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(json moved to old-json-serializations: Now out of date and obsoleted by canonical JSON as defined in microformats2) |
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<entry-title>JSON</entry-title> | |||
<dfn>JSON</dfn> is JavaScript Object Notation (RFC 4627), a popular data format for APIs. | |||
[[microformats2]] has a canonical JSON representation. | |||
== tools == | |||
* http://jsonlint.com/ - use JSON Lint to check any JSON examples for/in the wiki. | |||
== previous work == | |||
* [[old-json-serializations]] | |||
== see also == | |||
* [http://www.json.org www.json.org]: the original specification, documentation, and list of implementations for many different programming languages. | |||
* RFC 4627, current formal JSON specification. | |||
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSON JSON on Wikipedia] |
Revision as of 17:57, 25 October 2012
This article is a stub. You can help the microformats.org wiki by expanding it. <entry-title>JSON</entry-title>
JSON is JavaScript Object Notation (RFC 4627), a popular data format for APIs.
microformats2 has a canonical JSON representation.
tools
- http://jsonlint.com/ - use JSON Lint to check any JSON examples for/in the wiki.
previous work
see also
- www.json.org: the original specification, documentation, and list of implementations for many different programming languages.
- RFC 4627, current formal JSON specification.
- JSON on Wikipedia