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Course Content
Advanced Java

Exchanging Data

When exchanging data between a browser and a server, the data can only be text.

JSON is text, and we can convert any JavaScript object into JSON, and send JSON to the server.

We can also convert any JSON received from the server into JavaScript objects.

This way we can work with the data as JavaScript objects, with no complicated parsing and translations.

Sending Data

If you have data stored in a JavaScript object, you can convert the object into JSON, and send it to a server:

Example

var myObj = { “name”:“John”, “age”:31, “city”:“New York” };
var myJSON = JSON.stringify(myObj);
window.location = “demo_json.php?x=” + myJSON;

Receiving Data

If you receive data in JSON format, you can convert it into a JavaScript object:

Example

var myJSON = ‘{ “name”:”John”, “age”:31, “city”:”New York” }’;
var myObj = JSON.parse(myJSON);
document.getElementById(“demo”).innerHTML = myObj.name;

Storing Data

When storing data, the data has to be a certain format, and regardless of where you choose to store it, text is always one of the legal formats.

JSON makes it possible to store JavaScript objects as text.

Example

Storing data in local storage

//Storing data:
myObj = { “name”:“John”, “age”:31, “city”:“New York” };
myJSON = JSON.stringify(myObj);
localStorage.setItem(“testJSON”, myJSON);

//Retrieving data:
text = localStorage.getItem(“testJSON”);
obj = JSON.parse(text);
document.getElementById(“demo”).innerHTML = obj.name