JSON file search
Search JSON files online for API examples, OpenAPI definitions, package metadata, app manifests, configuration exports, translation files, and structured public datasets.
Find structured data files online
Search for XML, JSON and structured data files across the web with FindFiles.net.
Use this developer data search page when the useful result is a schema, API response, feed, manifest, configuration export, or machine-readable file rather than an article that only describes it. The goal is to move directly toward files that can be inspected, validated, parsed, imported, or compared in development and data workflows.
Developer and data search
A normal web search can return documentation, API guides, blog posts, dashboards, release notes, and repository pages. Those results explain systems, but they often hide the structured file behind several clicks, generated download buttons, repository folders, or portal interfaces.
A JSON file search or XML file search starts closer to the artifact developers actually need. That artifact may be a feed, manifest, schema, sample response, sitemap, package metadata, configuration file, validation definition, or exported dataset. When the file is the interface, direct discovery saves time.
Structured formats
JSON is common for APIs, manifests, configuration files, and data interchange. XML remains common in feeds, sitemaps, enterprise exports, schemas, standards, and older integration systems. Searching both formats helps when the source may publish the same data in more than one machine-readable form, or when you know the domain but not the exact format used by the publisher.
Search JSON files online for API examples, OpenAPI definitions, package metadata, app manifests, configuration exports, translation files, and structured public datasets.
Search XML files online for RSS feeds, sitemaps, schema documents, product feeds, enterprise records, metadata exports, and standards-based interchange files.
Expand to JSONL, NDJSON, YAML, CSV, TSV, XSD, RSS, Atom, or Parquet when the publisher uses a neighboring format for machine-readable data.
How structured file search works
Common developer searches
Frequently asked questions
Search data files
Use FindFiles.net when the JSON or XML file is the useful result. Start with the system, dataset, schema, or feed you need, keep the search focused on structured file formats, and review candidate files with developer-grade attention to source and compatibility. This page is meant for practical discovery: finding the file that can be opened in an editor, checked with a validator, loaded into a parser, or used as a reference for integration work.