JSON vers C#
Convertir JSON en classes ou records C# avec les attributs Newtonsoft.Json ou System.Text.Json
Comparer des outils similaires
About This Tool
How to Use This Tool
Paste JSON Source Data
Enter the JSON data you want to convert. The tool automatically validates your JSON input and shows any syntax errors before conversion. Ensure your JSON is valid for best results.
Configure Conversion Options
Adjust conversion settings like indentation, handling of JSON-specific features, and CSHARP output style. Smart defaults work for most cases, but you can customize how JSON structures map to CSHARP.
Review CSHARP Output
The converted CSHARP appears in real-time. Review carefully to ensure data integrity is maintained. Copy to clipboard or download the CSHARP file. Verify the output with our CSHARP validator if needed.
Technical Implementation
Best Practices & Tips
- ✓Validate input before conversion. Ensure your JSON is valid before converting to CSHARP. Invalid JSON often produces unexpected CSHARP results.
- ✓Review conversion results. Spot-check the CSHARP output to ensure data structure and values are preserved correctly. Pay special attention to nested objects and special characters.
- ✓Handle conversion edge cases. Test with empty values, null fields, special characters, and large datasets. JSON-to-CSHARP conversion can have nuances that require attention.
- ✓Use related tools in sequence. After conversion, use our CSHARP formatter and validator to ensure the output is clean and valid. This creates a reliable conversion workflow.
Troubleshooting Common Issues
Problem: Conversion output is missing data or incorrect
Solution: First validate your JSON input. Invalid JSON often converts to incomplete CSHARP. Also check if the data structure is compatible - some JSON features may not have CSHARP equivalents.
Example: JSON comments or special attributes might not convert to CSHARP if CSHARP doesn't support those features.
Problem: Special characters appear corrupted after conversion
Solution: Ensure your JSON uses proper character encoding (UTF-8). Special characters, emojis, or international text require consistent encoding throughout the conversion process.
Example: If you see � or garbled text, your source JSON might not be UTF-8 encoded.
Related Development Topics
JSON to CSHARP Migration Strategies
Discover best practices for migrating from JSON to CSHARP, including data transformation patterns, handling edge cases, and maintaining data integrity. Learn when and why to use CSHARP instead of JSON.
