I've always had a pet peeve of people using the phrase "JSON Object" to refer to any JavaScript object which happens to be the result of parsing JSON. It's just an object people!
Now I see we even have a special tag, jsonobject which does nothing to combat this misunderstanding. The tag excerpt:
A JSON Object is a textual representation of an object in JSON format as defined by RFC 7159 section 4; it is an unordered collection of name/value pairs (called "object members"), where names are JSON Strings and values can be any JSON value.
I am left wondering how this tag differs from the existing json tag, whose excerpt seems quite similar:
JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) is a 100% textual data interchange format originally inspired by JavaScript objects. It is widely used in RESTful web services. Parsers for JSON exist in nearly all languages, and libraries also exist which can deserialize JSON to native objects or serialize native objects to JSON.
The similar android-json tag:
JSON stands for (Java Script Object Notation). It is a simple and light-weight data interchange format that can be easily read by humans and machines.Android includes the org.json library which allow working efficiently with JSON. This provides easy parsing of JSON data and creating JSON strings
appears to be specific to Android.
I originally thought of making the three synonyms (namely, point jsonobject and android-json to json), but reviewing the questions, it appears as though there are many things out there called "JsonObject" or similar:
- the Android API exposes a
JsonObject
class (241 questions tagged both jsonobject and android, but not javascript nor java). These could be retagged android-json. - Additionally, there is a
JsonObject
class in plain old Java as well (195 questions tagged both jsonobject and java, but not javascript nor android). These could likely be retagged with json. - There is also a
json_object
class in a C library called json-c (2 questions tagged both jsonobject and c). It seems like these could be sufficiently tagged with json-c. - There is a
JSON_OBJECT
function in MySQL (there was one question tagged with both jsonobject and mysql without android or java, and I just changed that one to json).
I'm sure there are likely others, but I should think they could all be tagged with json if the fact that they are using the notation format is important to the question.
I'm not sure what exactly the best approach here is, thus I am not calling for burnination, retagging, or synonymizing. I'd like to hear the opinions of others what the appropriate course is.
is a useful term in languages other than JS
is the whole point of pydsigner's comment.json.load
) you create a native Python object, either adict
or alist
. True, the keys of a JSON-deriveddict
are always strings, but that's normally not an issue, and when converting a native Python object to a JSON string using thejson
module any non-string keys are converted to strings.dict
cannot have such duplicate keys; the same is generally true (AFAIK) of the native objects that JSON objects are usually converted to.jsonobject
tag?json
tag. If thejsonobject
tag excerpt or wiki mentioned anything about it being "the object which results from parsing a string in JSON format", I probably would have just edited it out of the JavaScript questions and gone on my way. Still seems ambiguous, however.[1, 2]
would be an object in Javascript, but it is not a JSON object.json
tag should define clearly the difference between Javascript Object and JSOn (or include a llink to a really good anbswer about it ?). I got myself trying to explain that to newcomers qui sometimes already. I know that most of them won't have read the wiki tag, but some will do, and answeres will know that there is an explanation/link in the tag wiki to be used when we will see the case another time.