StartElement Event (JSON Control)
This event is fired when a new element is encountered in the document.
Syntax
Sub jsoncontrol_StartElement(Element As String)
Remarks
The StartElement event is fired when a new element is found in the document.
The element name is provided through the Element parameter.
Config Settings (JSON Control)
The control accepts one or more of the following configuration settings. Configuration settings are similar in functionality to properties, but they are rarely used. In order to avoid "polluting" the property namespace of the control, access to these internal properties is provided through the Config method.JSON Config Settings
string elementXPath = json.Config("ElementXPath");
Note: The BuildDOM property must be set to False.
Value | Description |
0 (None - default) | Only a single JSON document is expected. Use this when a single JSON document is being parsed (most cases). |
1 (Line Delimited) | Multiple documents are separated by carriage return (CR), line feed (LF), or CRLF character sequences. |
2 (Record Separated) | A defined start and end delimiter separate documents. See RecordStartDelimiter and RecordEndDelimiter. |
3 (Concatenated) | New documents begin immediately after the previous documents end; no characters or delimiters separate the documents. |
json.Config("PrettyPrint=true"); // false
json.StartObject();
json.PutName("data");
json.StartObject();
json.PutProperty("id", "3", 3);
json.PutProperty("first_name", "Emma", 2);
json.PutProperty("last_name", "Wong", 2);
json.PutProperty("avatar", "https://s3.amazonaws.com/uifaces/faces/twitter/olegpogodaev/128.jpg", 2);
json.EndObject();
json.EndObject();
json.Flush();
Console.WriteLine(json.OutputData);
With PrettyPrint set to False (the default), the output would look like this:
{"data":{"id":3,"first_name":"Emma","last_name":"Wong","avatar":"https:\/\/s3.amazonaws.com\/uifaces\/faces\/twitter\/olegpogodaev\/128.jpg"}}With PrettyPrint set to True, the output instead would look like this:
{ "data": { "id": 3, "first_name": "Emma", "last_name": "Wong", "avatar": "https:\/\/s3.amazonaws.com\/uifaces\/faces\/twitter\/olegpogodaev\/128.jpg" } }The default value is False.
0 (none - default) | No additional processing is performed. |
1 (unquote) | Strings are unquoted. |
2 (unescape) | Any escaped sequences are unescaped. |
3 (unquote and unescape) | Values are both unquoted and unescaped. |
"example" : "value\ntest"The following table shows the resulting value for the XText of the element:
StringProcessingOption | Output |
0 (none) | "value\ntest" |
1 (unquote) | value\ntest |
2 (unescape) | "value test" |
3 (unquote and unescape) | value test |
- 0 (Auto - default)
- 1 (XPath)
- 2 (JSONPath)
Trappable Errors (JSON Control)
JSON Errors
25232 | Unbalanced element tag. |
25233 | Invalid JSON markup. |
25234 | Invalid XPath. |
25235 | DOM tree unavailable (set BuildDOM to True and reparse). |
XML Errors
20102 | Invalid attribute index. |
20103 | No attributes available. |
20104 | Invalid namespace index. |
20105 | No namespaces available. |
20106 | Invalid element index. |
20107 | No elements available. |
20108 | Attribute does not exist. |
20202 | Unbalanced element tag. |
20203 | Unknown element prefix (cannot find namespace). |
20204 | Unknown attribute prefix (cannot find namespace). |
20205 | Invalid XML markup. |
20206 | Invalid end state for parser. |
20207 | Document contains unbalanced elements. |
20208 | Invalid XPath. |
20209 | No such child. |
20210 | Top element does not match start of path. |
20211 | DOM tree unavailable (set BuildDOM to True and reparse). |
20303 | Cannot open file. |
20402 | Invalid XML would be generated. |
20403 | An invalid XML name has been specified. |