How to escape double quotes in JSON
When and where to use \\\"
instead. OK if you are like me you will feel just as silly as I did when I realized what I was doing after I found this thread.
If you're making a .json text file/stream and importing the data from there then the main stream answer of just one backslash before the double quotes:\"
is the one you're looking for.
However if you're like me and you're trying to get the w3schools.com "Tryit Editor" to have a double quotes in the output of the JSON.parse(text), then the one you're looking for is the triple backslash double quotes \\\"
. This is because you're building your text string within an HTML <script>
block, and the first double backslash inserts a single backslash into the string variable then the following backslash double quote inserts the double quote into the string so that the resulting script string contains the \"
from the standard answer and the JSON parser will parse this as just the double quotes.
<script>
var text="{";
text += '"quip":"\\\"If nobody is listening, then you\'re likely talking to the wrong audience.\\\""';
text += "}";
var obj=JSON.parse(text);
</script>
+1: since it's a JavaScript text string, a double backslash double quote \\"
would work too; because the double quote does not need escaped within a single quoted string eg '\"'
and '"'
result in the same JS string.
Try this:
"maingame": {
"day1": {
"text1": "Tag 1",
"text2": "Heute startet unsere Rundreise \" Example text\". Jeden Tag wird ein neues Reiseziel angesteuert bis wir.</strong> "
}
}
(just one backslash (\
) in front of quotes).
if you want to escape double quote in JSON use \\ to escape it.
example if you want to create json of following javascript object
{time: '7 "o" clock'}
then you must write in following way
'{"time":"7 \\"o\\" clock"}'
if we parse it using JSON.parse()
JSON.parse('{"time":"7 \\"o\\" clock"}')
result will be
{time: "7 "o" clock"}