It would have been nice if you had some code that showed you began the process of solving this problem yourself. But, here is a sample custom deserializer that does pretty much what you're looking for:
class PersonDeserializer extends JsonDeserializer<Person> {
@Override
public Person deserialize(final JsonParser parser,
final DeserializationContext content) throws IOException,
JsonProcessingException {
final ObjectCodec codec = parser.getCodec();
final JsonNode node = codec.readTree(parser);
final Person person = new Person();
final Iterator<String> fieldNameIter = node.getFieldNames();
while (fieldNameIter.hasNext()) {
final String fieldName = fieldNameIter.next();
if (fieldName.equalsIgnoreCase("EMAIL")) {
person.setEmail(node.get(fieldName).getTextValue());
} else if (fieldName.equalsIgnoreCase("NOM")) {
person.setFirstName(node.get(fieldName).getTextValue());
} else if (fieldName.equalsIgnoreCase("PRENOM")) {
person.setLastName(node.get(fieldName).getTextValue());
} else if (fieldName.equalsIgnoreCase("VILLE")) {
person.setTown(node.get(fieldName).getTextValue());
} else if (fieldName.startsWith("LIKE")) {
person.addLike(Liking.LikingType.LIKE, node.get(fieldName)
.getTextValue());
} else if (fieldName.startsWith("HATE")) {
person.addLike(Liking.LikingType.HATE, node.get(fieldName)
.getTextValue());
}
}
return person;
}
}
It presumes a Liking object similar to this:
public class Liking {
public static enum LikingType {
LIKE, HATE;
}
private LikingType type;
private String value;
// Constructors, getters/setters
}
And some changes to your Person object which I think you can figure out. If you intend to serialize the object to JSON in the same custom format then you will have to write a corresponding JsonSerializer.
Another option, not quite as robust, would be too simply use a map to store the likes and dislikes exactly as is. This solution would omit any explicit mappings for likes/dislikes and utilize the @JsonAny annotation to capture them. In this scheme the Person object would look like this:
public class Person {
private String lastName;
private String firstName;
private String email;
private String town;
@JsonAny
private Map<String, Object> otherProperties;
// Constructors, getters/setters
}
Deserializing your JSON into this modified version of Person will place all unrecognized properties into the hash map, as key-value pairs.