![]() GSON 1.x applies different rules for versioning for classes vs fields. So, if you deserialize a JSON into a field that is supposed to be skipped, the field is set to null (or default value). However, if you deserialize it to a top-level class, a default instance is returned. GSON 2.x returns null for the top-level class. |
||
---|---|---|
examples/android-proguard-example | ||
extras | ||
gson | ||
lib | ||
metrics | ||
proto |