If I run this in a JavaScript console in Chrome or Firebug, it works fine.
JSON.parse('"\u0027"') // Escaped single-quote
But if I run either of these 2 lines in a Javascript console, it throws an error.
JSON.parse('"\u0022"') // Escaped double-quote
JSON.parse('"\u005C"') // Escaped backslash
RFC 4627 section 2.5 seems to imply that \ and " are allowed characters as long as they’re properly escaped. The 2 browsers I’ve tried this in don’t seem to allow it, however. Is there something I’m doing wrong here or are they really not allowed in strings? I’ve also tried using \" and \\ in place of \u0022 and \u005C respectively.
I feel like I’m just doing something very wrong, because I find it hard to believe that JSON would not allow these characters in strings, especially since the specification doesn’t seem to mention anything that I could find saying they’re not allowed.
You need to quote the backslash!
A double quote is a double quote, no matter how you express it in the string constant. If you put a backslash before your
\uexpression within the constant, then the effect is that of a backslash-quoted double-quote, which is in fact what you’ve got.The most interesting thing about your question is that it helps me realize that every JavaScript string parser I’ve ever written is wrong.