How to create/read/write JSON files in Qt5
An example on how to use that would be great. There is a couple of examples at the Qt forum, but you're right that the official documentation should be expanded.
QJsonDocument
on its own indeed doesn't produce anything, you will have to add the data to it. That's done through the QJsonObject
, QJsonArray
and QJsonValue
classes. The top-level item needs to be either an array or an object (because 1
is not a valid json document, while {foo: 1}
is.)
Example: Read json from file
/* test.json */
{
"appDesc": {
"description": "SomeDescription",
"message": "SomeMessage"
},
"appName": {
"description": "Home",
"message": "Welcome",
"imp":["awesome","best","good"]
}
}
void readJson()
{
QString val;
QFile file;
file.setFileName("test.json");
file.open(QIODevice::ReadOnly | QIODevice::Text);
val = file.readAll();
file.close();
qWarning() << val;
QJsonDocument d = QJsonDocument::fromJson(val.toUtf8());
QJsonObject sett2 = d.object();
QJsonValue value = sett2.value(QString("appName"));
qWarning() << value;
QJsonObject item = value.toObject();
qWarning() << tr("QJsonObject of description: ") << item;
/* in case of string value get value and convert into string*/
qWarning() << tr("QJsonObject[appName] of description: ") << item["description"];
QJsonValue subobj = item["description"];
qWarning() << subobj.toString();
/* in case of array get array and convert into string*/
qWarning() << tr("QJsonObject[appName] of value: ") << item["imp"];
QJsonArray test = item["imp"].toArray();
qWarning() << test[1].toString();
}
OUTPUT
QJsonValue(object, QJsonObject({"description": "Home","imp": ["awesome","best","good"],"message": "YouTube"}) )
"QJsonObject of description: " QJsonObject({"description": "Home","imp": ["awesome","best","good"],"message": "YouTube"})
"QJsonObject[appName] of description: " QJsonValue(string, "Home")
"Home"
"QJsonObject[appName] of value: " QJsonValue(array, QJsonArray(["awesome","best","good"]) )
"best"
Example: Read json from string
Assign json to string as below and use the readJson()
function shown before:
val =
' {
"appDesc": {
"description": "SomeDescription",
"message": "SomeMessage"
},
"appName": {
"description": "Home",
"message": "Welcome",
"imp":["awesome","best","good"]
}
}';
OUTPUT
QJsonValue(object, QJsonObject({"description": "Home","imp": ["awesome","best","good"],"message": "YouTube"}) )
"QJsonObject of description: " QJsonObject({"description": "Home","imp": ["awesome","best","good"],"message": "YouTube"})
"QJsonObject[appName] of description: " QJsonValue(string, "Home")
"Home"
"QJsonObject[appName] of value: " QJsonValue(array, QJsonArray(["awesome","best","good"]) )
"best"
JSON under QT is actually quite pleasant - I was surprised. This is an example of how to create a JSON output with some structure.
Forgive me for not explaining what the fields all mean - it is a Ham Radio processing output script.
This is the QT C++ Code
void CabrilloReader::JsonOutputMapper()
{
QFile file(QDir::homePath() + "/1.json");
if(!file.open(QIODevice::ReadWrite)) {
qDebug() << "File open error";
} else {
qDebug() <<"JSONTest2 File open!";
}
// Clear the original content in the file
file.resize(0);
// Add a value using QJsonArray and write to the file
QJsonArray jsonArray;
for(int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
QJsonObject jsonObject;
CabrilloRecord *rec= QSOs.at(i);
jsonObject.insert("Date", rec->getWhen().toString());
jsonObject.insert("Band", rec->getBand().toStr());
QJsonObject jsonSenderLatObject;
jsonSenderLatObject.insert("Lat",rec->getSender()->fLat);
jsonSenderLatObject.insert("Lon",rec->getSender()->fLon);
jsonSenderLatObject.insert("Sender",rec->getSender_call());
QJsonObject jsonReceiverLatObject;
jsonReceiverLatObject.insert("Lat",rec->getReceiver()->fLat);
jsonReceiverLatObject.insert("Lon",rec->getReceiver()->fLon);
jsonReceiverLatObject.insert("Receiver",rec->getReceiver_call());
jsonObject.insert("Receiver",jsonReceiverLatObject);
jsonObject.insert("Sender",jsonSenderLatObject);
jsonArray.append(jsonObject);
QThread::sleep(2);
}
QJsonObject jsonObject;
jsonObject.insert("number", jsonArray.size());
jsonArray.append(jsonObject);
QJsonDocument jsonDoc;
jsonDoc.setArray(jsonArray);
file.write(jsonDoc.toJson());
file.close();
qDebug() << "Write to file";
}
It takes an internal QT Structure (a List of pointers to a CabrilloRecord object ... which you just ignore) and extracts some fields. These fields are then output in a nested JSON format which looks like this.
[
{
"Band": "20",
"Date": "Sat Jul 10 12:00:00 2021",
"Receiver": {
"Lat": 36.400001525878906,
"Lon": 138.3800048828125,
"Receiver": "8N3HQ "
},
"Sender": {
"Lat": 13,
"Lon": 122,
"Sender": "DX0HQ "
}
},
{
"Band": "20",
"Date": "Sat Jul 10 12:01:00 2021",
"Receiver": {
"Lat": 36.400001525878906,
"Lon": 138.3800048828125,
"Receiver": "JA1CJP "
},
"Sender": {
"Lat": 13,
"Lon": 122,
"Sender": "DX0HQ "
}
}]
I hope this speeds up someone else's progression on this topic.
Sadly, many JSON C++ libraries have APIs that are non trivial to use, while JSON was intended to be easy to use.
So I tried jsoncpp from the gSOAP tools on the JSON doc shown in one of the answers above and this is the code generated with jsoncpp to construct a JSON object in C++ which is then written in JSON format to std::cout:
value x(ctx);
x["appDesc"]["description"] = "SomeDescription";
x["appDesc"]["message"] = "SomeMessage";
x["appName"]["description"] = "Home";
x["appName"]["message"] = "Welcome";
x["appName"]["imp"][0] = "awesome";
x["appName"]["imp"][1] = "best";
x["appName"]["imp"][2] = "good";
std::cout << x << std::endl;
and this is the code generated by jsoncpp to parse JSON from std::cin and extract its values (replace USE_VAL
as needed):
value x(ctx);
std::cin >> x;
if (x.soap->error)
exit(EXIT_FAILURE); // error parsing JSON
#define USE_VAL(path, val) std::cout << path << " = " << val << std::endl
if (x.has("appDesc"))
{
if (x["appDesc"].has("description"))
USE_VAL("$.appDesc.description", x["appDesc"]["description"]);
if (x["appDesc"].has("message"))
USE_VAL("$.appDesc.message", x["appDesc"]["message"]);
}
if (x.has("appName"))
{
if (x["appName"].has("description"))
USE_VAL("$.appName.description", x["appName"]["description"]);
if (x["appName"].has("message"))
USE_VAL("$.appName.message", x["appName"]["message"]);
if (x["appName"].has("imp"))
{
for (int i2 = 0; i2 < x["appName"]["imp"].size(); i2++)
USE_VAL("$.appName.imp[]", x["appName"]["imp"][i2]);
}
}
This code uses the JSON C++ API of gSOAP 2.8.28. I don't expect people to change libraries, but I think this comparison helps to put JSON C++ libraries in perspective.