> JSONObject jobj = new JSONObject(JsonUtils.safeEval(response.getText()));
> MQueryRoot root = 
> jobj.get("mquery").isObject().getJavaScriptObject().cast();
>

If you want that code a bit easier to read you could use a MQueryWrapper 
JSO like in the AutoBean example and then write

MQueryWrapper wrapper = JsonUtils.safeEval(response.getText());
MQueryRoot root = wrapper.getMQuery();


So at the end its like: calling .as() vs. implementing JSO's by hand/via 
code generation. 

-- J.

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