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-rw-r--r--json.html.markdown49
1 files changed, 38 insertions, 11 deletions
diff --git a/json.html.markdown b/json.html.markdown
index f57b82b8..cde7bc40 100644
--- a/json.html.markdown
+++ b/json.html.markdown
@@ -4,19 +4,36 @@ filename: learnjson.json
contributors:
- ["Anna Harren", "https://github.com/iirelu"]
- ["Marco Scannadinari", "https://github.com/marcoms"]
+ - ["himanshu", "https://github.com/himanshu81494"]
+ - ["Michael Neth", "https://github.com/infernocloud"]
---
-As JSON is an extremely simple data-interchange format, this is most likely going
-to be the simplest Learn X in Y Minutes ever.
+As JSON is an extremely simple data-interchange format, this is most likely going to be the simplest Learn X in Y Minutes ever.
-JSON in its purest form has no actual comments, but most parsers will accept
-C-style (`//`, `/* */`) comments. For the purposes of this, however, everything is
-going to be 100% valid JSON. Luckily, it kind of speaks for itself.
+JSON in its purest form has no actual comments, but most parsers will accept C-style (`//`, `/* */`) comments. Some parsers also tolerate a trailing comma (i.e. a comma after the last element of an array or the after the last property of an object), but they should be avoided for better compatibility.
+
+For the purposes of this, however, everything is going to be 100% valid JSON. Luckily, it kind of speaks for itself.
+
+A JSON value must be a number, a string, an array, an object, or one of the following 3 literal names: true, false, null.
+
+Supporting browsers are: Firefox 3.5+, Internet Explorer 8.0+, Chrome 1.0+, Opera 10.0+, and Safari 4.0+.
+
+File extension for JSON files is ".json" and the MIME type for JSON text is "application/json".
+
+Many programming languages have support for serializing (encoding) and unserializing (decoding) JSON data into native data structures. Javascript has implicit support for manipulating JSON text as data.
+
+More information can be found at http://www.json.org/
+
+JSON is built on two structures:
+* A collection of name/value pairs. In various languages, this is realized as an object, record, struct, dictionary, hash table, keyed list, or associative array.
+* An ordered list of values. In most languages, this is realized as an array, vector, list, or sequence.
+
+An object with various name/value pairs.
```json
{
"key": "value",
-
+
"keys": "must always be enclosed in double quotes",
"numbers": 0,
"strings": "Hellø, wørld. All unicode is allowed, along with \"escaping\".",
@@ -46,13 +63,23 @@ going to be 100% valid JSON. Luckily, it kind of speaks for itself.
[0, 0, 0, 1]
]
],
-
+
"alternative style": {
"comment": "check this out!"
- , "comma position": "doesn't matter - as long as its before the value, then its valid"
+ , "comma position": "doesn't matter - as long as it's before the next key, then it's valid"
, "another comment": "how nice"
- },
-
- "that was short": "And, you're done. You now know everything JSON has to offer."
+ }
}
```
+
+A single array of values by itself is also valid JSON.
+
+```json
+[1, 2, 3, "text", true]
+```
+
+Objects can be a part of the array as well.
+
+```json
+[{"name": "Bob", "age": 25}, {"name": "Jane", "age": 29}, {"name": "Jack", "age": 31}]
+```