Since Groovy 1.8 we can use JSONBuilder to create JSON data structures. With Groovy 1.8.1 we have a variant of JsonBuilder
that will not create a data structure in memory, but will stream directly to a writer the JSON structure: StreamingJsonBuilder
. This is useful in situations where we don't have to change the structure and need a memory efficient way to write JSON.
import groovy.json.* def jsonWriter = new StringWriter() def jsonBuilder = new StreamingJsonBuilder(jsonWriter) jsonBuilder.message { header { from(author: 'mrhaki') to 'Groovy Users', 'Java Users' } body "Check out Groovy's gr8 JSON support." } def json = jsonWriter.toString() assert json == '{"message":{"header":{"from":{"author":"mrhaki"},"to":["Groovy Users","Java Users"]},"body":"Check out Groovy\'s gr8 JSON support."}}' def prettyJson = JsonOutput.prettyPrint(json) assert prettyJson == '''{ "message": { "header": { "from": { "author": "mrhaki" }, "to": [ "Groovy Users", "Java Users" ] }, "body": "Check out Groovy's gr8 JSON support." } }''' new StringWriter().withWriter { sw -> def builder = new StreamingJsonBuilder(sw) // Without root element. builder name: 'Groovy', supports: 'JSON' assert sw.toString() == '{"name":"Groovy","supports":"JSON"}' } new StringWriter().with { sw -> def builder = new StreamingJsonBuilder(sw) // Combine named parameters and closures. builder.user(name: 'mrhaki') { active true } assert sw.toString() == '{"user":{"name":"mrhaki","active":true}}' }