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(Swift 2) JSON PathsDemonstrates using "Chilkat JSON Paths" to access parts of a JSON document, or to iterate over parts. This example uses the following JSON document: { "nestedArray" : [ [ [1,2,3], [4,5,6], [7,8,9,10] ], [ [11,12,13], [14,15,16], [17,18,19,20] ], [ [21,22,23], [24,25,26], [27,28,29,30], [31,32,33,34,35,36] ] ], "nestedObject" : { "aaa" : { "bb1" : { "cc1" : "c1Value", "cc2" : "c2Value", "cc3" : "c3Value" }, "bb2" : { "dd1" : "d1Value", "dd2" : "d2Value", "dd3" : "d3Value" } } }, "mixture" : { "arrayA" : [ { "fruit": "apple", "animal": "horse", "job": "fireman", "colors": ["red","blue","green"] }, { "fruit": "pear", "animal": "plankton", "job": "waiter", "colors": ["yellow","orange","purple"] }, { "fruit": "kiwi", "animal": "echidna", "job": "astronaut", "colors": ["magenta","tan","pink"] } ] }, "name.with.dots" : { "grain" : "oats" } }
func chilkatTest() { let json = CkoJsonObject() json.EmitCompact = false // Assume the file contains the data as shown above.. var success: Bool = json.LoadFile("qa_data/json/pathSample.json") if success != true { print("\(json.LastErrorText)") return } // First, let's get the value of "cc1" // The path to this value is: nestedObject.aaa.bb1.cc1 print("\(json.StringOf("nestedObject.aaa.bb1.cc1"))") // Now let's get number 18 from the nestedArray. // It is located at nestedArray[1][2][1] // (remember: Indexing is 0-based) print("This should be 18: \(json.IntOf("nestedArray[1][2][1]").intValue)") // We can do the same thing in a more roundabout way using the // I, J, and K properties. (The I,J,K properties will be convenient // for iterating over arrays, as we'll see later.) json.I = 1 json.J = 2 json.K = 1 print("This should be 18: \(json.IntOf("nestedArray[i][j][k]").intValue)") // Let's iterate over the array containing the numbers 17, 18, 19, 20. // First, use the SizeOfArray method to get the array size: var sz: Int = json.SizeOfArray("nestedArray[1][2]").intValue // The size should be 4. print("size of array = \(sz) (should equal 4)") // Now iterate... var i: Int for i = 0; i <= sz - 1; i++ { json.I = i print("\(json.IntOf("nestedArray[1][2][i]").intValue)") } // Let's use a triple-nested loop to iterate over the nestedArray: var j: Int var k: Int // szI should equal 1. var szI: Int = json.SizeOfArray("nestedArray").intValue for i = 0; i <= szI - 1; i++ { json.I = i var szJ: Int = json.SizeOfArray("nestedArray[i]").intValue for j = 0; j <= szJ - 1; j++ { json.J = j var szK: Int = json.SizeOfArray("nestedArray[i][j]").intValue for k = 0; k <= szK - 1; k++ { json.K = k print("\(json.IntOf("nestedArray[i][j][k]").intValue)") } } } // Now let's examine how to navigate to JSON objects contained within JSON arrays. // This line of code gets the value "kiwi" contained within "mixture" print("\(json.StringOf("mixture.arrayA[2].fruit"))") // This line of code gets the color "yellow" print("\(json.StringOf("mixture.arrayA[1].colors[0]"))") // Getting an object at a path: // This gets the 2nd object in "arrayA" var obj2: CkoJsonObject? = json.ObjectOf("mixture.arrayA[1]") // This object's "animal" should be "plankton" print("\(obj2!.StringOf("animal"))") // Note that paths are relative to the object, not the absolute root of the JSON document. // Starting from obj2, "purple" is at "colors[2]" print("\(obj2!.StringOf("colors[2]"))") obj2 = nil // Getting an array at a path: // This gets the array containing the colors red, green, blue: var arr1: CkoJsonArray? = json.ArrayOf("mixture.arrayA[0].colors") var szArr1: Int = arr1!.Size.intValue for i = 0; i <= szArr1 - 1; i++ { print("\(i): \(arr1!.StringAt(i))") } arr1 = nil // The Chilkat JSON path uses ".", "[", and "]" chars for separators. When a name // contains one of these chars, use double-quotes in the path: print("\(json.StringOf("\"name.with.dots\".grain"))") } |
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