com.fasterxml.jackson.databind

Class JsonDeserializer<T>

    • Constructor Detail

      • JsonDeserializer

        public JsonDeserializer()
    • Method Detail

      • deserialize

        public abstract T deserialize(JsonParser jp,
                    DeserializationContext ctxt)
                               throws IOException,
                                      JsonProcessingException
        Method that can be called to ask implementation to deserialize JSON content into the value type this serializer handles. Returned instance is to be constructed by method itself.

        Pre-condition for this method is that the parser points to the first event that is part of value to deserializer (and which is never JSON 'null' literal, more on this below): for simple types it may be the only value; and for structured types the Object start marker. Post-condition is that the parser will point to the last event that is part of deserialized value (or in case deserialization fails, event that was not recognized or usable, which may be the same event as the one it pointed to upon call).

        Note that this method is never called for JSON null literal, and thus deserializers need (and should) not check for it.

        Parameters:
        jp - Parsed used for reading JSON content
        ctxt - Context that can be used to access information about this deserialization activity.
        Returns:
        Deserialized value
        Throws:
        IOException
        JsonProcessingException
      • deserializeWithType

        public Object deserializeWithType(JsonParser jp,
                                 DeserializationContext ctxt,
                                 TypeDeserializer typeDeserializer)
                                   throws IOException,
                                          JsonProcessingException
        Deserialization called when type being deserialized is defined to contain additional type identifier, to allow for correctly instantiating correct subtype. This can be due to annotation on type (or its supertype), or due to global settings without annotations.

        Default implementation may work for some types, but ideally subclasses should not rely on current default implementation. Implementation is mostly provided to avoid compilation errors with older code.

        Parameters:
        typeDeserializer - Deserializer to use for handling type information
        Throws:
        IOException
        JsonProcessingException
      • unwrappingDeserializer

        public JsonDeserializer<T> unwrappingDeserializer(NameTransformer unwrapper)
        Method that will return deserializer instance that is able to handle "unwrapped" value instances If no unwrapped instance can be constructed, will simply return this object as-is.

        Default implementation just returns 'this' indicating that no unwrapped variant exists

      • replaceDelegatee

        public JsonDeserializer<?> replaceDelegatee(JsonDeserializer<?> delegatee)
        Method that can be called to try to replace deserializer this deserializer delegates calls to. If not supported (either this deserializer does not delegate anything; or it does not want any changes), should either throw UnsupportedOperationException (if operation does not make sense or is not allowed); or return this deserializer as is.
        Since:
        2.1
      • handledType

        public Class<?> handledType()
        Method for accessing type of values this deserializer produces. Note that this information is not guaranteed to be exact -- it may be a more generic (super-type) -- but it should not be incorrect (return a non-related type).

        Default implementation will return null, which means almost same same as returning Object.class would; that is, that nothing is known about handled type.

        Since:
        2.3
      • getNullValue

        public T getNullValue()
        Method that can be called to determine value to be used for representing null values (values deserialized when JSON token is JsonToken.VALUE_NULL). Usually this is simply Java null, but for some types (especially primitives) it may be necessary to use non-null values.

        Note that deserializers are allowed to call this just once and then reuse returned value; that is, method is not guaranteed to be called once for each conversion.

        Default implementation simply returns null.

      • getEmptyValue

        public T getEmptyValue()
        Method called to determine value to be used for "empty" values (most commonly when deserializing from empty JSON Strings). Usually this is same as getNullValue() (which in turn is usually simply Java null), but it can be overridden for types. Or, if type should never be converted from empty String, method can also throw an exception.

        Default implementation simple calls getNullValue() and returns value.

      • getKnownPropertyNames

        public Collection<Object> getKnownPropertyNames()
        Method that will either return null to indicate that type being deserializers has no concept of properties; or a collection of identifiers for which toString will give external property name. This is only to be used for error reporting and diagnostics purposes (most commonly, to accompany "unknown property" exception).
        Since:
        2.0
      • isCachable

        public boolean isCachable()
        Method called to see if deserializer instance is cachable and usable for other properties of same type (type for which instance was created).

        Note that cached instances are still resolved on per-property basis, if instance implements ResolvableDeserializer: cached instance is just as the base. This means that in most cases it is safe to cache instances; however, it only makes sense to cache instances if instantiation is expensive, or if instances are heavy-weight.

        Default implementation returns false, to indicate that no caching is done.

      • getObjectIdReader

        public ObjectIdReader getObjectIdReader()
        Accessor that can be used to check whether this deserializer is expecting to possibly get an Object Identifier value instead of full value serialization, and if so, should be able to resolve it to actual Object instance to return as deserialized value.

        Default implementation returns null, as support can not be implemented generically. Some standard deserializers (most notably BeanDeserializer) do implement this feature, and may return reader instance, depending on exact configuration of instance (which is based on type, and referring property).

        Returns:
        ObjectIdReader used for resolving possible Object Identifier value, instead of full value serialization, if deserializer can do that; null if no Object Id is expected.
        Since:
        2.0
      • getDelegatee

        public JsonDeserializer<?> getDelegatee()
        Accessor that can be used to determine if this deserializer uses another deserializer for actual deserialization, by delegating calls. If so, will return immediate delegate (which itself may delegate to further deserializers); otherwise will return null.
        Returns:
        Deserializer this deserializer delegates calls to, if null; null otherwise.
        Since:
        2.1

Copyright © 2012-2013 FasterXML. All Rights Reserved.