Syntax for documenting JSON structure

So I'm trying to document the format of the json returned by an api I am writing against and I'd like to know if there is any popular format for the documentation of json structure.

Note I'm not trying to to test or validate anything, I'm just using this for documentation. Also some ways to add comments to non-constants(items always returned w/ the same value) would be nice.

This the not totally thought out scheme I'm currently using:

Plain names refer to identifiers or types.
Some types have type-comment
Strings that appear to be constant(always returned for that type of request) strings are "str"
Constant Numbers would be just the number
Constant null is null
Booleans are true/false for constant booleans or Boolean otherwise
[a,b,c] are lists with 3 items a,b,c
[...  ...] is a list of repeating elements of some types/constants/patterns
{a:A,b:B,c:c} and {... ...}  is the same for a dictionary.

example:

story          := [header,footer]
header         := {"data":realHeader,"kind":"Listing"}
realHeader     := {"after": null, "before": null, "children": [{"data": realRealHeader, "kind": "t3"}], "modhash": ""}
footer         := {"data":AlmostComments,"kind":"Listing"}
AlmostComments := {"data": {"after": null, "before": null, "children": comments, "modhash": ""}, "kind": "t1"}
comments       := [...{"data":comment, "kind":"t1"}...]

realRealHeader :=
{"author": string,
"clicked": boolean,
"created": int,
"created_utc": int,
"domain": "code.reddit.com",
"downs": int,
"hidden": boolean,
"id": string-id,
"is_self": boolean,
"levenshtein": null,
"likes": null,
"media": null,
"media_embed": { },
"name": string-id,
"num_comments": int,
"over_18": false,
"permalink": string-urlLinkToStoryStartingFrom/r,
"saved": false,
"score": int,
"selftext": string,
"selftext_html": string-html,
"subreddit": string-subredditname,
"subreddit_id": string-id,
"thumbnail": "",
"title": string,
"ups": int,
"url": "http://code.reddit.com/"
}


comments := {
"author": string,
"body": string-body_html-wout-html,
"body_html": string-html-formated,
"created": int,
"created_utc": int,
"downs": int,
"id": string-id,
"levenshtein": null,
"likes": null,
"link_id": string-id,
"name": string-id",
"parent_id": string-id,
"replies": AlmostComments or null,
"subreddit": string-subredditname,
"subreddit_id": string-id,
"ups": int
}

In theory JSON Schema could serve this purpose, but in practice I am not sure it does. Worth mentioning I hope.

Other than this, my personal opinion is that since JSON is predominantly used for transferring objects, documenting equivalent objects in language client uses (Java, C#, various scripting languages) may make most sense -- after all, such objects usually are mapped/bound to JSON and back. And then you can use whatever documentation tools are available, like Javadoc for Java (perldoc for Perl, Oxygen for c++ etc etc).

For specifying interfaces there is also WADL (Web App Description Language), which might help.


How to generate a HTML Documentation from JSON:

You will need to generate a Json Schema, there is this service that you can paste the orginal JSON and auto generate the Schema:

http://www.jsonschema.net/

With the schema in hands you can auto generate the HTML Documentation using Matic.

https://github.com/mattyod/matic

Generating HTML

To Install Matic you will need install Node.js: http://nodejs.org/

On Windows, run CMD

Install Jade running this command: npm install -g jade

Open the Downloaded Matic folder from Github: cd PATH_TO_FOLDER/matic

Run the install command: npm install -g

Download a documentation example project: https://github.com/mattyod/matic-simple-example

Put your schema in the folder "schemas"

Open the project folder: cd PATH_TO_PROJECT_FOLDER

Run command: matic

You should see a success message: Documentation built to ./web/


I'm unsure to why you're trying to document JSON, I can guess your trying to find a consistent way to tell an IDE or a developer the data types on your notation.

jsdoc (http://jsdoc.sourceforge.net/#usage) might be what your are looking for.

for example:

{
   /**
     * Name of author
     * @type String
     */
   "author": null, 
   /**
     * has the author been clicked
     * @type Boolean
     */
   "clicked": null, 
   /**
     * Unix Timestamp of the creation date
     * @type Int
     */
   "created": null
}

Alternatively if your trying to demonstrate the structure of your data. You could look at YAML (http://www.yaml.org/), it's designed to be a human readable serialisation format which maybe be better suited for documenting your data structure.

A quick example:

Author:
  name: String
  clicked: Boolean
  created: Integer