invalid character 'n' in string escape code: what it means and how to fix it

TL;DR: Validate locally, fix the first real error, validate again (no upload).

Troubleshoot invalid character 'n' in string escape code quickly and validate JSON locally (no upload).

What the error means

invalid character 'n' in string escape code means the parser expected valid JSON but encountered a character/token that cannot appear there. In practice, it usually means the input is not JSON (or not strict JSON), or it is incomplete.

Most common real-world causes

  • The input is not strict JSON (single quotes, comments, trailing commas).
  • The response is truncated (missing closing } / ] / ").
  • The response contains a prefix/suffix (logs, banners, debug output).
  • The payload has invalid escapes or control characters in strings.
  • You are parsing the wrong thing (already-parsed object, HTML, CSV, etc).

Fast debugging steps

  • Validate the JSON as-is to get an exact error location.
  • Check the first and last 50 characters for truncation and prefixes.
  • Fix one issue at a time and re-validate after each change.

Code example (go)

body := bytes.TrimSpace(rawBody)
if len(body) == 0 {
    return fmt.Errorf("empty JSON input")
}
if body[0] == '<' {
    return fmt.Errorf("got HTML instead of JSON")
}
if err := json.Unmarshal(body, &v); err != nil {
    return err
}

Fix without uploading data

If the JSON contains sensitive data, validate and fix it locally. No Upload Tools runs 100% in your browser.

Workflow: validate -> fix the first error -> validate again -> export/convert.

FAQ

Does the exact token matter? Yes. The token often hints at the root cause: < is usually HTML, u is often undefined, and / often points to comments.

Should I just regex-fix JSON? Avoid blind regex edits. Validate after each change so you know what you fixed and what broke.

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