If you are looking for a very specific token and know the path to it, you can navigate to it easily using the built-in SelectToken()
method. For example:
string distance = jObject.SelectToken("routes[0].legs[0].distance.text").ToString();
If you need to find all occurences of a token with a given name in your JSON, no matter where they occur, then yes you’d need a recursive method. Here is one that might do the trick:
public static class JsonExtensions
{
public static List<JToken> FindTokens(this JToken containerToken, string name)
{
List<JToken> matches = new List<JToken>();
FindTokens(containerToken, name, matches);
return matches;
}
private static void FindTokens(JToken containerToken, string name, List<JToken> matches)
{
if (containerToken.Type == JTokenType.Object)
{
foreach (JProperty child in containerToken.Children<JProperty>())
{
if (child.Name == name)
{
matches.Add(child.Value);
}
FindTokens(child.Value, name, matches);
}
}
else if (containerToken.Type == JTokenType.Array)
{
foreach (JToken child in containerToken.Children())
{
FindTokens(child, name, matches);
}
}
}
}
Here is a demo:
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
string json = @"
{
""routes"": [
{
""bounds"": {
""northeast"": {
""lat"": 50.4639653,
""lng"": 30.6325177
},
""southwest"": {
""lat"": 50.4599625,
""lng"": 30.6272425
}
},
""legs"": [
{
""distance"": {
""text"": ""1.7 km"",
""value"": 1729
},
""duration"": {
""text"": ""4 mins"",
""value"": 223
}
},
{
""distance"": {
""text"": ""2.3 km"",
""value"": 2301
},
""duration"": {
""text"": ""5 mins"",
""value"": 305
}
}
]
}
]
}";
JObject jo = JObject.Parse(json);
foreach (JToken token in jo.FindTokens("text"))
{
Console.WriteLine(token.Path + ": " + token.ToString());
}
}
}
Here is the output:
routes[0].legs[0].distance.text: 1.7 km
routes[0].legs[0].duration.text: 4 mins
routes[0].legs[1].distance.text: 2.3 km
routes[0].legs[1].duration.text: 5 mins