I\'m trying to serialize a list of python objects with JSON (using simplejson) and am getting the error that the object \"is not JSON serializable\".
The class is a
I've used this strategy in the past and been pretty happy with it:  Encode your custom objects as JSON object literals (like Python dicts) with the following structure:
{ '__ClassName__': { ... } }
That's essentially a one-item dict whose single key is a special string that specifies what kind of object is encoded, and whose value is a dict of the instance's attributes.  If that makes sense.
A very simple implementation of an encoder and a decoder (simplified from code I've actually used) is like so:
TYPES = { 'ParentClass': ParentClass,
          'ChildClass': ChildClass }
class CustomTypeEncoder(json.JSONEncoder):
    """A custom JSONEncoder class that knows how to encode core custom
    objects.
    Custom objects are encoded as JSON object literals (ie, dicts) with
    one key, '__TypeName__' where 'TypeName' is the actual name of the
    type to which the object belongs.  That single key maps to another
    object literal which is just the __dict__ of the object encoded."""
    def default(self, obj):
        if isinstance(obj, TYPES.values()):
            key = '__%s__' % obj.__class__.__name__
            return { key: obj.__dict__ }
        return json.JSONEncoder.default(self, obj)
def CustomTypeDecoder(dct):
    if len(dct) == 1:
        type_name, value = dct.items()[0]
        type_name = type_name.strip('_')
        if type_name in TYPES:
            return TYPES[type_name].from_dict(value)
    return dct
In this implementation assumes that the objects you're encoding will have a from_dict() class method that knows how to take recreate an instance from a dict decoded from JSON.
It's easy to expand the encoder and decoder to support custom types (e.g. datetime objects).
EDIT, to answer your edit:  The nice thing about an implementation like this is that it will automatically encode and decode instances of any object found in the TYPES mapping.  That means that it will automatically handle a ChildClass like so:
class ChildClass(object):
    def __init__(self):
        self.foo = 'foo'
        self.bar = 1.1
        self.parent = ParentClass(1)
That should result in JSON something like the following:
{ '__ChildClass__': {
    'bar': 1.1,
    'foo': 'foo',
    'parent': {
        '__ParentClass__': {
            'foo': 1}
        }
    }
}