TestsTested | ✗ |
LangLanguage | Obj-CObjective C |
License | Apache 2 |
ReleasedLast Release | Nov 2015 |
Maintained by Dalton Cherry.
JSONJoy is a joyful little library for iOS and Mac OSX that makes converting and mapping JSON to your objects simple.
You can read more about it here: http://vluxe.io/json-parsing.html
So here is an JSON blob we want to parse:
{
"id" : 1
"first_name": "John",
"last_name": "Smith",
"age": 25,
"address": {
"id": 1
"street_address": "21 2nd Street",
"city": "New York",
"state": "NY",
"postal_code": 10021
}
}
And Here is our NSObjects we want to convert it to:
#import "Address.h"
@interface User : NSObject
@property(nonatomic,strong)NSNumber *objID;
@property(nonatomic,copy)NSString *firstName;
@property(nonatomic,copy)NSString *lastName;
@property(nonatomic,strong)NSNumber *age;
@property(nonatomic,strong)Address *address;
@end
@interface Address : NSObject
@property(nonatomic,strong)NSNumber *objID;
@property(nonatomic,copy)NSString *streetAddress;
@property(nonatomic,copy)NSString *city;
@property(nonatomic,copy)NSString *state;
@property(nonatomic,strong)NSNumber *postalCode;
@end
Take a bunch of error prone boilerplate code like this:
AFHTTPRequestOperationManager *manager = [AFHTTPRequestOperationManager manager];
[manager GET:@"http://example.com/resources.json" parameters:nil success:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, id responseObject)
{
NSDictionary* response = responseObject;
User *john = [[User alloc] init];
john.objID = response[@"id"];
john.firstName = response[@"first_name"];
john.lastName = response[@"last_name"];
john.age = response[@"age"];
//now for the address
john.address = [[Address alloc] init];
NSDictionary* address = response[@"address"];
john.address.objID = address[@"id"];
john.address.streetAddress = address[@"street_address"];
john.address.city = address[@"city"];
john.address.state = address[@"state"];
john.address.postalCode = address[@"postal_code"];
//finally!, now do work with object
} failure:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, NSError *error) {
NSLog(@"Error: %@", error);
}];
and Joyify it into this:
AFHTTPRequestOperationManager *manager = [AFHTTPRequestOperationManager manager];
[manager GET:@"http://example.com/resources.json" parameters:nil success:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, id responseObject)
{
NSError *error = nil;
JSONJoy *joy = [JSONJoy JSONJoyWithClass:[User class]];
User *john = [joy process:responseObject error:&error];
//do work with object
} failure:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, NSError *error) {
NSLog(@"Error: %@", error);
}];
There is even a category on NSObject to make you be able to do a one liner like this:
AFHTTPRequestOperationManager *manager = [AFHTTPRequestOperationManager manager];
[manager GET:@"http://example.com/resources.json" parameters:nil success:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, id responseObject)
{
User *john = [User objectWithJoy:responseObject];
//do work with object
} failure:^(AFHTTPRequestOperation *operation, NSError *error) {
NSLog(@"Error: %@", error);
}];
Need to add some customize parsing? No Problem, just implement this method like the example below:
+(JSONJoy*)jsonMapper
{
JSONJoy* mapper = [[JSONJoy alloc] initWithClass:[self class]];
[mapper addArrayClassMap:@"photos" class:[Photo class]];
return mapper;
}
All category methods call this method as well, so your objects get parsed properly.
JSONJoy works by mapping property names to JSON value names. It also supports standard rails snake case JSON names being convert to standard camel case objective-c property names. For example:
@property(nonatomic,copy)NSString *firstName;
supports JSON values in the format of:
"first_name": "John"
"firstName": "John"
The recommended approach for installing JSONJoy is via the CocoaPods package manager, as it provides flexible dependency management and dead simple installation.
via CocoaPods
Install CocoaPods if not already available:
$ [sudo] gem install cocoapods
$ pod setup
Change to the directory of your Xcode project, and Create and Edit your Podfile and add JSONJoy:
$ cd /path/to/MyProject
$ touch Podfile
$ edit Podfile
platform :ios, '5.0'
# Or platform :osx, '10.8'
pod 'JSONJoy'
Install into your project:
$ pod install
Open your project in Xcode from the .xcworkspace file (not the usual project file)
Via git just add JSONJoy as a git submodule
JSONJoy requires at least iOS 5/Mac OSX 10.8 or above.
JSONJoy is license under the Apache License.