Using JSON File in Android App Resources
See openRawResource. Something like this should work:
InputStream is = getResources().openRawResource(R.raw.json_file);
Writer writer = new StringWriter();
char[] buffer = new char[1024];
try {
Reader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(is, "UTF-8"));
int n;
while ((n = reader.read(buffer)) != -1) {
writer.write(buffer, 0, n);
}
} finally {
is.close();
}
String jsonString = writer.toString();
Kotlin is now official language for Android, so I think this would be useful for someone
val text = resources.openRawResource(R.raw.your_text_file)
.bufferedReader().use { it.readText() }
I used @kabuko's answer to create an object that loads from a JSON file, using Gson, from the Resources:
package com.jingit.mobile.testsupport;
import java.io.*;
import android.content.res.Resources;
import android.util.Log;
import com.google.gson.Gson;
import com.google.gson.GsonBuilder;
/**
* An object for reading from a JSON resource file and constructing an object from that resource file using Gson.
*/
public class JSONResourceReader {
// === [ Private Data Members ] ============================================
// Our JSON, in string form.
private String jsonString;
private static final String LOGTAG = JSONResourceReader.class.getSimpleName();
// === [ Public API ] ======================================================
/**
* Read from a resources file and create a {@link JSONResourceReader} object that will allow the creation of other
* objects from this resource.
*
* @param resources An application {@link Resources} object.
* @param id The id for the resource to load, typically held in the raw/ folder.
*/
public JSONResourceReader(Resources resources, int id) {
InputStream resourceReader = resources.openRawResource(id);
Writer writer = new StringWriter();
try {
BufferedReader reader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(resourceReader, "UTF-8"));
String line = reader.readLine();
while (line != null) {
writer.write(line);
line = reader.readLine();
}
} catch (Exception e) {
Log.e(LOGTAG, "Unhandled exception while using JSONResourceReader", e);
} finally {
try {
resourceReader.close();
} catch (Exception e) {
Log.e(LOGTAG, "Unhandled exception while using JSONResourceReader", e);
}
}
jsonString = writer.toString();
}
/**
* Build an object from the specified JSON resource using Gson.
*
* @param type The type of the object to build.
*
* @return An object of type T, with member fields populated using Gson.
*/
public <T> T constructUsingGson(Class<T> type) {
Gson gson = new GsonBuilder().create();
return gson.fromJson(jsonString, type);
}
}
To use it, you'd do something like the following (the example is in an InstrumentationTestCase
):
@Override
public void setUp() {
// Load our JSON file.
JSONResourceReader reader = new JSONResourceReader(getInstrumentation().getContext().getResources(), R.raw.jsonfile);
MyJsonObject jsonObj = reader.constructUsingGson(MyJsonObject.class);
}
Like @mah states, the Android documentation (https://developer.android.com/guide/topics/resources/providing-resources.html) says that json files may be saved in the /raw directory under the /res (resources) directory in your project, for example:
MyProject/
src/
MyActivity.java
res/
drawable/
graphic.png
layout/
main.xml
info.xml
mipmap/
icon.png
values/
strings.xml
raw/
myjsonfile.json
Inside an Activity
, the json file can be accessed through the R
(Resources) class, and read to a String:
Context context = this;
Inputstream inputStream = context.getResources().openRawResource(R.raw.myjsonfile);
String jsonString = new Scanner(inputStream).useDelimiter("\\A").next();
This uses the Java class Scanner
, leading to less lines of code than some other methods of reading a simple text / json file. The delimiter pattern \A
means 'the beginning of the input'. .next()
reads the next token, which is the whole file in this case.
There are multiple ways to parse the resulting json string:
- Use the Java / Android built in JSONObject and JSONArray objects, like here: JSON Array iteration in Android/Java. It may be convenient to get Strings, Integers etc. using the
optString(String name)
,optInt(String name)
etc. methods, not thegetString(String name)
,getInt(String name)
methods, because theopt
methods return null instead of an exception in case of failing. - Use a Java / Android json serializing / deserializing library like the ones mentiod here: https://medium.com/@IlyaEremin/android-json-parsers-comparison-2017-8b5221721e31