Modern browsers support JSON.parse().
var arr_from_json = JSON.parse( json_string );
In browsers that don't, you can include the json2 library.
Modern browsers support JSON.parse().
var arr_from_json = JSON.parse( json_string );
In browsers that don't, you can include the json2 library.
The whole point of JSON is that JSON strings can be converted to native objects without doing anything. Check this link
You can use either eval(string) or JSON.parse(string).
However, eval is risky. From json.org:
The eval function is very fast. However, it can compile and execute any JavaScript program, so there can be security issues. The use of eval is indicated when the source is trusted and competent. It is much safer to use a JSON parser. In web applications over XMLHttpRequest, communication is permitted only to the same origin that provide that page, so it is trusted. But it might not be competent. If the server is not rigorous in its JSON encoding, or if it does not scrupulously validate all of its inputs, then it could deliver invalid JSON text that could be carrying dangerous script. The eval function would execute the script, unleashing its malice.