public class JsonReader
extends java.lang.Object
implements java.io.Closeable
JsonReader.
 Next, create handler methods for each structure in your JSON text. You'll need a method for each object type and for each array type.
beginArray() to consume the array's opening bracket. Then create a
       while loop that accumulates values, terminating when hasNext()
       is false. Finally, read the array's closing bracket by calling endArray().
   beginObject() to consume the object's opening brace. Then create a
       while loop that assigns values to local variables based on their name.
       This loop should terminate when hasNext() is false. Finally,
       read the object's closing brace by calling endObject().
 When a nested object or array is encountered, delegate to the corresponding handler method.
When an unknown name is encountered, strict parsers should fail with an
 exception. Lenient parsers should call skipValue() to recursively
 skip the value's nested tokens, which may otherwise conflict.
 
If a value may be null, you should first check using peek().
 Null literals can be consumed using either nextNull() or skipValue().
 
 
 [
   {
     "id": 912345678901,
     "text": "How do I read a JSON stream in Java?",
     "geo": null,
     "user": {
       "name": "json_newb",
       "followers_count": 41
      }
   },
   {
     "id": 912345678902,
     "text": "@json_newb just use JsonReader!",
     "geo": [50.454722, -104.606667],
     "user": {
       "name": "jesse",
       "followers_count": 2
     }
   }
 ]
 This code implements the parser for the above structure:    
   public List<Message> readJsonStream(InputStream in) throws IOException {
     JsonReader reader = new JsonReader(new InputStreamReader(in, "UTF-8"));
     try {
       return readMessagesArray(reader);
     } finally {
       reader.close();
     }
   }
   public List<Message> readMessagesArray(JsonReader reader) throws IOException {
     List<Message> messages = new ArrayList<Message>();
     reader.beginArray();
     while (reader.hasNext()) {
       messages.add(readMessage(reader));
     }
     reader.endArray();
     return messages;
   }
   public Message readMessage(JsonReader reader) throws IOException {
     long id = -1;
     String text = null;
     User user = null;
     List<Double> geo = null;
     reader.beginObject();
     while (reader.hasNext()) {
       String name = reader.nextName();
       if (name.equals("id")) {
         id = reader.nextLong();
       } else if (name.equals("text")) {
         text = reader.nextString();
       } else if (name.equals("geo") && reader.peek() != JsonToken.NULL) {
         geo = readDoublesArray(reader);
       } else if (name.equals("user")) {
         user = readUser(reader);
       } else {
         reader.skipValue();
       }
     }
     reader.endObject();
     return new Message(id, text, user, geo);
   }
   public List<Double> readDoublesArray(JsonReader reader) throws IOException {
     List<Double> doubles = new ArrayList<Double>();
     reader.beginArray();
     while (reader.hasNext()) {
       doubles.add(reader.nextDouble());
     }
     reader.endArray();
     return doubles;
   }
   public User readUser(JsonReader reader) throws IOException {
     String username = null;
     int followersCount = -1;
     reader.beginObject();
     while (reader.hasNext()) {
       String name = reader.nextName();
       if (name.equals("name")) {
         username = reader.nextString();
       } else if (name.equals("followers_count")) {
         followersCount = reader.nextInt();
       } else {
         reader.skipValue();
       }
     }
     reader.endObject();
     return new User(username, followersCount);
   }
 [1, "1"] may be read using either nextInt() or nextString().
 This behavior is intended to prevent lossy numeric conversions: double is
 JavaScript's only numeric type and very large values like 9007199254740993 cannot be represented exactly on that platform. To minimize
 precision loss, extremely large values should be written and read as strings
 in JSON.
 <script> tag.
 Prefixing JSON files with ")]}'\n" makes them non-executable
 by <script> tags, disarming the attack. Since the prefix is malformed
 JSON, strict parsing fails when it is encountered. This class permits the
 non-execute prefix when lenient parsing is
 enabled.
 
Each JsonReader may be used to read a single JSON stream. Instances
 of this class are not thread safe.
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
JsonReader(java.io.Reader in)
Creates a new instance that reads a JSON-encoded stream from  
in. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
void | 
beginArray()
Consumes the next token from the JSON stream and asserts that it is the
 beginning of a new array. 
 | 
void | 
beginObject()
Consumes the next token from the JSON stream and asserts that it is the
 beginning of a new object. 
 | 
void | 
close()
Closes this JSON reader and the underlying  
Reader. | 
void | 
endArray()
Consumes the next token from the JSON stream and asserts that it is the
 end of the current array. 
 | 
void | 
endObject()
Consumes the next token from the JSON stream and asserts that it is the
 end of the current object. 
 | 
java.lang.String | 
getPath()
Returns a JsonPath to
 the current location in the JSON value. 
 | 
boolean | 
hasNext()
Returns true if the current array or object has another element. 
 | 
boolean | 
isLenient()
Returns true if this parser is liberal in what it accepts. 
 | 
boolean | 
nextBoolean()
Returns the  
boolean value of the next token,
 consuming it. | 
double | 
nextDouble()
Returns the  
double value of the next token,
 consuming it. | 
int | 
nextInt()
Returns the  
int value of the next token,
 consuming it. | 
long | 
nextLong()
Returns the  
long value of the next token,
 consuming it. | 
java.lang.String | 
nextName()
Returns the next token, a  
property name, and
 consumes it. | 
void | 
nextNull()
Consumes the next token from the JSON stream and asserts that it is a
 literal null. 
 | 
java.lang.String | 
nextString()
Returns the  
string value of the next token,
 consuming it. | 
JsonToken | 
peek()
Returns the type of the next token without consuming it. 
 | 
void | 
setLenient(boolean lenient)
Configure this parser to be liberal in what it accepts. 
 | 
void | 
skipValue()
Skips the next value recursively. 
 | 
java.lang.String | 
toString()  | 
public JsonReader(java.io.Reader in)
in.public final void setLenient(boolean lenient)
")]}'\n".
   NaNs or infinities.
   // or # and
       ending with a newline character.
   /* and ending with
       */. Such comments may not be nested.
   'single quoted'.
   'single quoted'.
   ; instead of ,.
   = or => instead of
       :.
   ; instead of ,.
 public final boolean isLenient()
public void beginArray()
                throws java.io.IOException
java.io.IOExceptionpublic void endArray()
              throws java.io.IOException
java.io.IOExceptionpublic void beginObject()
                 throws java.io.IOException
java.io.IOExceptionpublic void endObject()
               throws java.io.IOException
java.io.IOExceptionpublic boolean hasNext()
                throws java.io.IOException
java.io.IOExceptionpublic JsonToken peek() throws java.io.IOException
java.io.IOExceptionpublic java.lang.String nextName()
                          throws java.io.IOException
property name, and
 consumes it.java.io.IOException - if the next token in the stream is not a property
     name.public java.lang.String nextString()
                            throws java.io.IOException
string value of the next token,
 consuming it. If the next token is a number, this method will return its
 string form.java.lang.IllegalStateException - if the next token is not a string or if
     this reader is closed.java.io.IOExceptionpublic boolean nextBoolean()
                    throws java.io.IOException
boolean value of the next token,
 consuming it.java.lang.IllegalStateException - if the next token is not a boolean or if
     this reader is closed.java.io.IOExceptionpublic void nextNull()
              throws java.io.IOException
java.lang.IllegalStateException - if the next token is not null or if this
     reader is closed.java.io.IOExceptionpublic double nextDouble()
                  throws java.io.IOException
double value of the next token,
 consuming it. If the next token is a string, this method will attempt to
 parse it as a double using Double.parseDouble(String).java.lang.IllegalStateException - if the next token is not a literal value.java.lang.NumberFormatException - if the next literal value cannot be parsed
     as a double, or is non-finite.java.io.IOExceptionpublic long nextLong()
              throws java.io.IOException
long value of the next token,
 consuming it. If the next token is a string, this method will attempt to
 parse it as a long. If the next token's numeric value cannot be exactly
 represented by a Java long, this method throws.java.lang.IllegalStateException - if the next token is not a literal value.java.lang.NumberFormatException - if the next literal value cannot be parsed
     as a number, or exactly represented as a long.java.io.IOExceptionpublic int nextInt()
            throws java.io.IOException
int value of the next token,
 consuming it. If the next token is a string, this method will attempt to
 parse it as an int. If the next token's numeric value cannot be exactly
 represented by a Java int, this method throws.java.lang.IllegalStateException - if the next token is not a literal value.java.lang.NumberFormatException - if the next literal value cannot be parsed
     as a number, or exactly represented as an int.java.io.IOExceptionpublic void close()
           throws java.io.IOException
Reader.close in interface java.io.Closeableclose in interface java.lang.AutoCloseablejava.io.IOExceptionpublic void skipValue()
               throws java.io.IOException
java.io.IOExceptionpublic java.lang.String toString()
toString in class java.lang.Objectpublic java.lang.String getPath()
"Copyright © 2010 - 2020 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All Rights Reserved"