Class TypeAdapter<T>
Defining a type's JSON form
By default Gson converts application classes to JSON using its built-in type adapters. If Gson's default JSON conversion isn't appropriate for a type, extend this class to customize the conversion. Here's an example of a type adapter for an (X,Y) coordinate point:
public class PointAdapter extends TypeAdapter<Point> {
public Point read(JsonReader reader) throws IOException {
if (reader.peek() == JsonToken.NULL) {
reader.nextNull();
return null;
}
String xy = reader.nextString();
String[] parts = xy.split(",");
int x = Integer.parseInt(parts[0]);
int y = Integer.parseInt(parts[1]);
return new Point(x, y);
}
public void write(JsonWriter writer, Point value) throws IOException {
if (value == null) {
writer.nullValue();
return;
}
String xy = value.getX() + "," + value.getY();
writer.value(xy);
}
}
With this type adapter installed, Gson will convert Points to JSON as
strings like "5,8" rather than objects like {"x":5,"y":8}. In
this case the type adapter binds a rich Java class to a compact JSON value.
The read() method must read exactly one value
and write() must write exactly one value.
For primitive types this is means readers should make exactly one call to
nextBoolean(), nextDouble(), nextInt(),
nextLong(), nextString() or nextNull(). Writers should make
exactly one call to one of value() or nullValue().
For arrays, type adapters should start with a call to beginArray(),
convert all elements, and finish with a call to endArray(). For
objects, they should start with beginObject(), convert the object,
and finish with endObject(). Failing to convert a value or converting
too many values may cause the application to crash.
Type adapters should be prepared to read null from the stream and write it
to the stream. Alternatively, they should use nullSafe() method while
registering the type adapter with Gson. If your Gson instance
has been configured to GsonBuilder.serializeNulls(), these nulls will be
written to the final document. Otherwise the value (and the corresponding name
when writing to a JSON object) will be omitted automatically. In either case
your type adapter must handle null.
To use a custom type adapter with Gson, you must register it with a
GsonBuilder:
GsonBuilder builder = new GsonBuilder();
builder.registerTypeAdapter(Point.class, new PointAdapter());
// if PointAdapter didn't check for nulls in its read/write methods, you should instead use
// builder.registerTypeAdapter(Point.class, new PointAdapter().nullSafe());
...
Gson gson = builder.create();
- Since:
- 2.1
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Constructor Summary
Constructors -
Method Summary
Modifier and TypeMethodDescriptionfinal TConverts the JSON document ininto a Java object.final TConverts the JSON document injsonto a Java object.final TfromJsonTree(JsonElement jsonTree) ConvertsjsonTreeto a Java object.final TypeAdapter<T> nullSafe()This wrapper method is used to make a type adapter null tolerant.abstract Tread(JsonReader in) Reads one JSON value (an array, object, string, number, boolean or null) and converts it to a Java object.final voidConvertsvalueto a JSON document and writes it toout.final StringConvertsvalueto a JSON document.final JsonElementtoJsonTree(T value) Convertsvalueto a JSON tree.abstract voidwrite(JsonWriter out, T value) Writes one JSON value (an array, object, string, number, boolean or null) forvalue.
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Constructor Details
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TypeAdapter
public TypeAdapter()
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Method Details
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write
Writes one JSON value (an array, object, string, number, boolean or null) forvalue.- Parameters:
value- the Java object to write. May be null.- Throws:
IOException
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toJson
Convertsvalueto a JSON document and writes it toout. Unlike Gson's similartoJsonmethod, this write is strict. Create alenientJsonWriterand callwrite(com.google.gson.stream.JsonWriter, Object)for lenient writing.- Parameters:
value- the Java object to convert. May be null.- Throws:
IOException- Since:
- 2.2
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nullSafe
This wrapper method is used to make a type adapter null tolerant. In general, a type adapter is required to handle nulls in write and read methods. Here is how this is typically done:
You can avoid this boilerplate handling of nulls by wrapping your type adapter with this method. Here is how we will rewrite the above example:Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().registerTypeAdapter(Foo.class, new TypeAdapter<Foo>() { public Foo read(JsonReader in) throws IOException { if (in.peek() == JsonToken.NULL) { in.nextNull(); return null; } // read a Foo from in and return it } public void write(JsonWriter out, Foo src) throws IOException { if (src == null) { out.nullValue(); return; } // write src as JSON to out } }).create();
Note that we didn't need to check for nulls in our type adapter after we used nullSafe.Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().registerTypeAdapter(Foo.class, new TypeAdapter<Foo>() { public Foo read(JsonReader in) throws IOException { // read a Foo from in and return it } public void write(JsonWriter out, Foo src) throws IOException { // write src as JSON to out } }.nullSafe()).create(); -
toJson
Convertsvalueto a JSON document. Unlike Gson's similartoJsonmethod, this write is strict. Create alenientJsonWriterand callwrite(com.google.gson.stream.JsonWriter, Object)for lenient writing.- Parameters:
value- the Java object to convert. May be null.- Since:
- 2.2
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toJsonTree
Convertsvalueto a JSON tree.- Parameters:
value- the Java object to convert. May be null.- Returns:
- the converted JSON tree. May be
JsonNull. - Since:
- 2.2
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read
Reads one JSON value (an array, object, string, number, boolean or null) and converts it to a Java object. Returns the converted object.- Returns:
- the converted Java object. May be null.
- Throws:
IOException
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fromJson
Converts the JSON document ininto a Java object. Unlike Gson's similarfromJsonmethod, this read is strict. Create alenientJsonReaderand callread(JsonReader)for lenient reading.- Returns:
- the converted Java object. May be null.
- Throws:
IOException- Since:
- 2.2
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fromJson
Converts the JSON document injsonto a Java object. Unlike Gson's similarfromJsonmethod, this read is strict. Create alenientJsonReaderand callread(JsonReader)for lenient reading.- Returns:
- the converted Java object. May be null.
- Throws:
IOException- Since:
- 2.2
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fromJsonTree
ConvertsjsonTreeto a Java object.- Parameters:
jsonTree- the Java object to convert. May beJsonNull.- Since:
- 2.2
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