A Variant containing the parsed JSON. Use @GDScript..typeof or the is keyword to check if it is what you expect. For example, if the JSON source starts with curly braces ({}), a Dictionary will be returned. If the JSON source starts with brackets ($(D ]), an [Array) will be returned.
Note: The JSON specification does not define integer or float types, but only a number type. Therefore, parsing a JSON text will convert all numerical values to double types.
Note: JSON objects do not preserve key order like Godot dictionaries, thus, you should not rely on keys being in a certain order if a dictionary is constructed from JSON. In contrast, JSON arrays retain the order of their elements:
var p = JSON.parse('"hello", "world", "!"')
if typeof(p.result) == TYPE_ARRAY:
print(p.result0) # Prints "hello"
else:
push_error("Unexpected results.")
A Variant containing the parsed JSON. Use @GDScript..typeof or the is keyword to check if it is what you expect. For example, if the JSON source starts with curly braces ({}), a Dictionary will be returned. If the JSON source starts with brackets ($(D ]), an [Array) will be returned. Note: The JSON specification does not define integer or float types, but only a number type. Therefore, parsing a JSON text will convert all numerical values to double types. Note: JSON objects do not preserve key order like Godot dictionaries, thus, you should not rely on keys being in a certain order if a dictionary is constructed from JSON. In contrast, JSON arrays retain the order of their elements: