var file = new StreamReader("policies.json"); string json = file.ReadToEnd(); var oldIntent = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<AppPoliciesResponse>(json);
Is that requirement set in stone? Because it might be easier to just return "The fol..." or even {content: "The fol..."}. It already knows what the header is, because it sent that to the server in the request
In any case, you want to deserialize 'policies.json' into Dictionary<string, string>... then, you can extract the content by the key provided in the request (first checking it exists, of course)
var file = new StreamReader("policies.json");
string json = file.ReadToEnd();
var policiesFile = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<AppPoliciesResponse>(json);
I have a json file that's online and I can get it with this:
using System;
using System.Net;
using System.Text.Json;
using System.Text.Json.Serialization;
namespace games
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
using (WebClient wc = new System.Net.WebClient())
{
string json = wc.DownloadString("https://www.website.com/games.json");
}
}
}
}
public class Game
{
public string Genre { get; set; }
public void Genres()
{
Console.WriteLine("The genres of this game are " + Genre);
}
}
I can get it to print stuff to the console manually if I add this
using System;
using System.Net;
using System.Text.Json;
using System.Text.Json.Serialization;
namespace games
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
using (WebClient wc = new System.Net.WebClient())
{
string json = wc.DownloadString("https://www.website.com/games.json");
}
Game game = new Game();
game.Genre = "Action";
game.Genres();
}
public class Game
sorry for the giant paste
but I'm trying to pull the genres from the json
I can Console.WriteLine(json); and get the whole list, it's quite large
I'm just not sure how to translate that into c# objects that I can work with
and there are a bunch of other fields, I trimmed it down to just genre for simplicity
The class should look like this:
public class Game {
public string[] Genres { get; set; }
public void PrintGenres() {
foreach(var genre in genres) Console.WriteLine(genre);
}
}
In the json, genres describes an array, as you can see by the [] being used instead of just a string
(Also makes sense that something call genres can actually hold several genres instead of just one despite being called a plural)
Then you deserialize the json into a Game[] to get multiple games, each having multiple genres
This will make a string of the Game[] - which has a class of Array and can just tell you what class it holds, and therefore tells you "I am an array of type Game"
@Squirrelkiller do you know how to handle exceptions with dictionaries? I'm trying to add error handling for my code when a bad request is created via the endpoint
public TypedResponse<AppPoliciesResponse> GetPolicies(string content) { //Need to store on s3 var policyFile = new StreamReader("policies.json"); string json = policyFile.ReadToEnd();
var policyDic = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Dictionary<string, string>>(json);
if (policyDic[content] == null) throw new ApiException(HttpStatusCode.BadRequest, "Policy does not exist");
var policy = policyDic[content];
return new TypedResponse<AppPoliciesResponse> { Data = new AppPoliciesResponse() { Content = policy,
But it doesn't hit the line if (policyDic[content] == null)
public TypedResponse<AppPoliciesResponse> GetPolicies(string content)
{
//Need to store on s3
var policyFile = new StreamReader("policies.json");
string json = policyFile.ReadToEnd();
var policyDic = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Dictionary<string, string>>(json);
if (policyDic[content] == null)
throw new ApiException(HttpStatusCode.BadRequest, "Policy does not exist");
var policy = policyDic[content];
so I wanted it to hit if(policyDic[content] == null ... and then show my error message but instead I get this error message: The given key 'termsandconditions' was not present in the dictionary.
Then you'd have a different question. Currently your question is "Do you have an entry for my content?". With an array it will either be "Do you have entries?" or "Do you have a certain number of entries?", so you either go `arr.Any()` or `arr.Length >= requiredNumberOfEntries`.
so strange it's still skipping that check @Squirrelkiller this is what I added
public TypedResponse<AppPoliciesResponse> GetPolicies(string content)
{
//Need to store on s3
var policyFile = new StreamReader("policies.json");
string json = policyFile.ReadToEnd();
var policyDic = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Dictionary<string, string>>(json);
if (policyDic.ContainsKey(content))
throw new ApiException(HttpStatusCode.BadRequest, "Policy does not exist");
var policy = policyDic[content];
using System;
namespace games
{
public class Game
{
public string[] Genres { get; set; }
public void PrintGenres()
{
foreach(var genre in Genres)
Console.WriteLine(game.PrintGenres());
}
}
}
Step1 : Press PrintScreen button and save it to a file. Step2 : Set it as desktop wallpaper and minimize all windows. Step3 : Right click at desktop hide the desktop icon in menu and then set the taskbar auto hide.
Step1 : Press PrintScreen button and save it to a file. Step2 : Set it as desktop wallpaper and minimize all windows. Step3 : Right click at desktop hide the desktop icon in menu and then set the taskbar auto hide. Step4 : Stay behind and watch when your colleague back from toilet.
using System;
using System.Net;
using Newtonsoft.Json;
namespace games
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
using (WebClient wc = new System.Net.WebClient())
{
string jsonGames = wc.DownloadString("https://www.website.com/games.json");
Game[] games = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Game[]>(jsonGames);
}
}
}
}
and Game.cs
using System;
namespace games
{
public class Game
{
public string[] Genres { get; set; }
public void PrintGenres()
{
Console.WriteLine("This game has the following genres:");
foreach(var genre in genres)
Console.WriteLine(genre);
}
}
}
@Jay The function static void Main in the Program.cs is the code that actually gets executed. So to actually output the games, you have to call the PrintGenres() after you deserialize the games.
string jsonGames = ...
Game[] games = JsonConvert...
foreach(var game in games)
game.PrintGenres();
LINQ basically has Where-clauses in every call: Any() can have a filter in it like .Any(obj => obj == 3), Count() like above, Single too. I see many calls that chain things like objects.Where(obj => obj.Property == "value").Count(), although it is unnecessary.
You them like a sentence: "Count the games where a game's genres include Action"