Most data returned by Facebook APIs will be in the form of JSON strings. To help you work with them quickly, we've included the widely-used MiniJson as part of our distribution; see its documentation for further details. The most important method from that class, for present purposes, is Deserialize()
. To use it, you will have to import the implementation of MiniJSON included in the Facebook namespace: using Facebook.MiniJSON;
.
Creates a dictionary from a JSON string representation.
public static object Deserialize( string json )
Name | Type | Description |
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| The string has to be a legal JSON object. In the simplest case, a JSON object is an atomic value, which must be of an allowed type ( |
To use Deserialize
, specify the type of object you expect to get from it, as in the example below.
// Suppose you have a string jsonString whose value is: // {"name": "Jason Stringe", "user_id": "75782347", // "friends": // {"data": [{"first_name": "Sally", "user_id": "98198298"}]} // } //Notice that we're using the Facebook implementation of MiniJSON: using Facebook.MiniJSON; ... var dict = Json.Deserialize(jsonString) as Dictionary<string,object>; string userName = dict["name"]; object friendsH; var friends = new List<object>(); string friendName; if(dict.TryGetValue ("friends", out friendsH)) { friends = (List<object>)(((Dictionary<string, object>)friendsH) ["data"]); if(friends.Count > 0) { var friendDict = ((Dictionary<string,object>)(friends[0])); var friend = new Dictionary<string, string>(); friend["id"] = (string)friendDict["id"]; friend["first_name"] = (string)friendDict["first_name"]; } }