Takes a JSON encoded string and converts it into a PHP variable.
The json
string being decoded.
This function only works with UTF-8 encoded strings.
Note:
PHP implements a superset of JSON as specified in the original » RFC 4627 - it will also encode and decode scalar types and
NULL
. RFC 4627 only supports these values when they are nested inside an array or an object.Although this superset is consistent with the expanded definition of "JSON text" in the newer » RFC 7159 (which aims to supersede RFC 4627) and » ECMA-404, this may cause interoperability issues with older JSON parsers that adhere strictly to RFC 4627 when encoding a single scalar value.
When TRUE
, returned objects will be converted into associative arrays.
User specified recursion depth.
Bitmask of JSON decode options. Currently only JSON_BIGINT_AS_STRING
is supported (default is to cast large integers as floats)
Returns the value encoded in json
in appropriate PHP type. Values true, false and null are returned as TRUE
, FALSE
and NULL
respectively. NULL
is returned if the json
cannot be decoded or if the encoded data is deeper than the recursion limit.
Invalid non-lowercased variants of the true, false and null literals are no longer accepted as valid input, and will generate warnings.
The options
parameter was added.
Added the optional depth
. The default recursion depth was increased from 128 to 512
The nesting limit was increased from 20 to 128
Added support for JSON decoding of basic types.
The JSON spec is not JavaScript, but a subset of JavaScript.
In the event of a failure to decode, json_last_error() can be used to determine the exact nature of the error.
<?php $json = '{"a":1,"b":2,"c":3,"d":4,"e":5}'; var_dump(json_decode($json)); var_dump(json_decode($json, true)); ?>
The above example will output:
object(stdClass)#1 (5) { ["a"] => int(1) ["b"] => int(2) ["c"] => int(3) ["d"] => int(4) ["e"] => int(5) } array(5) { ["a"] => int(1) ["b"] => int(2) ["c"] => int(3) ["d"] => int(4) ["e"] => int(5) }
Accessing elements within an object that contain characters not permitted under PHP's naming convention (e.g. the hyphen) can be accomplished by encapsulating the element name within braces and the apostrophe.
<?php $json = '{"foo-bar": 12345}'; $obj = json_decode($json); print $obj->{'foo-bar'}; // 12345 ?>
<?php // the following strings are valid JavaScript but not valid JSON // the name and value must be enclosed in double quotes // single quotes are not valid $bad_json = "{ 'bar': 'baz' }"; json_decode($bad_json); // null // the name must be enclosed in double quotes $bad_json = '{ bar: "baz" }'; json_decode($bad_json); // null // trailing commas are not allowed $bad_json = '{ bar: "baz", }'; json_decode($bad_json); // null ?>
<?php // Encode the data. $json = json_encode( array( 1 => array( 'English' => array( 'One', 'January' ), 'French' => array( 'Une', 'Janvier' ) ) ) ); // Define the errors. $constants = get_defined_constants(true); $json_errors = array(); foreach ($constants["json"] as $name => $value) { if (!strncmp($name, "JSON_ERROR_", 11)) { $json_errors[$value] = $name; } } // Show the errors for different depths. foreach (range(4, 3, -1) as $depth) { var_dump(json_decode($json, true, $depth)); echo 'Last error: ', $json_errors[json_last_error()], PHP_EOL, PHP_EOL; } ?>
The above example will output:
array(1) { [1]=> array(2) { ["English"]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(3) "One" [1]=> string(7) "January" } ["French"]=> array(2) { [0]=> string(3) "Une" [1]=> string(7) "Janvier" } } } Last error: JSON_ERROR_NONE NULL Last error: JSON_ERROR_DEPTH
<?php $json = '{"number": 12345678901234567890}'; var_dump(json_decode($json)); var_dump(json_decode($json, false, 512, JSON_BIGINT_AS_STRING)); ?>
The above example will output:
object(stdClass)#1 (1) { ["number"]=> float(1.2345678901235E+19) } object(stdClass)#1 (1) { ["number"]=> string(20) "12345678901234567890" }
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