Jackson is a fast JSON processor for Java that supports three models: streaming, node, and object mapping (akin to the three independent models SAX, DOM, and JAXB in XML).
The object mapping model is a high-level processing model that allows the user to project JSON data onto a domain-specific data model appropriate for their application, without having to deal with the low-level mechanics of JSON parsing. It is the standard object mapping parser implementaton in Jersey, the reference implementation for JSR-311 (Java API for Restful Web Services).
Scala is a functional programming language for the JVM that supports
Java interoperability. Its standard library is quite distinct from Java,
and does not fulfill the expectations of Jacksons default mappings.
Notably, Scala collections do not derive from java.util.Collection
or
its subclasses, and Scala properties do not (by default) look like Java
Bean properties.
The Scala Module supports serialization and limited deserialization of Scala Case Classes, Sequences, Maps, Tuples, Options, and Enumerations.
Support for class constructor arguments currently depends upon [Paranamer] (http://paranamer.codehaus.org/), specifically an implementation that depends upon constructor parameter names being present in the class debug information. Since this is the default in Scala, it is usually not an issue, but since it's possible to turn this off, be aware that the current version will throw an exception if it cannot find the constructor parameter names. Future versions may permit configuration to suppress this exception.
To use the Scala Module in Jackson, simply register it with the ObjectMapper instance:
val mapper = new ObjectMapper()
mapper.registerModule(DefaultScalaModule)
DefaultScalaModule
is a Scala object that includes support for all
currently supported Scala data types. If only partial support is desired,
the component traits can be included individually:
val module = new OptionModule with TupleModule {}
val mapper = new ObjectMapper()
mapper.registerModule(module)
You can also mixin ScalaObjectMapper
(experimental) to get rich wrappers that automatically
convert scala manifests directly into TypeReferences for Jackson to use:
val mapper = new ObjectMapper() with ScalaObjectMapper
mapper.registerModule(DefaultScalaModule)
val myMap = mapper.readValue[Map[String,Tuple2[Int,Int]]](src)
Consult the Scaladoc for further details.
Check out Wiki.