Type:
Module
Constants:
NaN : 0.0/0
Infinity : 1.0/0
MinusInfinity : -Infinity
UnparserError : GeneratorError

This exception is raised if a generator or unparser error occurs.

JSON_LOADED : true unless defined?(::JSON::JSON_LOADED)
VERSION : '1.7.7'

JSON version

VERSION_ARRAY : VERSION.split(/\./).map { |x| x.to_i }
VERSION_MAJOR : VERSION_ARRAY[0]
VERSION_MINOR : VERSION_ARRAY[1]
VERSION_BUILD : VERSION_ARRAY[2]

JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)

JSON is a lightweight data-interchange format. It is easy for us humans to read and write. Plus, equally simple for machines to generate or parse. JSON is completely language agnostic, making it the ideal interchange format.

Built on two universally available structures:

1. A collection of name/value pairs. Often referred to as an _object_, hash table, record, struct, keyed list, or associative array.
2. An ordered list of values. More commonly called an _array_, vector, sequence or list.

To read more about JSON visit: json.org

Parsing JSON

To parse a JSON string received by another application or generated within your existing application:

require 'json'

my_hash = JSON.parse('{"hello": "goodbye"}')
puts my_hash["hello"] => "goodbye"

Notice the extra quotes '' around the hash notation. Ruby expects the argument to be a string and can't convert objects like a hash or array.

Ruby converts your string into a hash

Generating JSON

Creating a JSON string for communication or serialization is just as simple.

require 'json'

my_hash = {:hello => "goodbye"}
puts JSON.generate(my_hash) => "{\"hello\":\"goodbye\"}"

Or an alternative way:

require 'json'
puts {:hello => "goodbye"}.to_json => "{\"hello\":\"goodbye\"}"

JSON.generate only allows objects or arrays to be converted to JSON syntax. to_json, however, accepts many Ruby classes even though it acts only as a method for serialization:

require 'json'

1.to_json => "1"
to_json
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON/JSON::Ext/JSON::Ext::Generator/JSON::Ext::Generator::GeneratorMethods/JSON::Ext::Generator::GeneratorMethods::Float

to_json(*) Instance Public methods Returns a

2025-01-10 15:47:30
to_json
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON/JSON::Ext/JSON::Ext::Generator/JSON::Ext::Generator::GeneratorMethods/JSON::Ext::Generator::GeneratorMethods::TrueClass

to_json(*) Instance Public methods Returns a

2025-01-10 15:47:30
[]
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON/JSON::Ext/JSON::Ext::Generator/JSON::Ext::Generator::State

[](name) Instance Public methods Return the value returned by method name

2025-01-10 15:47:30
to_json
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON/JSON::GenericObject

to_json(*a) Instance Public methods

2025-01-10 15:47:30
source
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON/JSON::Ext/JSON::Ext::Parser

source() Instance Public methods Returns a copy of the current source

2025-01-10 15:47:30
pretty_generate
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON

pretty_generate(obj, opts = nil) Instance Public methods Generate a

2025-01-10 15:47:30
generate
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON/JSON::Ext/JSON::Ext::Generator/JSON::Ext::Generator::State

generate(obj) Instance Public methods Generates a valid

2025-01-10 15:47:30
[]
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON/JSON::GenericObject

[](name) Instance Public methods

2025-01-10 15:47:30
to_json_raw
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON/JSON::Ext/JSON::Ext::Generator/JSON::Ext::Generator::GeneratorMethods/JSON::Ext::Generator::GeneratorMethods::String

to_json_raw(*args) Instance Public methods This method creates a

2025-01-10 15:47:30
initialize_copy
  • References/Ruby on Rails/Ruby/Classes/JSON/JSON::Ext/JSON::Ext::Generator/JSON::Ext::Generator::State

initialize_copy(orig) Instance Public methods Initializes this object from

2025-01-10 15:47:30