@ajkachnic/jason
v0.1.2
Published
`jason` is a JSON parser and formatter written in JavaScript. It's pretty simple (220 lines with comments and blank lines) and should be pretty fast. It uses [`moo`](https://github.com/no-context/moo) for lexing, and then iterates over that stream of toke
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jason
jason
is a JSON parser and formatter written in JavaScript. It's pretty simple (220 lines with comments and blank lines) and should be pretty fast. It uses moo
for lexing, and then iterates over that stream of tokens. It supports proper strings, floats, and some pretty errors. It's kinda pointless because JSON.parse
exists, but interesting nonetheless.
install
npm install @ajkachnic/jason
usage
You can selectively import the functions you want using destructuring
Here's a typescript example:
import { parse, format, beautify } from '@ajkachnic/jason'
And here's a commonjs version:
const { parse, format, beautify } = require('@ajkachnic/jason')
api
parse
parse
takes a string and returns it's JavaScript equivalent.
Example:
const output = parse('{ "name": "bob", "age": 28.5 }') // { name: "bob", age: 28.5 }
format
format
takes a JavaScript value and returns it's JSON encoded counterpart. Please only pass this things that will be properly encoded (class instances and stuff won't be)
It also has a second optional argument for whether or not to pretty-print. This is set to false by default
Example:
const json = format({ name: "bob", age: 28.5 }) // {"name":"bob","age":28.5}
beautify
beautify
takes a JSON string and returns a pretty-printed version. It basically just parses it and then runs format
on it with pretty printing enabled. It's probably not very fast
Example:
const beautified = beautify('{"name":"bob","age":28.5}') // { "name": "bob", "age": 28.5 }