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The JavaScript JSON Cookbook

You're reading from   The JavaScript JSON Cookbook Over 80 recipes to make the most of JSON in your desktop, server, web, and mobile applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785286902
Length 192 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Reading and Writing JSON on the Client FREE CHAPTER 2. Reading and Writing JSON on the Server 3. Using JSON in Simple AJAX Applications 4. Using JSON in AJAX Applications with jQuery and AngularJS 5. Using JSON with MongoDB 6. Using JSON with CouchDB 7. Using JSON in a Type-safe Manner 8. Using JSON for Binary Data Transfer 9. Querying JSON with JSONPath and LINQ 10. JSON on Mobile Platforms Index

Parsing JSON on iOS in Objective-C

Objective-C's class libraries define the NSJSONSerialization class, which can serialize to and from JSON. It converts JSON to NSDictionary objects of values, with the keys, the names of the slots in the JSON, and the values of their JSON. It's available in iOS 5.0 and later.

How to do it…

Here's a simple example:

NSError* error;
NSDictionary* data = [ NSJSONSerialization
  JSONObjectWithData: json
  options: kNilOptions
  error: &error ];

NSString* call = [ data ObjectForKey: @"call" ];

How it works…

The NSJSONSerialization class has a method, JSONObjectWithData:options:error, that takes an NSString, parsing options, and a place to record errors, and performs JSON parsing. It can accept JSON whose top level is an array or dictionary, returning an NSArray or NSDictionary result respectively. All values must be instances of NSString, NSNumber, NSArray, NSDictionary, or NSNull respectively. If the top-level object is...

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