Play JSON is a powerful Scala JSON library, originally developed by the Play team for use with Play Framework. It uses Jackson for JSON parsing and has no Play dependencies.
We've provided some documentation here on how to use Play JSON in your app (without Play). For more information on how to use Play JSON in Play, please refer to the Play documentation.
To get started, you can add play-json as a dependency in your project:
- sbt
libraryDependencies += "com.typesafe.play" %% "play-json" % -version-
- Gradle
compile group: 'com.typesafe.play', name: 'play-json_2.13', version: -version-
- Maven
<dependency> <groupId>com.typesafe.play</groupId> <artifactId>play-json_2.13</artifactId> <version>-version-</version> </dependency>
See GitHub releases for the correct version.
Play JSON supports Scala 2.12 and 2.13. Choosing the right JAR is automatically managed in sbt. If you're using Gradle or Maven then you need to use the correct version in the artifactId
.
The base type in Play JSON is play.api.libs.json.JsValue
, and has several subtypes representing different JSON types:
JsObject
: a JSON object, represented as a Map. Can be constructed from an orderedSeq
or any kind ofMap
usingJsObject.apply
JsArray
: a JSON array, consisting of aSeq[JsValue]
JsNumber
: a JSON number, represented as aBigDecimal
.JsString
: a JSON string.JsBoolean
: a JSON boolean, eitherJsTrue
orJsFalse
.JsNull
: the JSONnull
value.
The play.api.libs.json
package includes several features for constructing JSON from scratch, as well as for converting to and from case classes.
The play.api.libs.json.Json
object has several methods for reading and writing:
Json.parse
parses a JSON string or InputStream
into a JSON tree:
val json: JsValue = Json.parse("""
{
"name" : "Watership Down",
"location" : {
"lat" : 51.235685,
"long" : -1.309197
},
"residents" : [ {
"name" : "Fiver",
"age" : 4,
"role" : null
}, {
"name" : "Bigwig",
"age" : 6,
"role" : "Owsla"
} ]
}
""")
and Json.stringify
is used to convert a JsValue
to a String
of JSON:
val jsonString = Json.stringify(json)
// {"name":"Watership Down","location":{"lat":51.235685,"long":-1.309197},"residents":[{"name":"Fiver","age":4,"role":null},{"name":"Bigwig","age":6,"role":"Owsla"}]}
Play JSON provides a traversal DSL that lets you query fields in the JSON:
Applying the \
operator will return the property corresponding to the field argument, supposing this is a JsObject.
val lat = (json \ "location" \ "lat").get
// returns JsNumber(51.235685)
The (json \ "location" \ "lat")
returns a JsLookupResult
which may or may not contain a value. Note that the get
operation is not always safe; it throws an exception if the path doesn't exist.
You can also use \
to look up indices within a JsArray
:
val bigwig = (json \ "residents" \ 1).get
// returns {"name":"Bigwig","age":6,"role":"Owsla"}
Applying the \\
operator will do a lookup for the field in the current object and all descendants.
val names = json \\ "name"
// returns Seq(JsString("Watership Down"), JsString("Fiver"), JsString("Bigwig"))
You can retrieve a value in a JsObject or JsArray using an apply operator with the index number or key.
val name = json("name")
// returns JsString("Watership Down")
val bigwig = json("residents")(1)
// returns {"name":"Bigwig","age":6,"role":"Owsla"}
Like get
, this will throw an exception if the index doesn't exist. Use the Simple Path \
operator and validate
or asOpt
(described below) if you expect that they key may not be present.
To convert a Scala object to and from JSON, we use Json.toJson[T: Writes]
and Json.fromJson[T: Reads]
respectively. Play JSON provides the Reads
and Writes
typeclasses to define how to read or write specific types. You can get these either by using Play's automatic JSON macros, or by manually defining them.
You can also read JSON from a JsValue
using validate
, as
and asOpt
methods. Generally it's preferable to use validate
since it returns a JsResult
which may contain an error if the JSON is malformed.
For example:
val unsafeName = (json \ "name").as[String]
// "Watership Down"
val unsafeBogusName = (json \ "bogus").as[String]
// throws exception
val nameOption = (json \ "name").asOpt[String]
// Some("Watership Down")
val bogusOption = (json \ "bogus").asOpt[String]
// None
val nameResult = (json \ "name").validate[String]
// JsSuccess("Watership Down")
val bogusResult = (json \ "bogus").validate[String]
// JsError
val unsafeName2 = json("name").as[String]
// "Watership Down"
val unsafeBogusName2 = json("bogus").as[String]
// throws exception
Usually you don't need to traverse JSON AST directly. Play JSON comes equipped with some convenient macros to convert to and from case classes.
For example, suppose I have the following class:
case class Resident(name: String, age: Int, role: Option[String])
I can define a Reads
(JSON parser), Writes
(JSON writer) using convenient macros:
implicit val residentReads = Json.reads[Resident]
implicit val residentWrites = Json.writes[Resident]
I can also define a Format
that does both:
implicit val residentFormat = Json.format[Resident]
With the Reads
and/or Writes
in scope, I can then easily convert my class using toJson
and fromJson
Play JSON provides a convenient functional DSL for constructing Reads
and Writes
. For example, assume I have the following classes:
case class Location(lat: Double, long: Double)
case class Resident(name: String, age: Int, role: Option[String])
case class Place(name: String, location: Location, residents: Seq[Resident])
Then I could construct Reads
for them as follows:
import play.api.libs.json._
import play.api.libs.json.Reads._
import play.api.libs.functional.syntax._
implicit val locationReads: Reads[Location] = (
(JsPath \ "lat").read[Double](min(-90.0) keepAnd max(90.0)) and
(JsPath \ "long").read[Double](min(-180.0) keepAnd max(180.0))
)(Location.apply _)
implicit val residentReads: Reads[Resident] = (
(JsPath \ "name").read[String](minLength[String](2)) and
(JsPath \ "age").read[Int](min(0) keepAnd max(150)) and
(JsPath \ "role").readNullable[String]
)(Resident.apply _)
implicit val placeReads: Reads[Place] = (
(JsPath \ "name").read[String](minLength[String](2)) and
(JsPath \ "location").read[Location] and
(JsPath \ "residents").read[Seq[Resident]]
)(Place.apply _)
val json = { ... }
json.validate[Place] match {
case s: JsSuccess[Place] => {
val place: Place = s.get
// do something with place
}
case e: JsError => {
// error handling flow
}
}
Similarly, I could construct Writes
like this:
import play.api.libs.json._
import play.api.libs.functional.syntax._
implicit val locationWrites: Writes[Location] = (
(JsPath \ "lat").write[Double] and
(JsPath \ "long").write[Double]
)(unlift(Location.unapply))
implicit val residentWrites: Writes[Resident] = (
(JsPath \ "name").write[String] and
(JsPath \ "age").write[Int] and
(JsPath \ "role").writeNullable[String]
)(unlift(Resident.unapply))
implicit val placeWrites: Writes[Place] = (
(JsPath \ "name").write[String] and
(JsPath \ "location").write[Location] and
(JsPath \ "residents").write[Seq[Resident]]
)(unlift(Place.unapply))
val place = Place(
"Watership Down",
Location(51.235685, -1.309197),
Seq(
Resident("Fiver", 4, None),
Resident("Bigwig", 6, Some("Owsla"))
)
)
val json = Json.toJson(place)
It is also possible to implement custom logic by implementing the Reads
, Writes
and/or Format
traits manually, but we recommend using the automatic conversion macros or the functional DSL if possible.
JSON can also be manually constructed using a DSL:
val json: JsValue = Json.obj(
"name" -> "Watership Down",
"location" -> Json.obj("lat" -> 51.235685, "long" -> -1.309197),
"residents" -> Json.arr(
Json.obj(
"name" -> "Fiver",
"age" -> 4,
"role" -> JsNull
),
Json.obj(
"name" -> "Bigwig",
"age" -> 6,
"role" -> "Owsla"
)
)
)
Play JSON is licensed under the Apache license, version 2. See the LICENSE file for more information.