This is all you need for valid JSON, right?
["somestring1", "somestring2"]
JSON is JavaScript Object Notation is used for data interchange, Array of strings is an ordered list of values with string type. So on a whole, the 'JSON array of strings' represents an ordered list of values, and It can store multiple values. This is useful to store string, Boolean, number, or an object.
A JSON array contains zero, one, or more ordered elements, separated by a comma. The JSON array is surrounded by square brackets [ ] . A JSON array is zero terminated, the first index of the array is zero (0). Therefore, the last index of the array is length - 1.
A string is a sequence of zero or more Unicode characters, enclosed between " and " (double quotes). Strings wrapped in single quotes ' are not valid. JSON Strings can contain the following backslash-escaped characters: \" – Double quote.
I'll elaborate a bit more on ChrisR awesome answer and bring images from his awesome reference.
A valid JSON always starts with either curly braces { or square brackets [, nothing else.
{ will start an object:
{ "key": value, "another key": value }
Hint: although javascript accepts single quotes
', JSON only takes double ones".
[ will start an array:
[value, value]
Hint: spaces among elements are always ignored by any JSON parser.
value is an object, array, string, number, bool or null:
So yeah, ["a", "b"] is a perfectly valid JSON, like you could try on the link Manish pointed.
Here are a few extra valid JSON examples, one per block:
{}
[0]
{"__comment": "json doesn't accept comments and you should not be commenting even in this way", "avoid!": "also, never add more than one key per line, like this"}
[{ "why":null} ]
{
"not true": [0, false],
"true": true,
"not null": [0, 1, false, true, {
"obj": null
}, "a string"]
}
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