I have the following class, that is mapped by Jackson (simplified version):

public class POI { @JsonProperty("name") private String name; } 

In some cases the server returns "name": null and I would like to then set name to empty Java String.

Is there any Jackson annotation or should I just check for the null inside my getter and return empty string if the property is null?

1

4 Answers

Jackson 2.9 actually offers a new mechanism not yet mentioned: use of @JsonSetter for properties, and its equivalent "Config Overrides" for types like String.class. Longer explanation included in

but gist is that you can either mark field (or setter) like so:

@JsonSetter(nulls=Nulls.AS_EMPTY) public String stringValue; 

or configure mapper to do the same for all String value properties:

mapper.configOverride(String.class) .setSetterInfo(JsonSetter.Value.forValueNulls(Nulls.AS_EMPTY)); 

both of which would convert incoming null into empty value, which for Strings is "".

This also works for Collections and Maps as expected.

3

Again, this answer is for the SO users who happen to stumble upon this thread.

While the accepted answer stands accepted and valid in all its sense - it did not help me in the case where the decision to set null string values to empty string came only after we made our services available to iOS clients.

So, around 30-40 pojo's(increasing) and initializing them while instantiating the object in question or at the point of declaration was too much.

Here's how we did it.

public class CustomSerializerProvider extends DefaultSerializerProvider { public CustomSerializerProvider() { super(); } public CustomSerializerProvider(CustomSerializerProvider provider, SerializationConfig config, SerializerFactory jsf) { super(provider, config, jsf); } @Override public CustomSerializerProvider createInstance(SerializationConfig config, SerializerFactory jsf) { return new CustomSerializerProvider(this, config, jsf); } @Override public JsonSerializer<Object> findNullValueSerializer(BeanProperty property) throws JsonMappingException { if (property.getType().getRawClass().equals(String.class)) return Serializers.EMPTY_STRING_SERIALIZER_INSTANCE; else return super.findNullValueSerializer(property); } } 

And, the serializer

public class Serializers extends JsonSerializer<Object> { public static final JsonSerializer<Object> EMPTY_STRING_SERIALIZER_INSTANCE = new EmptyStringSerializer(); public Serializers() {} @Override public void serialize(Object o, JsonGenerator jsonGenerator, SerializerProvider serializerProvider) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException { jsonGenerator.writeString(""); } private static class EmptyStringSerializer extends JsonSerializer<Object> { public EmptyStringSerializer() {} @Override public void serialize(Object o, JsonGenerator jsonGenerator, SerializerProvider serializerProvider) throws IOException, JsonProcessingException { jsonGenerator.writeString(""); } } } 

And, then set the serializer in the ObjectMapper. (Jackson 2.7.4)

ObjectMapper nullMapper = new ObjectMapper(); nullMapper.setSerializerProvider(new CustomSerializerProvider()); 

Hoping, this will save someone some time.

3

A simple solution using no Jackson specialities: Write a Getter for name which returns an empty String instead of null as Jackson uses those to serialize.

public String getName() { return name != null ? name : ""; } 

Another way would be to write a custom deserializer. Look here:

You can either set it in the default constructor, or on declaration:

public class POI { @JsonProperty("name") private String name; public POI() { name = ""; } } 

OR

public class POI { @JsonProperty("name") private String name = ""; } 
1

Your Answer

Sign up or log in

Sign up using Google Sign up using Facebook Sign up using Email and Password

Post as a guest

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy