There are several ways to retrieve the json array value:
Assume we have a jsonString
jsonString = "{\n" + " \"firstNames\": [ \n" + " \"Aaron\",\n" + " \"Abigail\",\n" + " \"Albert\",\n" + " \"Bob\"\n" + " ]\n" + "}";
(since many classes share similar names, I am using the groupId and artifactId for distinction.)
Simple cases: use generic JSONObjects and JSONArrays.
json-simple (which OP is using) json-simple website, maven :
org.json.simple.parser.JSONParser jsonParser = new org.json.simple.parser.JSONParser();
org.json.simple.JSONObject firstObject = (org.json.simple.JSONObject) jsonParser.parse(jsonString);
org.json.simple.JSONArray jsonArray = (org.json.simple.JSONArray) firstObject.get("firstNames");
System.out.println(jsonArray);
JSON in Java (mentioned in adendrata's answer): JSON-Java doc, maven
org.json.JSONObject secondObject = new org.json.JSONObject(jsonString);
org.json.JSONArray jsonArray2 = secondObject.getJSONArray("firstNames");
System.out.println(jsonArray2);
gson: Gson, maven
com.google.gson.JsonObject thirdObject = com.google.gson.JsonParser.parseString(jsonString).getAsJsonObject();
System.out.println(thirdObject.get("firstNames").getAsJsonArray());
For more complicated use cases, if you'd like to define your own class, and want to deserialize JSON string to your class, then you can use Gson or Jackson:
// Create your own class:
/*
public class YourOwnClass {
private List<String> firstNames;
public List<String> getFirstNames() {
return firstNames;
}
}
*/
Gson gson = new Gson();
YourOwnClass customObject1 = gson.fromJson(jsonString, YourOwnClass.class);
System.out.println(customObject1.getFirstNames());
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper();
YourOwnClass customObject2 = mapper.readValue(jsonString, YourOwnClass.class);
System.out.println(customObject2.getFirstNames());