Cannot read String response of Retrofit and RxJava POST request - android

Api Interface
#FormUrlEncoded
#POST("register.php")
Observable<String> registerUser(#Field("email") String email, #Field("password") String password);
In my MVP presenter
onCreate{
Observable<String> registerUserObservable=
apiInterface.registerUser("test#gmail.com", "1234");
registerUserObservable.subscribeOn("schedulers.io())
.observeOn(AndroidSchedulers.mainThread())
.subscribe(this::handleResult, this::handleError);
}
//methods
private void handleResult(String response){
Log.d(TAG, response);
}
private void handleError(Throwable throwable){
Log.d(TAG, throwable.getMessage());
}
These are my code for retrofit and rxjava and I am suppose to post an email and password to register a user. The server should return a string on success and a string on failure too.
Gson gson = new GsonBuilder()
.setLenient()
.create();
retrofit = new retrofit2.Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(BASE_URL)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
.addCallAdapterFactory(RxJava2CallAdapterFactory.create())
.build();
I added the gson setLenient code portion because it gives me
Use JsonReader.setLenient(true) to accept malformed JSON at line 2 column 1 path $ error if I don't have it. After adding this, I am getting JSON document was not fully consumed. error which I do not know how to solve it. Is this because of the return response from the server is a string?
Thanks in advance.

If your server sends normal string response not JSON string, you need to use another converter that reads string into String. Happily there is Scalars converter officially.
A Converter which supports converting strings and both primitives and their boxed types to text/plain bodies.

Related

How to parse data into my retrofit client correctly in order to preform a post request [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
"Expected BEGIN_OBJECT but was STRING at line 1 column 1"
(21 answers)
Closed 1 year ago.
I'm trying to send JSON via a POST request to a rest API with Retrofit. The problem I am having is that I cannot seem to figure out/use the type of data(JSONArray, String, INT ...etc) that retrofit wants in order for it to POST to my rest API. As of now, I have only tried to hard code the JSON in a string and parse it to Retrofit in hopes of it POSTing to the rest API and messing around with what type I input I use to give to retrofit to POST
when I try and parse a String I get the following: com.google.gson.JsonSyntaxException: java.lang.IllegalStateException: Expected BEGIN_OBJECT but was STRING at line 1 column 1 path $ this error says that I am not parsing JSON. the problem is that I have no idea what to parse.
when I tried to parse either a JSONarray or a JSONobject or any other type of data my apps view would not load and my app would crash.
my code
interface SimpleApi {
#POST("posttest.php")
suspend fun postit(#Body post: String): Phone
}
this is the retrofit API that I. the String value is the one that I believe is giving me trouble, the Phone class is data class I am using for my recylerview.
private fun TestGet() {
val gson = GsonBuilder()
.setLenient()
.create()
val api = Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(BASE_URL)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
.build()
.create(SimpleApi::class.java)
GlobalScope.launch(Dispatchers.IO) {
val response = api.postit(test)//it wants a JSONarray
//the above wants some kind of JSON to work I was passing Strings instead
try {
//here lies the app logic and recylerview setup
}catch (e: Exception){
println("you messed up the connection some how")
}
}
}
this function is how I am calling my the rest API, parsing and returning the JSON and handling the business logic.
now the variable test has been a few things originally it was just a hardcoded string exactly like this private var test = "[\"text1\", \"text2\", \"text3\"]" and private var test = """["text1", "text2", "text3"]""" , this did not work, I have also tried to implement A GSON converter as stated above this did not work.
thank you for your time.
EDIT
with out the addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson)) I get the following errors FATAL EXCEPTION: DefaultDispatcher-worker-1 and com.google.gson.stream.MalformedJsonException: Use JsonReader.setLenient(true) to accept malformed JSON at line 1 column 1 path $
The line .addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson)), when applied means that retrofit is treating each payload that you pas as a Json Object. So, when you pass a simple string you get that error.
A possible fix would be to convert your string array into a json array as explained here https://stackoverflow.com/a/10498107/404438.
Also check if the server response is a valid json, You could achieve this by adding logging interceptor.
Here is how you add the interceptor :
first, in your build.gradle:
implementation "com.squareup.retrofit2:retrofit:2.6.0"
implementation "com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-gson:2.6.0"
implementation "com.squareup.okhttp3:logging-interceptor:3.11.0"
Then:
val gson = GsonBuilder()
.setLenient()
.create()
val builder = OkHttpClient().newBuilder()
builder.readTimeout(120, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
builder.connectTimeout(30, TimeUnit.SECONDS)
if (BuildConfig.DEBUG) {
val interceptor = HttpLoggingInterceptor()
interceptor.level = HttpLoggingInterceptor.Level.BASIC
builder.addInterceptor(interceptor)
}
val client = builder.build()
val retrofit = Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(BASE_URL)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
.client(client)
.build()

How to know right headers for API request?

I'm trying to hit this POST API from last 2 hours, but I'm stuck with this error.
public interface ApiInterface {
/*POST API*/
#Headers(HEADER)
#POST("Api/signup")
Call<String> addSignUpData(#Body SignUp signUp);
}
Set your Base url to:
public static final String BASE_URL =
"http://clarigoinfotech.co.in/";
GSon can't parse your json from your objects, Please change your response to json object
or create an entity class for your response
Call<JsonObject> addSignUpData(#Body SignUp signUp)
or
Call<SignupResult> addSignUpData(#Body SignUp signUp)
public SignupResult{
boolean response ;
String message;
...
}
your header must be in this format
#Headers("Accept: application/json")
and add GsonConverterFactory to your retrofit service :
Retrofit.Builder()
.client(client)
.baseUrl(baseUrl)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
.build

How to send object parameter in Retrofit GET request?

I have a back-end server that works like this
"api/videos?search_object={"cat_id" :2, "channel_id" : 3, etc}
Basily you can give a search object as input and it will filter the list base on that object. Now I want to use this service with Retrofit with something like this
#GET("videos")
Call<VideoListResponse> listVideos(#Query("search_object") VideoSearchObject videoSearchObject);
But the above code doesn't work, I can first convert VideoSearchModel to JSON string that pass it to retrofit like this
#GET("videos")
Call<VideoListResponse> listVideos(#Query("search_object") String jsonString);
I wonder if there is a better more clear way? Any suggestions will be appreciated.
Retrofit 2 supports it. All you have to do is implementing a custom converter factory with the stringConverter() method overridden.
Consider the following Retrofit-friendly interface with a custom annotation:
#Target(PARAMETER)
#Retention(RUNTIME)
#interface ToJson {
}
interface IService {
#GET("api/videos")
Call<Void> get(
#ToJson #Query("X") Map<String, Object> request
);
}
The annotation is used to denote an argument that must be converted to a string.
Mock OkHttpClient to always respond with "HTTP 200 OK" and dump request URLs:
private static final OkHttpClient mockHttpClient = new OkHttpClient.Builder()
.addInterceptor(chain -> {
System.out.println(chain.request().url());
return new Response.Builder()
.request(chain.request())
.protocol(HTTP_1_0)
.code(HTTP_OK)
.body(ResponseBody.create(MediaType.parse("application/json"), "OK"))
.build();
})
.build();
private static final Gson gson = new Gson();
private static final Retrofit retrofit = new Retrofit.Builder()
.client(mockHttpClient)
.baseUrl("http://whatever")
.addConverterFactory(new Converter.Factory() {
#Override
public Converter<?, String> stringConverter(final Type type, final Annotation[] annotations, final Retrofit retrofit) {
if ( !hasToJson(annotations) ) {
return super.stringConverter(type, annotations, retrofit);
}
return value -> gson.toJson(value, type);
}
private boolean hasToJson(final Annotation[] annotations) {
for ( final Annotation annotation : annotations ) {
if ( annotation instanceof ToJson ) {
return true;
}
}
return false;
}
})
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
.build();
To test it you can simply invoke the service interface method:
final IService service = retrofit.create(IService.class);
service.get(ImmutableMap.of("k1", "v1", "k2", "v2")).execute();
Result:
http://whatever/api/videos?X={%22k1%22:%22v1%22,%22k2%22:%22v2%22}
Where the X parameter argument is an encoded representation of {"k1":"v1","k2":"v2"}.
You can try the below code, it works for me
#GET("api")
Call<Response> method(#Query("") JSONObject param);
Map<String, String> map = new HashMap<>();
map.put("key", "value");
JSONObject json = new JSONObject(map);
"api/videos?search_object={"cat_id" :2, "channel_id" : 3, etc}
Basically you can give a search object as input
No, you do not give an object as input. You provide multiple parameters enclosed in { } so that it looks like an object (a JavaScript object that is, not a Java object). In reality it is just a string.
The constructed url is just a bunch of characters. There is no such thing as an "object" in an url.
Keep doing it like #Query("search_object") String jsonString. Although you might also want to rename the parameter from jsonString to searchString, since that is what it is. It is not a JSON string. A JSON string would have all " characters escaped like \".

Retrofit2 scalar converter not converting before gson converter android

I have the following retrofit2 in Android with the scalar converter factory first and gson converter after but when I call a String Call and the response comes as a string it gives me the exeption "Not a JSON object: "success".
Am I missing anything?
Retrofit creation:
Retrofit retrofit = new Retrofit.Builder()
.addConverterFactory(ScalarsConverterFactory.create())
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
.baseUrl(IPService.END)
.client(new OkHttpClient.Builder().build())
.build();
Call creation:
#POST("/friends/sendRequest")
Call<String> sendFriendRequest(...);
Call Execution:
Response<String> a = myApi.sendFriendRequest(...).execute();
Reponse body is "Success".
I think that this isn't possible to use Gson and Scalar. Retrofit can't recognize if it's plain string response or json string response.
My way is to use Scalar converter only, return everywhere String, and then manually convert it in stream using Gson.
Below example in Kotlin with RxJava
#GET("{path}")
fun getVersion(#Path("path") hash: String): Single<String>
api.getVersion()
.map { val gson = GsonBuilder()
.setDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSS'Z'")
.create()
gson.fromJson(it, VersionResponse::class.java)
}
I think that because Scalar can't work with wraped by Call

How can I pass xml in payload via retrofit [duplicate]

This question may have been asked before but no it was not definitively answered. How exactly does one post raw whole JSON inside the body of a Retrofit request?
See similar question here. Or is this answer correct that it must be form url encoded and passed as a field? I really hope not, as the services I am connecting to are just expecting raw JSON in the body of the post. They are not set up to look for a particular field for the JSON data.
I just want to clarify this with the restperts once and for all. One person answered not to use Retrofit. The other was not certain of the syntax. Another thinks yes it can be done but only if its form url-encoded and placed in a field (that's not acceptable in my case). No, I can't re-code all the services for my Android client. And yes, it's very common in major projects to post raw JSON instead of passing over JSON content as field property values. Let's get it right and move on. Can someone point to the documentation or example that shows how this is done? Or provide a valid reason why it can/should not be done.
UPDATE: One thing I can say with 100% certainty. You CAN do this in Google's Volley. It's built right in. Can we do this in Retrofit?
The #Body annotation defines a single request body.
interface Foo {
#POST("/jayson")
FooResponse postJson(#Body FooRequest body);
}
Since Retrofit uses Gson by default, the FooRequest instances will be serialized as JSON as the sole body of the request.
public class FooRequest {
final String foo;
final String bar;
FooRequest(String foo, String bar) {
this.foo = foo;
this.bar = bar;
}
}
Calling with:
FooResponse = foo.postJson(new FooRequest("kit", "kat"));
Will yield the following body:
{"foo":"kit","bar":"kat"}
The Gson docs have much more on how object serialization works.
Now, if you really really want to send "raw" JSON as the body yourself (but please use Gson for this!) you still can using TypedInput:
interface Foo {
#POST("/jayson")
FooResponse postRawJson(#Body TypedInput body);
}
TypedInput is a defined as "Binary data with an associated mime type.". There's two ways to easily send raw data with the above declaration:
Use TypedByteArray to send raw bytes and the JSON mime type:
String json = "{\"foo\":\"kit\",\"bar\":\"kat\"}";
TypedInput in = new TypedByteArray("application/json", json.getBytes("UTF-8"));
FooResponse response = foo.postRawJson(in);
Subclass TypedString to create a TypedJsonString class:
public class TypedJsonString extends TypedString {
public TypedJsonString(String body) {
super(body);
}
#Override public String mimeType() {
return "application/json";
}
}
And then use an instance of that class similar to #1.
Yes I know it's late, but somebody would probably benefit from this.
Using Retrofit2:
I came across this problem last night migrating from Volley to Retrofit2 (and as OP states, this was built right into Volley with JsonObjectRequest), and although Jake's answer is the correct one for Retrofit1.9, Retrofit2 doesn't have TypedString.
My case required sending a Map<String,Object> that could contain some null values, converted to a JSONObject (that won't fly with #FieldMap, neither does special chars, some get converted), so following #bnorms hint, and as stated by Square:
An object can be specified for use as an HTTP request body with the #Body annotation.
The object will also be converted using a converter specified on the Retrofit instance. If no converter is added, only RequestBody can be used.
So this is an option using RequestBody and ResponseBody:
In your interface use #Body with RequestBody
public interface ServiceApi
{
#POST("prefix/user/{login}")
Call<ResponseBody> login(#Path("login") String postfix, #Body RequestBody params);
}
In your calling point create a RequestBody, stating it's MediaType, and using JSONObject to convert your Map to the proper format:
Map<String, Object> jsonParams = new ArrayMap<>();
//put something inside the map, could be null
jsonParams.put("code", some_code);
RequestBody body = RequestBody.create(okhttp3.MediaType.parse("application/json; charset=utf-8"),(new JSONObject(jsonParams)).toString());
//serviceCaller is the interface initialized with retrofit.create...
Call<ResponseBody> response = serviceCaller.login("loginpostfix", body);
response.enqueue(new Callback<ResponseBody>()
{
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<ResponseBody> call, retrofit2.Response<ResponseBody> rawResponse)
{
try
{
//get your response....
Log.d(TAG, "RetroFit2.0 :RetroGetLogin: " + rawResponse.body().string());
}
catch (Exception e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<ResponseBody> call, Throwable throwable)
{
// other stuff...
}
});
An elegant Kotlin version of the above, to allow abstracting the parameters from the JSON convertion in the rest of your application code:
interface ServiceApi {
#POST("/api/login")
fun jsonLogin(#Body params: RequestBody): Deferred<LoginResult>
}
class ServiceApiUsingClass {
//ServiceApi init
fun login(username: String, password: String) =
serviceApi.jsonLogin(createJsonRequestBody(
"username" to username, "password" to password))
private fun createJsonRequestBody(vararg params: Pair<String, String>) =
RequestBody.create(
okhttp3.MediaType.parse("application/json; charset=utf-8"),
JSONObject(mapOf(*params)).toString())
}
Instead of classes we can also directly use the HashMap<String, Object> to send body parameters
for example
interface Foo {
#POST("/jayson")
FooResponse postJson(#Body HashMap<String, Object> body);
}
In Retrofit2, When you want to send your parameters in raw you must use Scalars.
first add this in your gradle:
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:retrofit:2.3.0'
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-gson:2.3.0'
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-scalars:2.3.0'
Your Interface
public interface ApiInterface {
String URL_BASE = "http://10.157.102.22/rest/";
#Headers("Content-Type: application/json")
#POST("login")
Call<User> getUser(#Body String body);
}
Activity
public class SampleActivity extends AppCompatActivity implements Callback<User> {
#Override
protected void onCreate(#Nullable Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.activity_sample);
Retrofit retrofit = new Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(ApiInterface.URL_BASE)
.addConverterFactory(ScalarsConverterFactory.create())
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create())
.build();
ApiInterface apiInterface = retrofit.create(ApiInterface.class);
// prepare call in Retrofit 2.0
try {
JSONObject paramObject = new JSONObject();
paramObject.put("email", "sample#gmail.com");
paramObject.put("pass", "4384984938943");
Call<User> userCall = apiInterface.getUser(paramObject.toString());
userCall.enqueue(this);
} catch (JSONException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<User> call, Response<User> response) {
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<User> call, Throwable t) {
}
}
Using JsonObject is the way it is:
Create your interface like this:
public interface laInterfaz{
#POST("/bleh/blah/org")
void registerPayer(#Body JsonObject bean, Callback<JsonObject> callback);
}
Make the JsonObject acording to the jsons structure.
JsonObject obj = new JsonObject();
JsonObject payerReg = new JsonObject();
payerReg.addProperty("crc","aas22");
payerReg.addProperty("payerDevManufacturer","Samsung");
obj.add("payerReg",payerReg);
/*json/*
{"payerReg":{"crc":"aas22","payerDevManufacturer":"Samsung"}}
/*json*/
Call the service:
service.registerPayer(obj, callBackRegistraPagador);
Callback<JsonObject> callBackRegistraPagador = new Callback<JsonObject>(){
public void success(JsonObject object, Response response){
System.out.println(object.toString());
}
public void failure(RetrofitError retrofitError){
System.out.println(retrofitError.toString());
}
};
And that its! In my personal opinion, its a lot better than making pojos and working with the class mess. This is a lot more cleaner.
Add ScalarsConverterFactory to retrofit:
in gradle:
implementation'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-scalars:2.5.0'
your retrofit:
retrofit = new Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(WEB_DOMAIN_MAIN)
.addConverterFactory(ScalarsConverterFactory.create())
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson))
.build();
change your call interface #Body parameter to String, don't forget to add #Headers("Content-Type: application/json"):
#Headers("Content-Type: application/json")
#POST("/api/getUsers")
Call<List<Users>> getUsers(#Body String rawJsonString);
now you can post raw json.
I particularly like Jake's suggestion of the TypedString subclass above. You could indeed create a variety of subclasses based on the sorts of POST data you plan to push up, each with its own custom set of consistent tweaks.
You also have the option of adding a header annotation to your JSON POST methods in your Retrofit API…
#Headers( "Content-Type: application/json" )
#POST("/json/foo/bar/")
Response fubar( #Body TypedString sJsonBody ) ;
…but using a subclass is more obviously self-documenting.
#POST("/json/foo/bar")
Response fubar( #Body TypedJsonString jsonBody ) ;
1)Add dependencies-
compile 'com.google.code.gson:gson:2.6.2'
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:retrofit:2.3.0'
compile 'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-gson:2.3.0'
2) make Api Handler class
public class ApiHandler {
public static final String BASE_URL = "URL";
private static Webservices apiService;
public static Webservices getApiService() {
if (apiService == null) {
Gson gson = new GsonBuilder()
.setLenient()
.create();
Retrofit retrofit = new Retrofit.Builder().addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create(gson)).baseUrl(BASE_URL).build();
apiService = retrofit.create(Webservices.class);
return apiService;
} else {
return apiService;
}
}
}
3)make bean classes from Json schema 2 pojo
Remember
-Target language : Java
-Source type : JSON
-Annotation style : Gson
-select Include getters and setters
-also you may select Allow additional properties
http://www.jsonschema2pojo.org/
4)make interface fro api calling
public interface Webservices {
#POST("ApiUrlpath")
Call<ResponseBean> ApiName(#Body JsonObject jsonBody);
}
if you have a form-data parameters then add below line
#Headers("Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded")
Other way for form-data parameter check this link
5)make JsonObject for passing in to body as parameter
private JsonObject ApiJsonMap() {
JsonObject gsonObject = new JsonObject();
try {
JSONObject jsonObj_ = new JSONObject();
jsonObj_.put("key", "value");
jsonObj_.put("key", "value");
jsonObj_.put("key", "value");
JsonParser jsonParser = new JsonParser();
gsonObject = (JsonObject) jsonParser.parse(jsonObj_.toString());
//print parameter
Log.e("MY gson.JSON: ", "AS PARAMETER " + gsonObject);
} catch (JSONException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
return gsonObject;
}
6) Call Api Like this
private void ApiCallMethod() {
try {
if (CommonUtils.isConnectingToInternet(MyActivity.this)) {
final ProgressDialog dialog;
dialog = new ProgressDialog(MyActivity.this);
dialog.setMessage("Loading...");
dialog.setCanceledOnTouchOutside(false);
dialog.show();
Call<ResponseBean> registerCall = ApiHandler.getApiService().ApiName(ApiJsonMap());
registerCall.enqueue(new retrofit2.Callback<ResponseBean>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<ResponseBean> registerCall, retrofit2.Response<ResponseBean> response) {
try {
//print respone
Log.e(" Full json gson => ", new Gson().toJson(response));
JSONObject jsonObj = new JSONObject(new Gson().toJson(response).toString());
Log.e(" responce => ", jsonObj.getJSONObject("body").toString());
if (response.isSuccessful()) {
dialog.dismiss();
int success = response.body().getSuccess();
if (success == 1) {
} else if (success == 0) {
}
} else {
dialog.dismiss();
}
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
try {
Log.e("Tag", "error=" + e.toString());
dialog.dismiss();
} catch (Resources.NotFoundException e1) {
e1.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<ResponseBean> call, Throwable t) {
try {
Log.e("Tag", "error" + t.toString());
dialog.dismiss();
} catch (Resources.NotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
});
} else {
Log.e("Tag", "error= Alert no internet");
}
} catch (Resources.NotFoundException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
I found that when you use a compound object as #Body params, it could not work well with the Retrofit's GSONConverter (under the assumption you are using that).
You have to use JsonObject and not JSONObject when working with that, it adds NameValueParams without being verbose about it - you can only see that if you add another dependency of logging interceptor, and other shenanigans.
So what I found the best approach to tackle this is using RequestBody.
You turn your object to RequestBody with a simple api call and launch it.
In my case I'm converting a map:
val map = HashMap<String, Any>()
map["orderType"] = orderType
map["optionType"] = optionType
map["baseAmount"] = baseAmount.toString()
map["openSpotRate"] = openSpotRate.toString()
map["premiumAmount"] = premiumAmount.toString()
map["premiumAmountAbc"] = premiumAmountAbc.toString()
map["conversionSpotRate"] = (premiumAmountAbc / premiumAmount).toString()
return RequestBody.create(MediaType.parse("application/json; charset=utf-8"), JSONObject(map).toString())
and this is the call:
#POST("openUsvDeal")
fun openUsvDeal(
#Body params: RequestBody,
#Query("timestamp") timeStamp: Long,
#Query("appid") appid: String = Constants.APP_ID,
): Call<JsonObject>
This is what works me for the current version of retrofit 2.6.2,
First of all, we need to add a Scalars Converter to the list of our Gradle dependencies, which would take care of converting java.lang.String objects to text/plain request bodies,
implementation'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-scalars:2.6.2'
Then, we need to pass a converter factory to our Retrofit builder. It will later tell Retrofit how to convert the #Body parameter passed to the service.
private val retrofitBuilder: Retrofit.Builder by lazy {
Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(BASE_URL)
.addConverterFactory(ScalarsConverterFactory.create())
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create())
}
Note: In my retrofit builder i have two converters Gson and
Scalars you can use both of them but to send Json body we need to
focus Scalars so if you don't need Gson remove it
Then Retrofit service with a String body parameter.
#Headers("Content-Type: application/json")
#POST("users")
fun saveUser(#Body user: String): Response<MyResponse>
Then create the JSON body
val user = JsonObject()
user.addProperty("id", 001)
user.addProperty("name", "Name")
Call your service
RetrofitService.myApi.saveUser(user.toString())
You can use hashmap if you don't want to create pojo class for every API call.
HashMap<String,String> hashMap=new HashMap<>();
hashMap.put("email","this#gmail.com");
hashMap.put("password","1234");
And then send like this
Call<JsonElement> register(#Body HashMap registerApiPayload);
After so much effort, found that the basic difference is you need to send the JsonObject instead of JSONObject as parameter.
use following to send json
final JSONObject jsonBody = new JSONObject();
try {
jsonBody.put("key", "value");
} catch (JSONException e){
e.printStackTrace();
}
RequestBody body = RequestBody.create(okhttp3.MediaType.parse("application/json; charset=utf-8"),(jsonBody).toString());
and pass it to url
#Body RequestBody key
If you don't want to create extra classes or use JSONObject you can use a HashMap.
Retrofit interface:
#POST("/rest/registration/register")
fun signUp(#Body params: HashMap<String, String>): Call<ResponseBody>
Call:
val map = hashMapOf(
"username" to username,
"password" to password,
"firstName" to firstName,
"surname" to lastName
)
retrofit.create(TheApi::class.java)
.signUp(map)
.enqueue(callback)
Things required to send raw json in Retrofit.
1) Make sure to add the following header and remove any other duplicate header. Since, on Retrofit's official documentation they specifically mention-
Note that headers do not overwrite each other. All headers with the
same name will be included in the request.
#Headers({"Content-Type: application/json"})
2) a. If you are using a converter factory you can pass your json as a String, JSONObject, JsonObject and even a POJO. Also have checked, having ScalarConverterFactory is not necessary only GsonConverterFactory does the job.
#POST("/urlPath")
#FormUrlEncoded
Call<Response> myApi(#Header("Authorization") String auth, #Header("KEY") String key,
#Body JsonObject/POJO/String requestBody);
2) b. If you are NOT using any converter factory then you MUST use okhttp3's RequestBody as Retrofit's documentation says-
The object will also be converted using a converter specified on the
Retrofit instance. If no converter is added, only RequestBody can be
used.
RequestBody requestBody=RequestBody.create(MediaType.parse("application/json; charset=utf-8"),jsonString);
#POST("/urlPath")
#FormUrlEncoded
Call<Response> myApi(#Header("Authorization") String auth, #Header("KEY") String key,
#Body RequestBody requestBody);
3) Success!!
Based on the top answer, I have a solution to not have to make POJOs for every request.
Example, I want to post this JSON.
{
"data" : {
"mobile" : "qwer",
"password" : "qwer"
},
"commom" : {}
}
then, I create a common class like this:
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.HashMap;
public class WRequest {
Map<String, Object> data;
Map<String, Object> common;
public WRequest() {
data = new HashMap<>();
common = new HashMap<>();
}
}
Finally, when I need a json
WRequest request = new WRequest();
request.data.put("type", type);
request.data.put("page", page);
The request marked annotation #Body then can pass to Retrofit.
For more clarity on the answers given here, this is how you can use the extension functions. This is only if you are using Kotlin
If you are using com.squareup.okhttp3:okhttp:4.0.1 the older methods of creating objects of MediaType and RequestBody have been deprecated and cannot be used in Kotlin.
If you want to use the extension functions to get a MediaType object and a ResponseBody object from your strings, firstly add the following lines to the class in which you expect to use them.
import okhttp3.MediaType.Companion.toMediaType
import okhttp3.RequestBody.Companion.toRequestBody
You can now directly get an object of MediaType this way
val mediaType = "application/json; charset=utf-8".toMediaType()
To get an object of RequestBody first convert the JSONObject you want to send to a string this way. You have to pass the mediaType object to it.
val requestBody = myJSONObject.toString().toRequestBody(mediaType)
you need to set #Body in interface
#Headers({ "Content-Type: application/json;charset=UTF-8"})
#POST("Auth/Login")
Call<ApiResponse> loginWithPhone(#Body HashMap<String, String> fields);
To pass the raw body to retrofit just use:
HashMap<String,String> SendData =new HashMap<>();
SendData.put("countryCode",ccode);
SendData.put("phoneNumber",phone);
Call<ApiResponse>call = serviceInterface.loginWithPhone(SendData);
this works for me:
Solved my problem based on TommySM answer (see previous).
But I didn't need to make login, I used Retrofit2 for testing https GraphQL API like this:
Defined my BaseResponse class with the help of json annotations (import jackson.annotation.JsonProperty).
public class MyRequest {
#JsonProperty("query")
private String query;
#JsonProperty("operationName")
private String operationName;
#JsonProperty("variables")
private String variables;
public void setQuery(String query) {
this.query = query;
}
public void setOperationName(String operationName) {
this.operationName = operationName;
}
public void setVariables(String variables) {
this.variables = variables;
}
}
Defined the call procedure in the interface:
#POST("/api/apiname")
Call<BaseResponse> apicall(#Body RequestBody params);
Called apicall in the body of test:
Create a variable of MyRequest type (for example "myLittleRequest").
Map<String, Object> jsonParams = convertObjectToMap(myLittleRequest);
RequestBody body =
RequestBody.create(okhttp3.MediaType.parse("application/json; charset=utf-8"),
(new JSONObject(jsonParams)).toString());
response = hereIsYourInterfaceName().apicall(body).execute();
I wanted to compare speed of volley and retrofit for sending and receiving data I wrote below code (for retrofit part)
first dependency:
dependencies {
implementation 'com.squareup.retrofit2:retrofit:2.4.0'
implementation 'com.squareup.retrofit2:converter-gson:2.4.0'
}
Then interface:
public interface IHttpRequest {
String BaseUrl="https://example.com/api/";
#POST("NewContract")
Call<JsonElement> register(#Body HashMap registerApiPayload);
}
and a function to set parameters to post data to server(In MainActivity):
private void Retrofit(){
Retrofit retrofitRequest = new Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl(IHttpRequest.BaseUrl)
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create())
.build();
// set data to send
HashMap<String,String> SendData =new HashMap<>();
SendData.put("token","XYXIUNJHJHJHGJHGJHGRTYTRY");
SendData.put("contract_type","0");
SendData.put("StopLess","37000");
SendData.put("StopProfit","48000");
final IHttpRequest request=retrofitRequest.create(IHttpRequest.class);
request.register(SendData).enqueue(new Callback<JsonElement>() {
#Override
public void onResponse(Call<JsonElement> call, Response<JsonElement> response) {
if (response.isSuccessful()){
Toast.makeText(getApplicationContext(),response.body().toString(),Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
}
}
#Override
public void onFailure(Call<JsonElement> call, Throwable t) {
}
});
}
And I found Retrofit faster than volley in my case.
API Call
#Headers("Content-Type: application/json")
#POST("/set_data")
Call<CommonResponse> setPreferences(#Body RequestData request);
Note: Use GSON library of Retrofit
import com.google.gson.annotations.Expose;
import com.google.gson.annotations.SerializedName;
public class RequestData {
#SerializedName("access_token")
#Expose
private String accessToken;
#SerializedName("data")
#Expose
private Data data;
// The above 'Data' is another similar class to add inner JSON objects. JSONObject within a JSONObject.
public void setAccessToken(String accessToken) {
this.accessToken = accessToken;
}
public void setData(Data data) {
this.data = data;
}
}
I guess that will help, rest all integration you might already have had and we don't need anything fancy to use above code snippet. It's working perfectly for me.
I tried this:
When you are creating your Retrofit instance, add this converter factory to the retrofit builder:
gsonBuilder = new GsonBuilder().serializeNulls()
your_retrofit_instance = Retrofit.Builder().addConverterFactory( GsonConverterFactory.create( gsonBuilder.create() ) )
While creating OkHttpClient that will be used for Retrofit.
add an Interceptor like this.
private val httpClient = OkHttpClient.Builder()
.addInterceptor (other interceptors)
........................................
//This Interceptor is the main logging Interceptor
.addInterceptor { chain ->
val request = chain.request()
val jsonObj = JSONObject(Gson().toJson(request))
val requestBody = (jsonObj
?.getJSONObject("tags")
?.getJSONObject("class retrofit2.Invocation")
?.getJSONArray("arguments")?.get(0) ?: "").toString()
val url = jsonObj?.getJSONObject("url")?.getString("url") ?: ""
Timber.d("gsonrequest request url: $url")
Timber.d("gsonrequest body :$requestBody")
chain.proceed(request)
}
..............
// Add other configurations
.build()
Now your every Retrofit call's URL and request body will be logged in Logcat. Filter it by "gsonrequest"
Updated solution for 2022:
One of the first things to check is that your post request is working via a third party API such as postman. I had done this before coming across the solutions on this page.
The next step is to add logging facilities to your retrofit instance. Click here on how to add logging to retrofit.
Upon adding logging I saw a 500 server error, based on the fact that the end-point was working via Postman we know that the error must be something to do with the format of the data that is passed to the Post method.
Your retrofit builder should look like this:
val retrofitInstance = Retrofit.Builder()
.baseUrl("https://pacific-tundra-61285.herokuapp.com/")
.addConverterFactory(ScalarsConverterFactory.create())
.addConverterFactory(GsonConverterFactory.create())
.client(httpClient)
.build()
This post helped a lot in helping solve this problem and provided the correct way to convert the object into the correct "application/json" format when making the post request. There were a few deprecated methods used in the kotlin version, the new code is very similar:
private fun createRequestBody(vararg params : Pair<String, Any>) =
JSONObject(mapOf(*params)).toString()
.toRequestBody("application/json; charset=utf-8".toMediaTypeOrNull())
The generic value parameter in the pair is set to Any so that you can handle the different types related to your object.
The final piece just for clarity is the actual post method and the code that is used to invoke the post request.
#POST("create/")
fun create(#Body params : RequestBody) : Call<YourObject>
val call = apiService.create(createRequestBody(
"string" to object // You should pass in any key and value pairs here.
Finally call enqueue on the call as usual.
JSONObject showing error please use
JsonObject paramObject = new JsonObject();
paramObject.addProperty("loginId", vMobile_Email);
Add ScalarsConverterFactory.create() method and pass hard code
#Headers(value = "Content-Type: application/json")
#POST("api/Persona/Add")
Call<Persona> AddPersona(#Header("authorization") String token, #Body JsonObject object);
JsonObject postParam = new JsonObject();
postParam.addProperty("PersonaCedula", item.getPersonaCedula());

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