how to read json result in jquery?

  1. Use jQuery’s jQuery.parseJSON() method to get a JavaScript object out of your JSON-String:

    var test = jQuery.parseJSON(data); // Where 'data' is your JSON string
    
  2. After parsing, test is a JavaScript object. The jQuery docs about parseJSON():

jQuery.parseJSON()

Takes a well-formed JSON string and returns the resulting JavaScript
object.

About the Javascript Object:

// Declaration
var Obj = {
    // Properties:
    propertyOne: 'value', // string
    propertyTwo: 52.3654, // float
    // propertyThree is an object inside 'Obj'
    // defined by the braces
    // which may naturally contain its own properties & methods
     propertyThree: { 
          propTrheeProperty: 42, // int
          propTrheeAnotherProperty: 'whatever',
          thePropThreeMethod: function () { 
            // your function code 
          }
          // and so on, no coma after the last property/method
      }, 
    // and so on
    // 'Obj' - Methods:
    methodOne: function () { 
        // your function code 
    },
    methodTwo: function () { 
        // your function code 
    }
    // and so on, no coma after the last property/method
}

There are two possibilities to access properties (but not methods, see below), so called Property Accessor:

– The “Dot Notation”:

With the dot notation, you can access properties & methods

var objOne = new Obj(); // Create a new instance of Obj
objOne.propertyTwo; // 52.3654

var objTwo = new Obj(); // Another instance of Obj
objTwo.propertyThtree.propTrheeProperty; // 42
objTwo.propertyThtree.propTrheeAnotherProperty; // whatever

// Accessing methods
objOne.methodOne(); // whatever your function methodOne() returns or does 
objTwo.methodTwo(); // whatever your function methodTwo() returns or does

– The “Bracket Notation”:

With the bracket notation, you can also access properties & methods

objTwo['propertyThtree']['propTrheeProperty']; // 42
objOne['methodOne']();

instead of

objTwo.propertyThtree.propTrheeProperty; // 42
objOne.methodOne();

In your case, that means:

window.console.log(test.waybill_log.TrackingResult.HAWBEntity.HAWBID); 
// 282829899

Or

window.console.log(test.waybill_log.TrackingResult.HAWBEntity); 
// Should give something like: Object { HAWBID: '282829899'}

Or

window.console.log(test.waybill_log.HAWBItemEntity); 
// null

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