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25.3: JavaScript Object Notation - JSON

  • Page ID
    103217
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    The JSON format was inspired by the object and array format used in the JavaScript language. But since Python was invented before JavaScript, Python's syntax for dictionaries and lists influenced the syntax of JSON. So the format of JSON is nearly identical to a combination of Python lists and dictionaries.

    Here is a JSON encoding that is roughly equivalent to the simple XML from above:

    {
      "name" : "Chuck",
      "phone" : {
        "type" : "intl",
        "number" : "+1 734 303 4456"
       },
       "email" : {
         "hide" : "yes"
       }
    }

    You will notice some differences. First, in XML, we can add attributes like "intl" to the "phone" tag. In JSON, we simply have key-value pairs. Also the XML "person" tag is gone, replaced by a set of outer curly braces.

    In general, JSON structures are simpler than XML because JSON has fewer capabilities than XML. But JSON has the advantage that it maps directly to some combination of dictionaries and lists. And since nearly all programming languages have something equivalent to Python's dictionaries and lists, JSON is a very natural format to have two cooperating programs exchange data.

    JSON is quickly becoming the format of choice for nearly all data exchange between applications because of its relative simplicity compared to XML.


    This page titled 25.3: JavaScript Object Notation - JSON is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Chuck Severance via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.