quarta-feira, 8 de novembro de 2017

JSON vs XML


Both JSON and XML can be used to receive data from a web server.

The following JSON and XML examples both defines an employees object, with an array of 3 employees:

JSON Example

{"employees":[
    { "firstName":"John""lastName":"Doe" },
    { "firstName":"Anna""lastName":"Smith" },
    { "firstName":"Peter""lastName":"Jones" }
]}

XML Example

<employees>
    <employee>
        <firstName>John</firstName> <lastName>Doe</lastName>
    </employee>
    <employee>
        <firstName>Anna</firstName> <lastName>Smith</lastName>
    </employee>
    <employee>
        <firstName>Peter</firstName> <lastName>Jones</lastName>
    </employee>
</employees>

 JSON is Like XML Because

  • Both JSON and XML are "self describing" (human readable)
  • Both JSON and XML are hierarchical (values within values)
  • Both JSON and XML can be parsed and used by lots of programming languages
  • Both JSON and XML can be fetched with an XMLHttpRequest

JSON is Unlike XML Because

  • JSON doesn't use end tag
  • JSON is shorter
  • JSON is quicker to read and write
  • JSON can use arrays
The biggest difference is:
 XML has to be parsed with an XML parser. JSON can be parsed by a standard JavaScript function.

Why JSON is Better Than XML

XML is much more difficult to parse than JSON.
JSON is parsed into a ready-to-use JavaScript object.
For AJAX applications, JSON is faster and easier than XML:
Using XML
  • Fetch an XML document
  • Use the XML DOM to loop through the document
  • Extract values and store in variables
Using JSON
  • Fetch a JSON string
  • JSON.Parse the JSON string
https://www.w3schools.com/js/js_json_xml.asp

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