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deferredjson
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`DeferredJSON` offers a drop in replacement for `JSON.stringify` and `JSON.parse` that defers parsing until the data is actually needed. If you happen to serialize a DeferredJSON instance later to a string without ever touching it, than neither the parse
DeferredJSON
DeferredJSON
offers a drop in replacement for JSON.stringify
and JSON.parse
that defers parsing until the data is actually needed. If you happen to serialize a DeferredJSON instance later to a string without ever touching it, than neither the parse nor stringify needs to happen, and DeferredJSON can just feed out the already serialized contents stored at the start.
DeferredJSON
works by returning a Proxy
object that parses on demand the first time a value is accessed. DeferredJSON
works with any incoming JSON value, including serialized arrays, objects, and primitive values.
Also handy is that DeferredJSON
serialization can interpolate several nested lazy JSON objects into an outer one when stringifing. If you are returning an outer object (say a REST API response) where one field on each record is a potentially-large JSON object, you can use DeferredJSON
for those large objects, but still rely on DeferredJSON.stringify
to avoid the cost of deserializing-and-re-serializing each little object in the payload.
A lot of nodejs programs serve up JSON data to a client, and to do that, some in-memory datastructure has to get serialized. Usually, you have to pay the price of serializing an entire JSON tree, which is an event-loop-blocking operation. If the JSON is very large, this event loop block can become a major issue.
But, a lot of the time, the JSON a program is serving is available in an already serialized JSON form. It could be bytes in a file, or a json
or jsonb
field in Postgres, or incoming bytes from a request. If you already have JSON that you trust is valid in string form, it is wasteful to parse it, never touch it, and then serialize it again.
DeferredJSON
helps with this performance issue in this specific situation by deferring the parsing of your existing serialized JSON until the last possible moment. If you do need to access data within the JSON, DeferredJSON
will parse it on demand. But, if you never need to access the data, DeferredJSON
will never parse it, and can feed out the already serialized contents as is.
Use DeferredJSON.parse
instead of JSON.parse
, that's all. DeferredJSON.parse
will return a Proxy
object that should act just like a normal JSON object.
const obj = DeferredJSON.parse(`{"foo": "bar"}`);
// no parsing has happened yet
obj.foo; // "bar"
// object is now parsed and quacks the same as if JSON.parse was used
There's a few optimizations DeferredJSON.parse
makes to be aware of:
DeferredJSON
proxy, since parsing it is so cheap..then
property, the JSON won't be deserialized, and instead the whole JSON will be returned. This means that if the .then
property is actually a string inside the JSON that you care about, you need to forcibly parse the JSON to access it. This is a good thing, since it means you can still blindly await your DeferredJSON
s and not worry about eagerly forcing parsing for no reason other than some async function baloney.Use DeferredJSON.stringify
instead of JSON.stringify
. DeferredJSON.stringify
will return a string of serialized JSON the same way JSON.stringify
does, but if possible, it will interpolate already serialized strings that are handy into the final output.
const obj = DeferredJSON.parse(`{"foo": "bar"}`);
DeferredJSON.stringify(obj);
// `{"foo":"bar"}`
DeferredJSON.stringify
can re-use serialized JSON deep within the tree you are serializing. You don't need to pass a DeferredJSON
object to DeferredJSON.stringify
, it will work with any JSON-stringifiable value, including those that contain DeferredJSON
objects deep within them.
const obj = DeferredJSON.parse(`{"foo": "bar"}`);
const response = {
data: obj,
other: "stuff",
};
DeferredJSON.stringify(response);
// `{"data":{"foo":"bar"},"other":"stuff"}`
DeferredJSON
is written with high-performance node.js apps in mind and does its best to add as little overhead as possible, but there is some. When accessing keys of a DeferredJSON
object, there is a small amount of overhead added to go through the proxy for each property access at the root-level node that is parsed. If you need absolutely no overhead in accessing the data you are parsing, then don't use DeferredJSON
.
For serialization, DeferredJSON
also adds some small overhead. DeferredJSON
still uses the JS VM's JSON.stringify
under the hood to get maximum performance and all the optimizations baked in there, but then does a second pass over the serialized string to interpolate if needed. This adds some overhead, but for JSON objects of any size, the performance is still much better than doing the whole parse and re-serializing of the objects in question.
FAQs
`DeferredJSON` offers a drop in replacement for `JSON.stringify` and `JSON.parse` that defers parsing until the data is actually needed. If you happen to serialize a DeferredJSON instance later to a string without ever touching it, than neither the parse
The npm package deferredjson receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, deferredjson popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that deferredjson demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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