Parse and stringify JSON with comments. It will retain comments even after saved!
- Parse JSON strings with comments into JavaScript objects and MAINTAIN comments
- supports comments everywhere, yes, EVERYWHERE in a JSON file, eventually 😆
- fixes the known issue about comments inside arrays.
- Stringify the objects into JSON strings with comments if there are
The usage of comment-json
is exactly the same as the vanilla JSON
object.
Why?
There are many other libraries that can deal with JSON with comments, such as json5, or strip-json-comments, but none of them can stringify the parsed object and return back a JSON string the same as the original content.
Imagine that if the user settings are saved in ${library}.json
, and the user has written a lot of comments to improve readability. If the library library
need to modify the user setting, such as modifying some property values and adding new fields, and if the library uses json5
to read the settings, all comments will disappear after modified which will drive people insane.
So, if you want to parse a JSON string with comments, modify it, then save it back, comment-json
is your must choice!
Install
$ npm i comment-json
Usage
package.json:
{
"name": "comment-json"
}
const {
parse,
stringify
} = require('comment-json')
const fs = require('fs')
const obj = parse(fs.readFileSync('package.json').toString())
console.log(obj.name)
stringify(obj, null, 2)
parse()
parse(text, reviver? = null, remove_comments? = false)
: object | string | number | boolean | null
- text
string
The string to parse as JSON. See the JSON object for a description of JSON syntax. - reviver?
Function() | null
Default to null
. It acts the same as the second parameter of JSON.parse
. If a function, prescribes how the value originally produced by parsing is transformed, before being returned. - remove_comments?
boolean = false
If true, the comments won't be maintained, which is often used when we want to get a clean object.
Returns object | string | number | boolean | null
corresponding to the given JSON text.
If the content
is:
{
"foo" :
1
,
"bar": [
"baz"
,
"quux"
]
}
const parsed = parse(content)
console.log(parsed)
console.log(stringify(parsed, null, 2))
And the result will be:
{
[Symbol.for('before-all')]: [{
type: 'BlockComment',
value: '\n before-all\n ',
inline: false
}, {
type: 'LineComment',
value: ' before-all',
inline: false
}],
...
[Symbol.for('after-prop:foo')]: [{
type: 'BlockComment',
value: ' after-prop:foo ',
inline: true
}],
foo: 1,
bar: [
"baz",
"quux",
[Symbol.for('after-value:0')]: [{
type: 'LineComment',
value: ' after-value:0',
inline: true
}, ...],
...
]
}
There are EIGHT kinds of symbol properties:
Symbol.for('before-all')
Symbol.for('before')
Symbol.for(`before:${prop}`)
Symbol.for(`after-prop:${prop}`)
Symbol.for(`after-colon:${prop}`)
Symbol.for(`after-value:${prop}`)
Symbol.for('after')
Symbol.for('after-all')
And the value of each symbol property is an array of CommentToken
interface CommentToken {
type: 'BlockComment' | 'LineComment'
value: string
inline: boolean
}
console.log(parse(content, null, true))
And the result will be:
{
foo: 1,
bar: [
"baz",
"quux"
]
}
Special cases
const parsed = parse(`
// comment
1
`)
console.log(parsed === 1)
If we parse a JSON of primative type with remove_comments:false
, then the return value of parse()
will be of object type.
The value of parsed
is equivalent to:
const parsed = new Number(1)
parsed[Symbol.for('before-all')] = [{
type: 'LineComment',
value: ' comment',
inline: false
}]
Which is similar for:
For example
const parsed = parse(`
"foo" /* comment */
`)
Which is equivalent to
const parsed = new String('foo')
parsed[Symbol.for('after-all')] = [{
type: 'BlockComment',
value: ' comment ',
inline: true
}]
But there is one exception:
const parsed = parse(`
// comment
null
`)
console.log(parsed === null)
stringify()
stringify(object: any, replacer?, space?): string
The arguments are the same as the vanilla JSON.stringify
.
And it does the similar thing as the vanilla one, but also deal with extra properties and convert them into comments.
console.log(stringify(parsed, null, 2))
space
If space is not specified, or the space is an empty string, the result of stringify()
will have no comments.
For the case above:
console.log(stringify(result))
console.log(stringify(result, null, 2))
License
MIT