Convert an iOS objective c object to a JSON string

Sankar picture Sankar · May 11, 2012 · Viewed 66.1k times · Source

I have an objective C class like,

@interface message : NSObject {
 NSString *from;
 NSString *date;
 NSString *msg;
}

I have an NSMutableArray of instances of this message class. I want serialize all the instances in the NSMutableArray into a JSON file, using the new JSONSerialization APIs in iOS 5 SDK. How can I do this ?

Is creating a NSDictionary of each key, by iterating through each instance of the elements in the NSArray ? Can someone help with code of how to solve this ? I am not able to get good results in Google, as "JSON" skews the results to server-side calls and transfer of data instead of serialization. Thanks a lot.

EDIT:

NSError *writeError = nil; 
NSData *jsonData = [NSJSONSerialization dataWithJSONObject:notifications options:NSJSONWritingPrettyPrinted error:&writeError];
NSString *jsonString = [[NSString alloc] initWithData:jsonData encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding]; 
NSLog(@"JSON Output: %@", jsonString);

Answer

Damo picture Damo · May 11, 2012

EDIT: I have made a dummy app that should be a good example for you.

I create a Message class from your code snippet;

//Message.h
@interface Message : NSObject {
    NSString *from_;
    NSString *date_;
    NSString *msg_;
}

@property (nonatomic, retain) NSString *from;
@property (nonatomic, retain) NSString *date;
@property (nonatomic, retain) NSString *msg;

-(NSDictionary *)dictionary;

@end

//Message.m
#import "Message.h"

@implementation Message

@synthesize from = from_;
@synthesize date = date_;
@synthesize msg = mesg_;

-(void) dealloc {
    self.from = nil;
    self.date = nil;
    self.msg = nil;
    [super dealloc];
}

-(NSDictionary *)dictionary {
    return [NSDictionary dictionaryWithObjectsAndKeys:self.from,@"from",self.date,    @"date",self.msg, @"msg", nil];
}

Then I set up an NSArray of two messages in the AppDelegate. The trick is that not only does the top level object (notifications in your case) need to be serializable but so do all the elements that notifications contains: Thats why I created the dictionary method in the Message class.

//AppDelegate.m
...
Message* message1 = [[Message alloc] init];
Message* message2 = [[Message alloc] init];

message1.from = @"a";
message1.date = @"b";
message1.msg = @"c";

message2.from = @"d";
message2.date = @"e";
message2.msg = @"f";

NSArray* notifications = [NSArray arrayWithObjects:message1.dictionary, message2.dictionary, nil];
[message1 release];
[message2 release];


NSError *writeError = nil; 
NSData *jsonData = [NSJSONSerialization dataWithJSONObject:notifications options:NSJSONWritingPrettyPrinted error:&writeError];
NSString *jsonString = [[NSString alloc] initWithData:jsonData encoding:NSUTF8StringEncoding]; 
NSLog(@"JSON Output: %@", jsonString);

@end

The output when I run the application is thus:

2012-05-11 11:58:36.018 stack[3146:f803] JSON Output: [ { "msg" : "c", "from" : "a", "date" : "b" }, { "msg" : "f", "from" : "d", "date" : "e" } ]

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