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Deserialize JSON into an Object(s) using System.Text.Json [duplicate]

I am trying to use the System.Text.Json.Serialization namespace to deserialize the text within a JSON file into an Object named Note, to then access its properties. With the later intent to read-in multiple Note objects, to then store in a List for example.

There don't seem to be many examples on the usage of this namespace, other than within the DOTNET docs https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/standard/serialization/system-text-json-how-to

This is my attempt based on the examples given. Which throws the error shown below, if you know what I'm doing wrong please let me know, thanks.

class Note
{
    public DateTime currentDate { get; set; }
    public string summary { get; set; }
    public Note(DateTime _date, string _sum)
    {
        currentDate = _date;
        summary = _sum;
    }
}

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        //Write json data
        string path = @"D:\Documents\Projects\Visual Projects\Notes Data\ThingsDone.json";

        DateTime date = DateTime.Now;
        string givenNote = "summary text";

        Note completeNote = new Note(date, givenNote);

        string serialString = JsonSerializer.Serialize(completeNote);
        File.WriteAllText(path, serialString);

        //Read json data
        string jsonString = File.ReadAllText(path);
        Note results = JsonSerializer.Deserialize<Note>(jsonString);
        Console.WriteLine(results.summary);
    }
}

Also I've looked into Json.NET and other options, but I would rather use this one (if possible)

like image 687
Luc Avatar asked Mar 17 '26 06:03

Luc


1 Answers

Your Note class needs a parameterless constructor

class Note
{
    public DateTime currentDate { get; set; }
    public string summary { get; set; }

    // add this
    public Note()
    {
    }

    public Note(DateTime _date, string _sum)
    {
        currentDate = _date;
        summary = _sum;
    }
}

It might be worth thinking if you need your original two parameter constructor. If you removed it, then you could instantiate a new Note like this

var completeNote = new Note
{
    currentdate = date,
    summary = givenNote
};
like image 172
Kevin Brydon Avatar answered Mar 20 '26 08:03

Kevin Brydon



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