json
Created: February 03, 2019
- JSON files are a collection of comma-separated key-value pairs.
"key": VALUE, - JSON starts and ends with curly brackets.
{ JSON_HERE } - Whitespace does not matter.
- Keys are always strings.
- Keys should be unique. Some JSON implementations use the last key if multiple are given, others throw an error.
- Strings must always be enclosed in double quotes.
- All unicode is valid. Characters can be escaped with a backslash.
"\""=".
Data Types
| Data Type | Notated By | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Strings | “STRING” | "string": "value" |
| Integer | INT | "integer": 1 |
| Floating-point numbers | x.yy or xEy or x.yE{+|-}z |
"key": 1.00 |
| Arrays | [] | [1,2,3,"GO"] |
| Objects | {} | "object": {"i": 1, "y": 2} |
| Boolean | true or false |
"boolean": false |
| Null | null |
"null": null |
- E = E (exponent) notation.
- Arrays contain comma-separated lists of values. Multiple types can be used in a single array.
- Objects contain comma-separated collections of key-value pairs.
- Objects can exist within arrays, and arrays can exist within objects.
- When objects exist within arrays, no key is used; just the curly brackets.
- There are no official comments, however, some parsers accept C-like comments (
//or/* */).
Simple example
{
"name": "bob",
"age": 24,
"height": 180.2,
"shoppingList": [1, "Apple", 2, "Oranges"],
"religulous": false,
"money": null,
"backpack": {"bread": 2, "porridge": null}
}
Prettify
Easy prettification:
file.json | python3 -m json.tool