JSON Serialization/Deserialization with Different Property Names
Jackson library offers the flexibility to specify different names for a property during serialization and deserialization. Consider the following scenario:
You have a class named "Coordinates" with a field "red". During deserialization from JSON, you want this field to be mapped to the property name "red". However, during serialization, you want the property name to be "r".
Solution
To achieve this, you can use the @JsonProperty annotation along with different method names for the getter and setter:
public class Coordinates { private int red; @JsonProperty("r") public int getRed() { return red; } @JsonProperty("red") public void setRed(int red) { this.red = red; } }
By using different method names for the getter and setter, Jackson recognizes them as distinct properties. During deserialization, it maps the JSON property "red" to the setter with the @JsonProperty("red") annotation. During serialization, it uses the getter with the @JsonProperty("r") annotation to retrieve the value and serialize it as the property "r".
Example
To illustrate this behavior, consider the following test code:
Coordinates c = new Coordinates(); c.setRed(5); ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper(); System.out.println("Serialization: " + mapper.writeValueAsString(c)); Coordinates r = mapper.readValue("{\"red\":25}", Coordinates.class); System.out.println("Deserialization: " + r.getRed());
Output:
Serialization: {"r":5} Deserialization: 25
As you can see, the property name "red" is used during deserialization, while the property name "r" is used during serialization.
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