When serializing arbitrary data via JSON.NET, any property that is null is written to the JSON as
"propertyName" : null
This is correct, of course.
However I have a requirement to automatically translate all nulls into the default empty value, e.g. null string
s should become String.Empty
, null int?
s should become 0
, null bool?
s should be false
, and so on.
NullValueHandling
is not helpful, since I dont want to Ignore
nulls, but neither do I want to Include
them (Hmm, new feature?).
So I turned to implementing a custom JsonConverter
.
While the implementation itself was a breeze, unfortunately this still didnt work - CanConvert()
is never called for a property that has a null value, and therefore WriteJson()
is not called either. Apparently nulls are automatically serialized directly into null
, without the custom pipeline.
For example, here is a sample of a custom converter for null strings:
public class StringConverter : JsonConverter
{
public override bool CanConvert(Type objectType)
{
return typeof(string).IsAssignableFrom(objectType);
}
...
public override void WriteJson(JsonWriter writer,
object value,
JsonSerializer serializer)
{
string strValue = value as string;
if (strValue == null)
{
writer.WriteValue(String.Empty);
}
else
{
writer.WriteValue(strValue);
}
}
}
Stepping through this in the debugger, I noted that neither of these methods are called for properties that have a null value.
Delving into JSON.NET's sourcecode, I found that (apparently, I didnt go into a lot of depth) there is a special case checking for nulls, and explictly calling .WriteNull()
.
For what it's worth, I did try implementing a custom JsonTextWriter
and overriding the default .WriteNull()
implementation...
public class NullJsonWriter : JsonTextWriter
{
...
public override void WriteNull()
{
this.WriteValue(String.Empty);
}
}
However, this can't work well, since the WriteNull()
method knows nothing about the underlying datatype. So sure, I can output ""
for any null, but that doesnt work well for e.g. int, bool, etc.
So, my question - short of converting the entire data structure manually, is there any solution or workaround for this?
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