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Hey I am building a chatbot using dialogflow and I am generating the responses by using a customized Webhook (I am programming in php). I am extracting data from my database and storing it in an array but when I send the array as a response to dialogflow it only shows the first row.
Here is my code:
<?php
header('Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8');
date_default_timezone_set("Asia/Bangkok");
$date = date("Y-m-d");
$time = date("H:i:s");
$json = file_get_contents('php://input');
$request = json_decode($json, true);
$input = fopen("log_json.txt", "w") or die("Unable to open file!");
fwrite($input,$json);
fclose($input);
function processMessage($update) {
if($update["queryResult"]["action"] == "ques"){
$bdd= new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=****', '****', '***', array(
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_INIT_COMMAND => "SET NAMES utf8")) ;
$data = array();
$nom= $update["queryResult"]["parameters"]["nom_aliment"];
$info=$update["queryResult"]["parameters"]["Information"];
$quantite=$update["queryResult"]["parameters"]["Quantite"];
$req=$bdd->prepare("SELECT * FROM TableCiqual WHERE alim_nom LIKE ? ");
$req->execute(array("%$nom%"));
while($resultat=$req->fetch()){
$variab=$resultat[$info]*$quantite/100;
$ppp =$resultat['alim_nom'].' '.$info.' : '.$variab;
$data=$ppp;
}
sendMessage(array(
"source" => $update["responseId"],
"fulfillmentText"=>$data,
"payload" => array(
"items"=>[
array(
"simpleResponse"=>
array(
"textToSpeech"=>"Bad request"
)
)
],
),
));
}
}
function sendMessage($parameters) {
echo json_encode($parameters);
}
I know that my query returns multiple results all these results are stored in the array $data that I send as a response in dialogflow. The problem is that dialogflow only shows me the first row of the array $data instead of the whole array with all the rows.
My question is : Is it possible to send an array as a response in dialogflow and if yes how so.
I think there are two issues here.
The first is that $data is not actually containing a list of your results. The line
$data = $ppp;
is assigning $ppp, which is a string, to $data rather than adding on to the end of the array. I think, for that line, you want something more like
$data[] = $ppp;
However, this doesn't solve your problem completely, since the fulfillmentText attribute in JSON isn't expecting an array - it is expecting a string. So you probably want to concatenate all of those entries with something like
"filfillmentText" => implode( "\n", $data );
However, this assumes that you both want a new line in between each answer and that the chat system you're using supports the feature this way - not all do. (And you haven't indicated which one you're using.)
I'm working on Laravel (v5.7) app that converts uploaded CSV (with contacts) into array that is then passed as argument when job class is being dispatched.
Here is the example of CSV file (format that is supported):
123456,Richard,Smith
654321,John,Doe
Uploaded (CSV) file is handled like this:
$file_path = $request->file_name->store('contacts');
$file = storage_path('app/' . $file_path);
$contactsIterator = $this->getContacts($file);
$contacts = iterator_to_array($contactsIterator); // Array of contacts from uploaded CSV file
protected function getContacts($file)
{
$f = fopen($file, 'r');
while ($line = fgets($f))
{
$row = explode(",", $line);
yield [
'phone' => !empty($row[0]) ? trim($row[0]) : '',
'firstname' => !empty($row[1]) ? trim($row[1]) : '',
'lastname' => !empty($row[2]) ? trim($row[2]) : '',
];
}
}
Finally, $contacts array is passed to a job that is dispatched:
ImportContacts::dispatch($contacts);
This job class looks like this:
public function __construct($contacts)
{
Log::info('ImportContacts#__construct START');
$this->contacts = $contacts;
Log::info('ImportContacts#__construct END');
}
public function handle()
{
Log::info('ImportContacts#handle');
}
... and everything worked fine (no errors) until I've tried with this CSV:
123456,Richardÿ,Smith
654321,John,Doe
Please notice ÿ. So, when I try with this CSV - I get this error exception:
/code_smsto/vendor/laravel/framework/src/Illuminate/Queue/Queue.php | 91 | Unable to JSON encode payload. Error code: 5
... and my log file looks like this:
error local 2019-11-11 17:17:18 /code_smsto/vendor/laravel/framework/src/Illuminate/Queue/Queue.php | 91 | Unable to JSON encode payload. Error code: 5
info local 2019-11-11 17:17:18 ImportContacts#__construct END
info local 2019-11-11 17:17:18 ImportContacts#__construct START
As you can see - handle method was never executed. If I remove ÿ - no errors and handle is executed.
I've tried to solve this, but without success:
Apply utf8_encode:
protected function getContacts($file, $listId)
{
$f = fopen($file, 'r');
while ($line = fgets($f))
{
$row = explode(",", $line);
yield [
'phone' => !empty($row[0]) ? utf8_encode($row[0]) : '',
'firstname' => !empty($row[1]) ? utf8_encode($row[1]) : '',
'lastname' => !empty($row[2]) ? utf8_encode($row[2]) : '',
];
}
}
... and it works (no errors, no matter if there's that ÿ), but then Greek and Cyrillic letters are turned into question marks. For example, this: Εθνικής will become ???????.
I also tried with mb_convert_encoding($row[1], 'utf-8') - and it doesn't turn Greek or Cyrillic letter into question marks, but this ÿ character will become ?.
Move "handling" (converting to array) of uploaded CSV file into #handle method of a Job class worked, but then I was not able to store the data from that array into DB (MongoDB). Please see the update below.
DEBUGGING:
This is what I get from dd($contacts);:
So, it has that "b" where ÿ is. And, after some "googling" I found that this "b" means "binary string", that is, a non unicode string, on which functions operate at the byte level (What does the b in front of string literals do?).
What I understand is this: When dispatching Job class, Laravel tries to "JSON encode" it (passed arguments/data) but it fails because there are binary data (non-unicode strings).
Anyway, I was not able to find a solution (to be able to handle such CSV file with ÿ).
I am using:
Laravel 5.7
PHP 7.1.31-1+ubuntu16.04.1+deb.sury.org+1 (cli) (built: Aug 7 2019 10:22:48) ( NTS )
Redis powered queues
UPDATE
When I move "handling" (converting to array) of uploaded CSV file into #handle method of a Job class - I don't get this error (Unable to JSON encode payload. Error code: 5), but when I try to store that problematic binary data with ÿ (b"Richardÿ") into MongoDB - it fails. The weird thing is that I don't get any error-exception message in log file, so I put all in try-catch like this:
try {
// Insert data into MongoDB
} catch (Exception $e) {
Log::info($e->getFile());
Log::info($e->getLine());
Log::info($e->getMessage());
}
... and this is the result:
Anyway, I believe that it failed because of b"Richardÿ", and I guess that the solution is in encoding string, but as I've mentioned - I was not able to find a solution that works:
utf8_encode works (no errors, no matter if there's that ÿ), but then Greek and Cyrillic letters are turned into question marks. For example, this: Εθνικής will become ???????
mb_convert_encoding($row[1], 'utf-8') - it doesn't turn Greek or Cyrillic letter into question marks, but this ÿ character will become ?.
iconv('windows-1252', 'UTF-8', $row[1]) - works (no errors, no matter if there's that ÿ), but when there are Greek or Cyrillic letters - it fails (I get this error exception: iconv(): Detected an illegal character in input string)
You have several ways to deal with it but I'd recommend the following two. In both cases, the idea is that you store a UTF-8 string.
A simpler approach, figure out what encoding it is out of the (your) predefined list and convert it to UTF8.
$encoding = mb_detect_encoding($content, 'UTF-8, ISO-8859-1, WINDOWS-1252, WINDOWS-1251', true);
if ($encoding != 'UTF-8') {
$string = iconv($encoding, 'UTF-8//IGNORE', $row[1]);
}
The second approach is to use a third party library outlined in this answer
I have a stdClass object called $post that, when dumped via print_r(), returns the following:
stdClass Object (
[ID] => 12981
[post_title] => Alumnus' Dinner Coming Soon
[post_parent] => 0
[post_date] => 2012-01-31 12:00:51
)
Echoing the result from calling json_encode() on this object results in the following:
{
"ID": "12981",
"post_title": null,
"post_parent": "0",
"post_date": "2012-01-31 12:00:51"
}
I'm assuming that something with the single quote is causing json_encode to choke, but I don't know what format is needed to escape that. Any ideas?
EDIT: Fixed mismatch in code examples. I'm running PHP version 5.3.8
EDIT2: Directly after encoding the object, I did this:
echo json_last_error() == JSON_ERROR_UTF8;
This printed 1, which means that the following error occurred: "Malformed UTF-8 characters, possibly incorrectly encoded". json_last_error()
EDIT3: Calling utf8_decode() on the post title resulted in the following: "Alumnus? Dinner Coming Soon". This data is being pulled from a MySQL database - the post title in particular is a text field, UTF-8 encoded. Maybe this single-quote is improperly encoded? The thing is, I have a SQL GUI app, and it appears correctly in that.
You need to set the connection encoding before executing queries. How this is done depends on the API you are using to connect:
call mysql_set_charset("utf8") if you use the old, deprecated API.
call mysqli_set_charset("utf8") if you use mysqli
add the charset parameter to the connection string if you use PDO and PHP >= 5.3.6. In earlier versions you need to execute SET NAMES utf8.
When you obtain data from MySQL any text will be encoded in "client encoding", which is likely windows-1252 if you don't configure it otherwise. The character that is causing your problem is the "curly quote", seen as 92 in the hex dump, which confirms that the mysql client is encoding text in windows-1252.
Another thing you might consider is pass all text through utf8_encode, but in this case it wouldn't produce the correct result. PHP's utf8_encode converts iso-8859-1-encoded text. In this encoding \x92 is a non-printable control character, which would be converted into a non-printable control character in utf-8. You could use str_replace("\x92", "'", $input) to fix the problem for this particular character, but if there's any chance there will be any other non-ascii characters in the database you'll want to have the client use UTF-8.
What I've had to do in the past to json_encode on text with utf8 characters is
json_encode( utf8_encode( $s ) );
and in some cases
json_encode( htmlspecialchars( utf8_encode( $s ) ) );
the utf8_encode() to handle special characters (note, that's Encode, not Decode)
the htmlspecialchars() depending on how you mean to use the JSON string, you may be able to leave this out
and finally, json_encode() to get your JSON packet.
Since you want to json_encode an object, you would need to call utf8_encode() on each text part first, or write a simple recursive utf8_encode(). For your example case, this would do:
function myEncode($o) {
$o->title = utf8_encode($o->title);
return json_encode($o);
}
I would like to refer you about this issue,
on link
I suggest you use a json_encode wrapper like this :
function safe_json_encode($value){
if (version_compare(PHP_VERSION, '5.4.0') >= 0) {
$encoded = json_encode($value, JSON_PRETTY_PRINT);
} else {
$encoded = json_encode($value);
}
switch (json_last_error()) {
case JSON_ERROR_NONE:
return $encoded;
case JSON_ERROR_DEPTH:
return 'Maximum stack depth exceeded'; // or trigger_error() or throw new Exception()
case JSON_ERROR_STATE_MISMATCH:
return 'Underflow or the modes mismatch'; // or trigger_error() or throw new Exception()
case JSON_ERROR_CTRL_CHAR:
return 'Unexpected control character found';
case JSON_ERROR_SYNTAX:
return 'Syntax error, malformed JSON'; // or trigger_error() or throw new Exception()
case JSON_ERROR_UTF8:
$clean = utf8ize($value);
return safe_json_encode($clean);
default:
return 'Unknown error'; // or trigger_error() or throw new Exception()
}
}
function utf8ize($mixed) {
if (is_array($mixed)) {
foreach ($mixed as $key => $value) {
$mixed[$key] = utf8ize($value);
}
} else if (is_string ($mixed)) {
return utf8_encode($mixed);
}
return $mixed;
}
And after define these function you can use it direct,
echo safe_json_encode($response);
i was having the same issue while JSON encoding a php array from an ODBC query results, my Server's OBC is configured with 'en_US.819', is a production server so there is no way i can even touch that!!.
when i tried:
echo json_encode($GLOBALS['response'], true);
Where 'respose' is an array with the results, it works as intended as long no bizarre char is present, if so, json_encode fails returning empty.
The solution?.... UTF encode results while fetching the rows from query:
$result = odbc_exec($conn, $sql_query);
$response = array();
while( $row = odbc_fetch_array($result) ) {
$json['pers_identificador'] = $row['pers_identificador'];
$json['nombre_persona'] = utf8_encode( $row['nombre_persona'] );
$json['nombre_1'] = utf8_encode($row['nombre_1'] );
$json['nombre_2'] = utf8_encode($row['nombre_2'] );
array_push($response, $json);
}
Now json_encode works!!!, the resulting string is something like this:
{"page_id":300,"max_rows":"100","cant_rows":"12897","datos":
[{"pers_identificador":"301","cedula":"15250068","interno_1":"178202","interno_2":"","nombre_persona":"JOSE JUAN PANDOLFO ZAGORODKO","nombre_1":"JOSE","nombre_2":"JUAN",....
That fixed my issue.
You can try to set the charset in the database config:
'charset' => 'utf8',
'driver_options' => array(
PDO::MYSQL_ATTR_INIT_COMMAND => 'SET NAMES \'UTF8\''
)
EDIT#4: json_decode is failing and returning null on a seemingly valid json string. See below for more info
I am new to JSON/JSONP and I'm running into constant trouble accessing the values in the returned JSON with PHP. I have stripped the JSONP callback without issue using code I found on this board. I am getting a JSONP result from http://www.google.com/dictionary/json?callback=a&sl=en&tl=en&q=love and struggling to access the first result for the meaning. It's a quite complex result, and I need to access the first meaning (in the node "text") from the below JSON result.
http://pastebin.com/hBTeBTUL
My best attempt was:
if (isset($json->primaries[1]->entries[1]->terms[1]->text))
The above was the best I could do, I just keep getting errors trying to return that text node saying it is undefined. I'd prefer to work with objects rather than associative arrays too, if possible, so please avoid telling me to set it to return assoc array.
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I'm really stuck :P
EDIT:
$json->primaries[1]->entries[1]->terms[0]->text didn't seem to work either. Here is the complete script. Ignore the $params array as it is not used, was going to use it to generate the query.
The script has been edited since when I first posted, I had an invalid JSON object, but the error seems to be fixed as it will now parse through JSON formatters.
The error i'm getting trying to print the value out is
PHP Notice: Trying to get property of non-object in /home/outil2/Plugins/GDefine.php on line 23
EDIT#2: added json_decode which was in my original solution, but got lost in the second version
<?php
class GDefine extends Plugin {
public static $enabled = TRUE;
public function onReceivedData($data) {
if ($data["message"][0] == ".def") {
$params = array (
"callback" => "a",
"sl" => "en",
"tl" => "en",
"q" => $data["message"][1]
);
$jsonp = file_get_contents(
"http://www.google.com/dictionary/json?callback=a&sl=en&tl=en&q=" . $data["message"][1]);
$json = json_decode(substr($jsonp, 2, strlen($jsonp)-12));
var_dump($json);
print_r($json->primaries[1]->entries[1]->terms[0]->text);
if (isset($json->primaries[1]->entries[1]->terms[0]->text)) {
$text = $this->bold("Google Definition: ");
$text .= $this->teal($json->primaries[1]->entries[1]->terms[0]->text);
$this->privmsg($data["target"], $text);
} else {
$this->privmsg($data["target"], "error error error");
}
}
}
}
EDIT #3: this is the string I'm trying to json_decode, after using substr to remove the callback function, but am getting a NULL value returned on var_dump($json)
{"query":"love","sourceLanguage":"en","targetLanguage":"en","primaries":[{"type":"headword","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"love","language":"en","labels":[{"text":"Noun","title":"Part-of-speech"}]},{"type":"phonetic","text":"/lÉv/","language":"und"},{"type":"sound","text":"http://www.gstatic.com/dictionary/static/sounds/de/0/love.mp3","language":"und"}],"entries":[{"type":"related","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"loves","language":"und","labels":[{"text":"plural"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"An intense feeling of deep affection","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"babies fill parents with intense feelings of \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e","language":"en"}]},{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"their \x3cb\x3e\x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e for\x3c/b\x3e their country","language":"en"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"A deep romantic or sexual attachment to someone","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"it was \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e at first sight","language":"en"}]},{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"they were both \x3cb\x3ein \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e with\x3c/b\x3e her","language":"en"}]},{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"we were slowly \x3cb\x3efalling in \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e\x3c/b\x3e","language":"en"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"A personified figure of \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e, often represented as Cupid","language":"en"}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"A great interest and pleasure in something","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"his \x3cb\x3e\x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e for\x3c/b\x3e football","language":"en"}]},{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"we share a \x3cb\x3e\x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e of\x3c/b\x3e music","language":"en"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"Affectionate greetings conveyed to someone on one\x27s behalf","language":"en"}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"A formula for ending an affectionate letter","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"take care, lots of \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e, Judy","language":"en"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"A person or thing that one \x3cem\x3eloves\x3c/em\x3e","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"she was \x3cb\x3ethe \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e of his life\x3c/b\x3e","language":"en"}]},{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"their two great \x3cem\x3eloves\x3c/em\x3e are tobacco and whiskey","language":"en"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"A friendly form of address","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"it\x27s all right, \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e","language":"en"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"Used to express affectionate approval for someone","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"don\x27t fret, there\x27s a \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e","language":"en"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"(in tennis, squash, and some other sports) A score of zero; nil","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"\x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e fifteen","language":"en"}]},{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"he was down two sets to \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e","language":"en"}]}]}]},{"type":"headword","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"love","language":"en","labels":[{"text":"Verb","title":"Part-of-speech"}]},{"type":"phonetic","text":"/lÉv/","language":"und"},{"type":"sound","text":"http://www.gstatic.com/dictionary/static/sounds/de/0/love.mp3","language":"und"}],"entries":[{"type":"related","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"loved","language":"und","labels":[{"text":"past participle"}]},{"type":"text","text":"loves","language":"und","labels":[{"text":"3rd person singular present"}]},{"type":"text","text":"loving","language":"und","labels":[{"text":"present participle"}]},{"type":"text","text":"loved","language":"und","labels":[{"text":"past tense"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"Feel a deep romantic or sexual attachment to (someone)","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"do you \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e me?","language":"en"}]}]},{"type":"meaning","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"Like very much; find pleasure in","language":"en"}],"entries":[{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"I\x27d \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e a cup of tea, thanks","language":"en"}]},{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"I just \x3cem\x3elove\x3c/em\x3e dancing","language":"en"}]},{"type":"example","terms":[{"type":"text","text":"a fun-\x3cem\x3eloving\x3c/em\x3e girl","language":"en"}]}]}]}]}
I json_decode that and it returns NULL :(
You're trying to access an object that doesn't exist. Your code:
if (isset($json->primaries[1]->entries[1]->terms[1]->text)) // Doesn't exist
There's no terms[1] in entries[1] in primaries[1]. There's just 1 item; terms[0]. I think this will work for example:
if (isset($json->primaries[1]->entries[1]->terms[0]->text))
The first item in the array is indexed by 0 not 1, maybe that's your mistake.
Edit:
You also need to decode the JSON, change:
$json = substr($jsonp, 2, strlen($jsonp)-12);
to:
$json = json_decode(substr($jsonp, 2, strlen($jsonp)-12));
Edit:
You need to escape some unescaped characters in the JSON as well. Add this to your code:
Change:
$json = json_decode(substr($jsonp, 2, strlen($jsonp)-12));
to:
$json = substr($jsonp, 2, strlen($jsonp) - 12);
$json = str_replace("\\", "\\\\", $json);
$json = json_decode($json);
This question already has answers here:
PHP json_decode() returns NULL with seemingly valid JSON?
(29 answers)
Closed 4 months ago.
There is a strange behaviour with json_encode and json_decode and I can't find a solution:
My php application calls a php web service. The webservice returns json that looks like this:
var_dump($foo):
string(62) "{"action":"set","user":"123123123123","status":"OK"}"
now I like to decode the json in my application:
$data = json_decode($foo, true)
but it returns NULL:
var_dump($data):
NULL
I use php5.
The Content-Type of the response from the webservice: "text/html; charset=utf-8" (also tried to use "application/json; charset=utf-8")
What could be the reason?
Well, i had a similar issue and the problems was the PHP magic quotes in the server... here is my solution:
if(get_magic_quotes_gpc()){
$param = stripslashes($_POST['param']);
}else{
$param = $_POST['param'];
}
$param = json_decode($param,true);
EDIT:
Just did some quick inspection of the string provided by the OP. The small "character" in front of the curly brace is a UTF-8 B(yte) O(rder) M(ark) 0xEF 0xBB 0xBF. I don't know why this byte sequence is displayed as here.
Essentially the system you aquire the data from sends it encoded in UTF-8 with a BOM preceding the data. You should remove the first three bytes from the string before you throw it into json_decode() (a substr($string, 3) will do).
string(62) "{"action":"set","user":"123123123123","status":"OK"}"
^
|
This is the UTF-8 BOM
As Kuroki Kaze discovered, this character surely is the reason why json_decode fails. The string in its given form is not correctly a JSON formated structure (see RFC 4627)
Print the last json error when debugging.
json_decode( $so, true, 9 );
$json_errors = array(
JSON_ERROR_NONE => 'No error has occurred',
JSON_ERROR_DEPTH => 'The maximum stack depth has been exceeded',
JSON_ERROR_CTRL_CHAR => 'Control character error, possibly incorrectly encoded',
JSON_ERROR_SYNTAX => 'Syntax error',
);
echo 'Last error : ', $json_errors[json_last_error()], PHP_EOL, PHP_EOL;
Also use the json.stringify() function to double check your JSON syntax.
None of the solutions above worked for me, but html_entity_decode($json_string) did the trick
Try this
$foo = utf8_encode($foo);
$data = json_decode($foo, true);
make sure that if you sent the data by POST / GET, the server has not escape the quotes
$my_array = json_decode(str_replace ('\"','"', $json_string), true);
"{"action":"set","user":"123123123123","status":"OK"}"
This little apostrophe in the beginning - what is it? First symbol after the doublequote.
I had the similar problem in a live site. In my local site it was working fine. For fixing the same I Just have added the below code
json_decode(stripslashes($_GET['arr']));
I just put this
$result = mb_convert_encoding($result,'UTF-8','UTF-8');
$result = json_decode($result);
and it's working
Yesterday I spent 2 hours on checking and fixing that error finally I found that in JSON string that I wanted to decode were '\' slashes. So the logical thing to do is to use stripslashes function or something similiar to different PL.
Of course the best way is sill to print this var out and see what it becomes after json_decode, if it is null you can also use json_last_error() function to determine the error it will return integer but here are those int described:
0 = JSON_ERROR_NONE
1 = JSON_ERROR_DEPTH
2 = JSON_ERROR_STATE_MISMATCH
3 = JSON_ERROR_CTRL_CHAR
4 = JSON_ERROR_SYNTAX
5 = JSON_ERROR_UTF8
In my case I got output of json_last_error() as number 4 so it is JSON_ERROR_SYNTAX. Then I went and take a look into the string it self which I wanted to convert and it had in last line:
'\'title\' error ...'
After that is really just an easy fix.
$json = json_decode(stripslashes($response));
if (json_last_error() == 0) { // you've got an object in $json}
I had such problem with storage json-string in MySQL.
Don't really know why, but using htmlspecialchars_decode berofe json_decode resolved problem.
Non of these solutions worked for me.
What DID eventually work was checking the string encoding by saving it to a local file and opening with Notepad++.
I found out it was 'UTF-16', so I was able to convert it this way:
$str = mb_convert_encoding($str,'UTF-8','UTF-16');
Maybe you use thing as $ ${: these chars should be quoted.
I was having this problem, when I was calling a soap method to obtain my data, and then return a json string, when I tried to do json_decode I just keep getting null.
Since I was using nusoap to do the soap call I tried to just return json string and now I could do a json_decode, since I really neaded to get my data with a SOAP call, what I did was add ob_start() before include nusoap, id did my call genereate json string, and then before returning my json string I did ob_end_clean(), and GOT MY PROBLEM FIXED :)
EXAMPLE
//HRT - SIGNED
//20130116
//verifica se um num assoc deco é valido
ob_start();
require('/nusoap.php');
$aResponse['SimpleIsMemberResult']['IsMember'] = FALSE;
if(!empty($iNumAssociadoTmp))
{
try
{
$client = new soapclientNusoap(PartnerService.svc?wsdl',
array(
// OPTS
'trace' => 0,
'exceptions' => false,
'cache_wsdl' => WSDL_CACHE_NONE
)
);
//MENSAGEM A ENVIAR
$sMensagem1 = '
<SimpleIsMember>
<request>
<CheckDigit>'.$iCheckDigitAssociado.'</CheckDigit>
<Country>Portugal</Country>
<MemberNumber">'.$iNumAssociadoDeco.'</MemberNumber>
</request>
</SimpleIsMember>';
$aResponse = $client->call('SimpleIsMember',$sMensagem1);
$aData = array('dados'=>$aResponse->xpto, 'success'=>$aResponse->example);
}
}
ob_end_clean();
return json_encode($aData);
I don't know Why?
But this work:
$out = curl_exec($curl);
$out = utf8_encode($out);
$out = str_replace("?", "", $out);
if (substr($out,1,1)!='{'){
$out = substr($out,3);
}
$arResult["questions"] = json_decode($out,true);
without utf8_encode() - Don't work
Check the encoding of your file. I was using netbeans and had to use iso windows 1252 encoding for an old project and netbeans was using this encoding since then for every new file. json_decode will then return NULL. Saving the file again with UTF-8 encoding solved the problem for me.
In Notepad++, select Encoding (from the top menu) and then ensure that "Encode in UTF-8" is selected.
This will display any characters that shouldn't be in your json that would cause json_decode to fail.
Try using json_encode on the string prior to using json_decode... idk if will work for you but it did for me... I'm using laravel 4 ajaxing through a route param.
$username = "{username: john}";
public function getAjaxSearchName($username)
{
$username = json_encode($username);
die(var_dump(json_decode($username, true)));
}
You should try out json_last_error_msg(). It will give you the error message and tell you what is wrong. It was introduced in PHP 5.5.
$foo = "{"action":"set","user":"123123123123","status":"OK"}";
$data = json_decode($foo, true);
if($data == null) {
throw new Exception('Decoding JSON failed with the following message: '
. json_last_error_msg());
}
// ... JSON decode was good => Let's use the data
Before applying PHP related solutions, validate your JSON format. That may be the problem. Try below online JSON format validator. If your JSON format is invalid, correct it first, because PHP doesn't decode invalid JSON strings.
https://jsonformatter.org/
Laravel specific answer:
I got the same issue in Laravel. And this did the trick for me
$result = json_decode($result->getContent(), true);
In my case, when I was printing to the screen, json was fine and I copied and decode with json_deocode() function. It was working fine. But, when I was trying to put jsonString directly in the function, it was returning null because quotes were coming like these ". So I used htmlspecialchars_decode() function and now it is working fine.
I am new here, so if I am making any mistakes in writing answer then sorry for that. I hope it'll help somebody.
Sometimes the problem is generated when the content is compressed, so adding the Accept-Encoding: identity header can solve the problem without having to wrangle with the response.
$opts = array(
'http' =>
array(
'header' =>
array(
'Accept-Encoding: identity',
),
),
);
$context = stream_context_create($opts);
$contents = file_get_contents('URL', false, $context);
i had a similar problem, got it to work after adding '' (single quotes) around the json_encode string. Following from my js file:
var myJsVar = <?php echo json_encode($var); ?> ; -------> NOT WORKING
var myJsVar = '<?php echo json_encode($var); ?>' ; -------> WORKING
just thought of posting it in case someone stumbles upon this post like me :)