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Functional json ga-badge jar-badge

This library inspired by playframework scala json lib and json-lib provide helpers to manipulate Jackson json nodes. With this lib you can have a total control on json serialization and deserialization. You can also separate POJO's definition from its serialization, which can be helpful in an hexagonal architecture. Another benefit is to get various ser/des for the same class.

At the end you will get a better error handling which can be very pleasant in RESTful API to help the client of the API to understand why the validation has failed.

To read and write from json, there is two important interface :

  • JsonRead to read json
  • JsonWrite to write json

This lib also comes with helpers to build json from scratch easily than with raw jackson.

Import

Jcenter hosts this library.

Maven

<dependency>
    <groupId>fr.maif</groupId>
    <artifactId>functional-json</artifactId>
    <version>${VERSION}</version>
</dependency>

Gradle

implementation 'fr.maif:functional-json:${VERSION}'

Creating json

You can create json using the $ static function or his alias $$ in case $ is already in scope (eg vavr pattern matching) to create a json object.

import fr.maif.json.Json.*;
import fr.maif.json.JsonWrite.*;
ObjectNode myJson = Json.obj(
        $("name", "Ragnar Lodbrock"),
        $("city", Some("Kattegat")),
        $("weight", 80),
        $("birthDate", LocalDate.of(766, 1, 1), $localdate()),
        $("sons", Json.arr(
            Json.obj($("name", "Bjorn")),
            Json.obj($("name", "Ubbe")),
            Json.obj($("name", "Hvitserk")),
            Json.obj($("name", "Sigurd")),
            Json.obj($("name", "Ivar"))
        ))
);

JsonRead

Reading JSON is basic :

@FunctionalInterface
public interface JsonRead<T> {

    JsResult<T> read(JsonNode jsonNode);
    
}

A JsResult can rather be a JsSuccess or a JsError. The JsError will stack all errors, in order to let you a detailed report of what happend.

With a lambda you can define a read this way :

JsonRead<String> strRead = json -> {
   if (json.isTextual()) {
       return JsResult.success(json.asText());
   } else {
       return JsResult.error(List.of(JsResult.Error.error("string.expected")));
   }
};

This lib already provides readers for all common types so you probably won't have to write this kind of code.

If you need to implement a specific reader for a POJO, this will look like this.

The POJO with a builder and immutable fields.

The @FieldNameConstants is a lombok annotation that will create a sub class with static fields with the name of each fields.

@FieldNameConstants
@Builder
@AllArgsConstructor
public static class Viking {
    public final String firstName;
    public final String lastName;
    public final Option<String> city;
}

And the reader is the following :

public static JsonRead<Viking> reader() {
    return _string("firstName", Viking.builder()::firstName)
            .and(_string("lastName"), Viking.VikingBuilder::lastName)
            .and(_opt("city", _string()), Viking.VikingBuilder::city)
            .map(Viking.VikingBuilder::build);
} 

For a better understanding, here is the decomposition of the previous code :

This part reads a string at path "firstName"

JsonRead<String> stringJsonRead = _string("firstName");

Here is an alternative, that reads a String at a path in order to use this String for something else. Then you'll need to create a builder and apply the string to the firstName field :

JsonRead<VikingBuilder> vikingBuilderJsonRead = _string("firstName", str -> Viking.builder().firstName(str));

The same with method reference :

JsonRead<VikingBuilder> vikingBuilderJsonRead2 = _string("firstName", Viking.builder()::firstName);

Now we can use the method and. With and you can read another field and combine with the current builder like this :

JsonRead<VikingBuilder> vikingBuilderJsonReadStep2 = vikingBuilderJsonRead2
    .and(_string("lastName"), (previousBuilder, str) -> previousBuilder.lastName(str));

The same with method reference :

JsonRead<VikingBuilder> vikingBuilderJsonReadStep2 = vikingBuilderJsonRead2
    .and(_string("lastName"), VikingBuilder::lastName);

At the end, when all the fields have been read, we can use map to transform the builder in the Viking instance :

JsonRead<Viking> vikingJsonRead = vikingBuilderJsonReadStep2.map(b -> b.build());

The same with method reference :

JsonRead<Viking> vikingJsonRead = vikingBuilderJsonReadStep2.map(VikingBuilder::build);

Wiring all together we'll have :

public static JsonRead<Viking> reader() {
    return _string("firstName", Viking.builder()::firstName)
            .and(_string("lastName"), Viking.VikingBuilder::lastName)
            .and(_opt("city", _string()), Viking.VikingBuilder::city)
            .map(Viking.VikingBuilder::build);
} 

We provide readers for :

  • String: _string(...)
  • Integer: _int(...)
  • Long: _long(...)
  • Boolean: _boolean(...)
  • BigDecimal: _bigDecimal(...)
  • Enum: _enum(...)
  • LocalDate: _localDate(...), _isoLocalDate(...)
  • LocalDateTime: _localDateTime(...), _isoLocalDateTime(...)
  • Option: _opt(...)
  • List: _list(...)
  • Set: _set(...)
  • Generic read at path: __()

Json Write

A json write is :

@FunctionalInterface
public interface JsonWrite<T> {
    JsonNode write(T value);
}

With a lambda you can define a write as :

JsonWrite<String> strWrite = str -> new TextNode(str);

To define a JSON object or arrays there is helpers so for the Viking POJO a write look like :

public static JsonWrite<Viking> writer() {
    return viking -> Json.obj(
            $("firstName", viking.firstName),
            $("lastName", viking.lastName),
            $("city", viking.city)
    );
}

Just as we do for the readers, we provide writers common types :

  • String: $string()
  • Integer: $int()
  • Long: $long()
  • Boolean: $boolean()
  • BigDecimal: _bigdecimal()
  • Enum: $enum()
  • LocalDate: $localdate()
  • LocalDateTime: $localdatetime()
  • Traversable: $list(JsonWrite<T>)
  • Jackson array: Json.newArray() or Json.arr(...nodes)

JsonFormat

A json format is the combinaison of a JsonRead and a JsonWrite. You can create a format using of:

JsonFormat<Viking> format() {
    return JsonFormat.of(reader(), writer());
}

Parsing json and converting it to POJOs

At the end with the following definition :

@FieldNameConstants
@Builder
@AllArgsConstructor
public class Viking {

    // A JsonFormat is both JsonRead and JsonWrite
    public static JsonFormat<Viking> format() {
        return JsonFormat.of(reader(), writer());
    }

    public static JsonRead<Viking> reader() {
        return _string("firstName", Viking.builder()::firstName)
                .and(_string("lastName"), Viking.VikingBuilder::lastName)
                .and(_opt("city", _string()), Viking.VikingBuilder::city)
                .map(Viking.VikingBuilder::build);
    }

    public static JsonWrite<Viking> writer() {
        return viking -> Json.obj(
                $("firstName", viking.firstName),
                $("lastName", viking.lastName),
                $("city", viking.city)
        );
    }

    public final String firstName;
    public final String lastName;
    public final Option<String> city;
}

We can do :

Viking viking = Viking.builder()
        .firstName("Ragnar")
        .lastName("Lodbrock")
        .city(Some("Kattegat"))
        .build();

JsonNode jsonNode = Json.toJson(viking, Viking.format());
String stringify = Json.stringify(jsonNode);

JsonNode parsed = Json.parse(stringify);

JsResult<Viking> vikingJsResult = Json.fromJson(parsed, Viking.format());

Handling sum types or polymorphism

Sometime you need to serialize or deserialize sum types. For example :

public interface Animal { }

@Builder
@Value
public class Dog implements Animal {
    String name;
}

@Builder
@Value
public class Cat implements Animal {
    String name;
}

In the following example, there's also different version of the json object serialization. The parsing is done using two fields type and version:

  • type is the type of the animal: dog or cat
  • version is the version of it's JSON representation

Here, we have two versions of the dog JSON, one with the name in the field legacyName (the v1 version) and one with the name in the field name (the v2version).

The readers are the followings :

JsonRead<Animal> dogJsonReadV1 =
        _string("legacyName", Dog.builder()::name)
            .map(Dog.DogBuilder::build);

JsonRead<Animal> dogJsonReadV2 =
        _string("name", Dog.builder()::name)
            .map(Dog.DogBuilder::build);


JsonRead<Animal> catJsonRead =
        _string("name", Cat.builder()::name)
            .map(Cat.CatBuilder::build);

Now to read an animal you can do this :

JsonRead<Animal> oneOfRead = JsonRead.oneOf(_string("type"), _string("version"), "data", List(
        caseOf((t, v) -> t.equals("dog") && v.equals("v1"), dogJsonReadV1),
        caseOf((t, v) -> t.equals("dog") && v.equals("v2"), dogJsonReadV2),
        caseOf((t, v) -> t.equals("cat") && v.equals("v1"), catJsonRead)
));

Or with the vavr helpers :

JsonRead<Animal> oneOfRead = JsonRead.oneOf(_string("type"), _string("version"), "data", List(
        caseOf($Tuple2($("dog"), $("v1")), dogJsonReadV1),
        caseOf($Tuple2($("dog"), $("v2")), dogJsonReadV2),
        caseOf($Tuple2($("cat"), $("v1")), catJsonRead)
));

Json schema

JsonRead exposes a JSON schema https://json-schema.org/. This could be usefull when you have to share the schema to other teams.

In the case you need to override or enrich the schema, there is some helpers to do that :

JsonRead.ofRead(oneOfRead, JsonSchema.emptySchema()
    .title("A title")
    .description("Blah blah blah")
    // ...
);