// ArduinoJson - arduinojson.org // Copyright Benoit Blanchon 2014-2018 // MIT License // // This example shows how to generate a JSON document with ArduinoJson. #include void setup() { // Initialize Serial port Serial.begin(9600); while (!Serial) continue; // The JSON document // // Inside the brackets, 200 is the RAM allocated to this document. // Don't forget to change this value to match your requirement. // Use arduinojson.org/assistant to compute the capacity. StaticJsonDocument<200> doc; // StaticJsonObject allocates memory on the stack, it can be // replaced by DynamicJsonDocument which allocates in the heap. // // DynamicJsonDocument doc(200); // Make our document be an object JsonObject& root = doc.to(); // Add values in the object // // Most of the time, you can rely on the implicit casts. // In other case, you can do root.set("time", 1351824120); root["sensor"] = "gps"; root["time"] = 1351824120; // Add an array. // JsonArray& data = root.createNestedArray("data"); data.add(48.756080); data.add(2.302038); serializeJson(root, Serial); // This prints: // {"sensor":"gps","time":1351824120,"data":[48.756080,2.302038]} Serial.println(); serializeJsonPretty(root, Serial); // This prints: // { // "sensor": "gps", // "time": 1351824120, // "data": [ // 48.756080, // 2.302038 // ] // } } void loop() { // not used in this example } // See also // -------- // // The website arduinojson.org contains the documentation for all the functions // used above. It also includes an FAQ that will help you solve any // serialization problem. // Please check it out at: https://arduinojson.org/ // // The book "Mastering ArduinoJson" contains a tutorial on serialization. // It begins with a simple example, like the one above, and then adds more // features like serializing directly to a file or an HTTP request. // Please check it out at: https://arduinojson.org/book/