Lecture

Exploring JSON Data Format

When fine-tuning text-generating AI on the OpenAI platform, JSON format is required for providing training data.

In this lesson, we'll take a closer look at the JSON data format.


Structure of JSON

1. Object

An object is enclosed in curly braces { } and consists of multiple key-value pairs.

Keys and values are separated by a colon :, and each key-value pair is separated by a comma ,.

JSON Object Example
{ "key1": "value1", "key2": "value2" }

Keys are always strings enclosed in double quotes " ", and values can be strings, numbers, objects, arrays, etc.

JSON Object Example
{ "name": "John Doe", "age": 30, "occupation": "Developer" }

In the JSON above:

  • name, age, occupation are keys, and John Doe, 30, Developer are their respective values.

  • The value for key name is the string "John Doe", and the value for key age is the number 30.


2. Array

An array is enclosed in square brackets [ ] and contains a list of values. Each value is separated by a comma. An array can include various data types such as objects, strings, numbers, etc.

JSON Array Example
[ "apple", "cherry", { "product": "banana", "price": 1000 } ]

In the JSON above, the array consists of the strings "apple", "cherry", and the object {"product": "banana", "price": 1000}. Arrays can include diverse data types.


3. Nested Structure

JSON can have a nested structure containing objects or arrays within objects.

Nested JSON Example
{ "name": "John Doe", "contact": { // Nested object within an object "email": "john@example.com", "phone": "555-1234-5678" }, "hobbies": ["Reading", "Soccer", "Cooking"] }

JSON Data Types

JSON supports various data types such as string, number, boolean, null, array, and object.

1. String

A string is a sequence of one or more characters enclosed in double quotes " ".

String Example
{ "greeting": "Hello" }

2. Number

Numbers are expressed in either integer or floating-point forms.

Number Example
{ "integer": 123, "float": 3.14 }

3. Boolean

A Boolean can have only two values: true or false.

Boolean Example
{ "trueValue": true, "falseValue": false }

4. Null

Null represents a special value indicating no value. For example, when someone's phone number is unknown, it can be represented as null.


Null Example
{ "phone": null }

5. Array

An array contains multiple values in a specific order.

Array Example
{ "fruits": ["apple", "banana", "cherry"] }
Mission
0 / 2
1.

JSON object keys must always be enclosed in double quotes ("").

True
False
2.

JSON keys and values are separated by semicolons (;).

True
False

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