geojsonhint: complete, fast, standards-based validation for geojson
A lint tool for the GeoJSON
standard. geojsonhint is written to the standard, with no missing or additional
opinions about structure.
Thanks to jsonlint-lines
, GeoJSON that is also not valid JSON
can return informative, line-oriented parsing errors.
Specification
The basis of this tool is the published GeoJSON 1.0 specification.
In the few cases where draft-geojson,
the ietf-candidate version of GeoJSON, is more precise (for instance, the id property), the validator follows the draft spec as well.
API
errors = geojsonhint.hint(string or object, options)
Lint a file, given as a string or object. This call detects all aberrations from
the GeoJSON standards and returns them as an array of errors. An example of the output:
[{
"message": "\"features\" property should be an array, but is an object instead",
"line": 1
}]
The options argument is optional. It has these options:
noDuplicateMembers
.
By default, geojsonhint will treat repeated properties as an error: you can
set noDuplicateMembers to false to allow them. For instance:
geojsonhint.hint('{"type":"invalid","type":"Feature","properties":{},"geometry":null}', {
noDuplicateMembers: false
});
The repeated type
property in this input will be ignored with the option,
and flagged without it.
precisionWarning
.
GeoJSON now recommends six decimal places of accuracy
for coordinates (Section 11.2). This option adds a warning message when coordinates
contain over 6 decimal places of accuracy, up to 10 coordinates before the warning
message is truncated for performance.
geojsonhint.hint('{ "type": "Point", "coordinates": [100.0000000001, 5.0000000001] }', {
precisionWarning: false
});
With this option enabled, geojsonhint will produce these warnings:
[{
line: 1,
level: 'message',
message: 'precision of coordinates should be reduced'
}, {
line: 1,
level: 'message',
message: 'precision of coordinates should be reduced'
}]
Without this option, this input will pass without errors.
Line Numbers
Note that the GeoJSON can be given as a string or as an object. Here's how
to choose which input to use:
string
inputs receive line numbers for each error. These make errors
easier to track down if the GeoJSON is hand-written.object
inputs don't have line numbers but are evaluated faster, by up to 10x.
GeoJSONHint is very fast already so unless you have identified it as a
bottleneck in your application, don't prematurely optimize based
on this fact.
If you're really trying to save space and don't care about JSON validity errors -
only GeoJSON errors - you can require('geojsonhint/lib/object')
to get a version
of this library that bypasses jsonlint-lines and provides only the object
interface.
use it
npm (node.js, browserify, webpack, etc)
npm install --save geojsonhint
CDN / script tag
Hit this URL to resolve to the latest pinned version.
https://npmcdn.com/geojsonhint@latest/geojsonhint.js
As a command-line utility
Install:
npm install -g geojsonhint
➟ geojsonhint
Usage: geojsonhint FILE.geojson
Options:
--json output json-formatted data for hints
➟ geojsonhint test.geojson
line 9, each element in a position must be a number
Development
- Tests:
npm test
- Building the browser version:
npm run build
See Also