JSON Pointer
This is an implementation of RFC-6901 JSON Pointer. JSON Pointer is designed for
referring to data values within a JSON document. It's designed to be URL
friendly so it can be used as a URL fragment that points to a specific part of
the JSON document.
Installation
Includes support for node.js (ES Modules, TypeScript) and browsers.
npm install @hyperjump/json-pointer
Usage
import * as JsonPointer from "@hyperjump/json-pointer";
const value = {
"foo": {
"bar": 42
}
};
const fooPointer = JsonPointer.append("foo", JsonPointer.nil);
const fooBarPointer = JsonPointer.append(fooPointer, "bar");
const getFooBar = JsonPointer.get(fooBarPointer);
getFooBar(value);
const setFooBar = JsonPointer.set(fooBarPointer);
setFooBar(value, 33);
const assignFooBar = JsonPointer.assign(fooBarPointer);
assignFooBar(value, 33);
const unsetFooBar = JsonPointer.unset(fooBarPointer);
setFooBar(value);
const deleteFooBar = JsonPointer.remove(fooBarPointer);
deleteFooBar(value);
API
-
nil: ""
The empty pointer.
-
pointerSegments: (pointer: string) => Generator<string>
An iterator for the segments of a JSON Pointer that handles escaping.
-
append: (segment: string, pointer: string) => string
Append a segment to a JSON Pointer.
-
get: (pointer: string, subject: any) => any
Use a JSON Pointer to get a value. This function can be curried.
-
set: (pointer: string, subject: any, value: any) => any
Immutably set a value using a JSON Pointer. Returns a new version of
subject
with the value set. The original subject
is not changed, but the
value isn't entirely cloned. Values that aren't changed will point to
the same value as the original. This function can be curried.
-
assign: (pointer: string, subject: any, value: any) => void
Mutate a value using a JSON Pointer. This function can be curried.
-
unset: (pointer: string, subject: any) => any
Immutably delete a value using a JSON Pointer. Returns a new version of
subject
without the value. The original subject
is not changed, but the
value isn't entirely cloned. Values that aren't changed will point to the
same value as the original. This function can be curried.
-
remove: (pointer: string, subject: any) => void
Delete a value using a JSON Pointer. This function can be curried.
Contributing
Tests
Run the tests
npm test
Run the tests with a continuous test runner
npm test -- --watch