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json-edit-react

React component for editing or viewing JSON/object data

  • 1.15.0
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json-edit-react

screenshot

A React component for editing or viewing JSON/object data

[!IMPORTANT] Version 1.14.0 has a change which recommends you provide a setData prop and not use onUpdate for updating your data externally. See Managing state.

Features include:

  • edit individual values, or whole objects as JSON text
  • fine-grained control over which elements can be edited, deleted, or added to
  • full JSON Schema validation (using 3rd-party validation library)
  • customisable UI, through simple, pre-defined themes, specific CSS overrides for UI components, or by targeting CSS classes
  • self-contained — rendered with plain HTML/CSS, so no dependance on external UI libraries
  • search/filter data by key, value or custom function
  • provide your own custom component to integrate specialised UI for certain data.
  • localisable UI
  • NEW! Drag-n-drop editing! (experimental)

Explore the Demo

screenshot

Installation

npm i json-edit-react

or

yarn add json-edit-react

Implementation

import { JsonEditor } from 'json-edit-react'

// In your React component:
return 
  <JsonEditor
    data={ jsonData }
    setData={ setJsonData } // optional
    { ...otherProps } />

Usage

(for end user)

It's pretty self explanatory (click the "edit" icon to edit, etc.), but there are a few not-so-obvious ways of interacting with the editor:

  • Double-click a value (or a key) to edit it
  • When editing a string, use Cmd/Ctrl/Shift-Enter to add a new line (Enter submits the value)
  • It's the opposite when editing a full object/array node (which you do by clicking "edit" on an object or array value) — Enter for new line, and Cmd/Ctrl/Shift-Enter for submit
  • Escape to cancel editing
  • When clicking the "clipboard" icon, holding down Cmd/Ctrl will copy the path to the selected node rather than its value
  • When opening/closing a node, hold down "Alt/Option" to open/close all child nodes at once
  • For Number inputs, arrow-up and down keys will increment/decrement the value
  • Drag and drop items to change the structure or modify display order
  • JSON text input can accept "looser" input, if an additional JSON parsing method is provided (e.g. JSON5). See jsonParse prop.

Props overview

The only required value is data (although you will need to provide a setData method to update your data).

proptypedefaultdescription
dataobject|arrayThe data to be displayed / edited
setDataobject|array => voidMethod to update your data object. See Managing state below for additional notes.
rootNamestring"data"A name to display in the editor as the root of the data object.
onUpdateUpdateFunctionA function to run whenever a value is updated (edit, delete or add) in the editor. See Update functions.
onEditUpdateFunctionA function to run whenever a value is edited.
onDeleteUpdateFunctionA function to run whenever a value is deleted.
onAddUpdateFunctionA function to run whenever a new property is added.
onChangeOnChangeFunctionA function to modify/constrain user input as they type -- see OnChange functions.
onErrorOnErrorFunctionA function to run whenever the component reports an error -- see OnErrorFunction.
showErrorMessagesboolean trueWhether or not the component should display its own error messages (you'd probably only want to disable this if you provided your own onError function)
enableClipboardboolean|CopyFunctiontrueWhether or not to enable the "Copy to clipboard" button in the UI. If a function is provided, true is assumed and this function will be run whenever an item is copied.
indentnumber3Specify the amount of indentation for each level of nesting in the displayed data.
collapseboolean|number|FilterFunctionfalseDefines which nodes of the JSON tree will be displayed "opened" in the UI on load. If boolean, it'll be either all or none. A number specifies a nesting depth after which nodes will be closed. For more fine control a function can be provided — see Filter functions.
restrictEditboolean|FilterFunctionfalseIf true, no editing is permitted. A function can be provided for more specificity — see Filter functions
restrictDeleteboolean|FilterFunctionfalseAs with restrictEdit but for deletion
restrictAddboolean|FilterFunctionfalseAs with restrictEdit but for adding new properties
restrictTypeSelectionboolean|FilterFunctiontrueSet to false to enable drag and drop functionality. See Drag-n-drop
restrictDragboolean|DataType[]|TypeFilterFunctionfalseFor restricting the data types the user can select. Can be a list of data types (e.g. [ 'string', 'number', 'boolean', 'array', 'object', 'null' ]) or a boolean. A function can be provided -- it should take the same input as the above FilterFunctions, but output should be boolean | DataType[].
searchTextstringundefinedData visibility will be filtered by matching against value, using the method defined below in searchFilter
searchFilter"key"|"value"|"all"|SearchFilterFunctionundefinedDefine how searchText should be matched to filter the visible items. See Search/Filtering
searchDebounceTimenumber350Debounce time when searchText changes
keySortboolean|CompareFunctionfalseIf true, object keys will be ordered (using default JS .sort()). A compare function can also be provided to define sorting behaviour.
showArrayIndicesbooleantrueWhether or not to display the index (as a property key) for array elements.
showStringQuotesbooleantrueWhether or not to display string values in "quotes".
showCollectionCountboolean|"when-closed"trueWhether or not to display the number of items in each collection (object or array).
defaultValueany|DefaultValueFilterFunctionnullWhen a new property is added, it is initialised with this value. A function can be provided with the same input as the FilterFunctions, but should output a value. This allows a different default value to be used depending on the data state (e.g. default for top level is an object, but a string elsewhere.)
stringTruncatenumber250String values longer than this many characters will be displayed truncated (with ...). The full string will always be visible when editing.
translationsLocalisedStrings object{ }UI strings (such as error messages) can be translated by passing an object containing localised string values (there are only a few). See Localisation
themestring|ThemeObject|[string, ThemeObject]"default"Either the name of one of the built-in themes, or an object specifying some or all theme properties. See Themes.
classNamestringName of a CSS class to apply to the component. In most cases, specifying theme properties will be more straightforward.
idstringName for the HTML id attribute on the main component container.
icons{[iconName]: JSX.Element, ... }{ }Replace the built-in icons by specifying them here. See Themes.
minWidthnumber|string (CSS value)250Minimum width for the editor container.
maxWidthnumber|string (CSS value)600Maximum width for the editor container.
rootFontSizenumber|string (CSS value)16pxThe "base" font size from which all other sizings are derived (in ems). By changing this you will scale the entire component. container.
customNodeDefinitionsCustomNodeDefinition[]You can provide customised components to override specific nodes in the data tree, according to a condition function. See see Custom nodes for more detail. (A simple custom component to turn url strings into active links is provided in the main package -- see here)
customTextCustomTextDefinitionsIn addition to localising the component text strings, you can also dynamically alter it, depending on the data. See Custom Text for more detail.
jsonParse(input: string) => JsonDataJSON.parseWhen editing a block of JSON directly, you may wish to allow some "looser" input -- e.g. 'single quotes', trailing commas, or unquoted field names. In this case, you can provide a third-party JSON parsing method. I recommend JSON5, which is what is used in the Demo
jsonStringify(data: JsonData) => string(data) => JSON.stringify(data, null, 2)Similarly, you can override the default presentation of the JSON string when starting editing JSON. You can supply different formatting parameters to the native JSON.stringify(), or provide a third-party option, like the aforementioned JSON5.

Managing state

It is recommended that you manage the data state yourself outside this component -- just pass in a setData method, which is called internally to update your data. However, this is not compulsory -- if you don't provide a setData method, the data will be managed internally, which would be fine if you're not doing anything with the data. The alternative is to use the Update functions to update your data externally, but this is not recommended except in special circumstances as you can run into issues keeping your data in sync with the internal state (which is what is displayed), as well as unnecessary re-renders. Update functions should be ideally be used only for implementing side effects, checking for errors, or mutating the data before setting it with setData.

Update functions

A callback to be executed whenever a data update (edit, delete or add) occurs can be provided. You might wish to use this to update some external state, make an API call, modify the data before saving it, or validate the data structure against a JSON schema. If you want the same function for all updates, then just the onUpdate prop is sufficient. However, should you require something different for editing, deletion and addition, then you can provide separate Update functions via the onEdit, onDelete and onAdd props.

The function will receive the following object as a parameter:

{
    newData,      // data state after update
    currentData,  // data state before update 
    newValue,     // the new value of the property being updated
    currentValue, // the current value of the property being updated
    name,         // name of the property being updated
    path          // full path to the property being updated, as an array of property keys
                  // (e.g. [ "user", "friends", 1, "name" ] ) (equivalent to "user.friends[1].name")
}

The function needn't return anything, in which case the data is updated normally. However, you can return either an Error value, or a modified data value, which will be used instead of the input data. The return value can be one of the following:

  • void / undefined: data continues update as normal
  • false: considers the update to be an error, so data is not updated (reverts to previous value), and a generic error message is displayed in the UI
  • string: also considered an error, so no data update, but the UI error message will be your provided string
  • [ "value", <value> ]: tells the component to use the returned <value> instead of the input data. You might use this to automatically modify user input -- for example, sorting an array, or inserting a timestamp field into an object.
  • [ "error", <value> ]: same as string, but in the longer tuple format.

OnChange function

Similar to the Update functions, the onChange function is executed as the user input changes. You can use this to restrict or constrain user input -- e.g. limiting numbers to positive values, or preventing line breaks in strings. The function must return a value in order to update the user input field, so if no changes are to made, just return it unmodified.

The input object is similar to the Update function input, but with no newData field (since this operation occurs before the data is updated).

Examples
  • Restrict "age" inputs to positive values up to 100:
    // in <JsonEditor /> props
    onChange = ({ newValue, name }) => {
          if (name === "age" && newValue < 0) return 0;
          if (name === "age" && newValue > 100) return 100;
          return newValue
        }
    
  • Only allow alphabetical or whitespace input for "name" field (including no line breaks):
    onChange = ({ newValue, name }) => {
        if (name === 'name' && typeof newValue === "string")
          return newValue.replace(/[^a-zA-Z\s]|\n|\r/gm, '');
        return newValue;
      }
    

OnError function

Normally, the component will display simple error messages whenever an error condition is detected (e.g. invalid JSON input, duplicate keys, or custom errors returned by the onUpdate functions)). However, you can provide your own onError callback in order to implement your own error UI, or run additional side effects. (In the former case, you'd probably want to disable the showErrorMessages prop, too.) The input to the callback is similar to the other callbacks:

{
    currentData,  // data state before update 
    currentValue, // the current value of the property being updated
    errorValue,   // the erroneous value that failed to update the property
    name,         // name of the property being updated
    path,         // full path to the property being updated, as an array of property keys
                  // (e.g. [ "user", "friends", 1, "name" ] ) (equivalent to "user.friends[1].name"),
    error: {
      code,       // one of 'UPDATE_ERROR' | 'DELETE_ERROR' | 'ADD_ERROR' | 'INVALID_JSON' | 'KEY_EXISTS'
      message     // the (localised) error message that would be displayed
    }
}

(An example of a custom Error UI can be seen in the Demo with the "Custom Nodes" data set -- when you enter invalid JSON input a "Toast" notification is displayed instead of the normal component error message.)

Copy function

A similar callback is executed whenever an item is copied to the clipboard (if passed to the enableClipboard prop), but with a different input parameter:

    key         // name of the property being copied  
    path        // path to the property
    value       // the value copied to the clipboard
    type        // Either "path" or "value" depending on whether "Cmd/Ctrl" was pressed 
    stringValue // A nicely stringified version of `value`  
                // (i.e. what the clipboard actually receives)

Since there is very little user feedback when clicking "Copy", a good idea would be to present some kind of notification in this callback.

Filter functions

You can control which nodes of the data structure can be edited, deleted, or added to, or have their data type changed, by passing Filter functions. These will be called on each property in the data and the attribute will be enforced depending on whether the function returns true or false (true means cannot be edited).

The function receives the following object:

{
    key,   // name of the property
    path,  // path to the property (as an array of property keys)
    level, // depth of the property (with 0 being the root)
    index, // index of the node within its collection (based on display order)
    value, // value of the property
    size ,  // if a collection (object, array), the number of items (null for non-collections)
    parentData, // parent object containing the current node
    fullData // the full (overall) data object
    collapsed // whether or not the current node is in a
              // "collapsed" state (only for Collection nodes)
}

A Filter function is available for the collapse prop as well, so you can have your data appear with deeply-nested collections opened up, while collapsing everything else, for example.

For restricting data types, the (Type) filter function is slightly more sophisticated. The input is the same, but the output can be either a boolean (which would restrict the available types for a given node to either all or none), or an array of data types to be restricted to. The available values are:

  • "string"
  • "number"
  • "boolean"
  • "null"
  • "object"
  • "array"

There is no specific restriction function for editing object key names, but they must return true for both restrictEdit and restrictDelete (and restrictAdd for collections), since changing a key name is equivalent to deleting a property and adding a new one.

Using all these restriction filters together can allow you to enforce a reasonably sophisticated data schema.

Examples

  • A good case would be ensure your root node is not directly editable:
// in <JsonEditor /> props
restrictEdit = { ({ level }) => level === 0 }
  • Don't let the id field be edited:
restrictEdit = { ({ key }) => key === "id" }
// You'd probably want to include this in `restrictDelete` as well
  • Only individual properties can be deleted, not objects or arrays:
restrictDelete = { ({ size }) => size !== null }
  • The only collections that can have new items added are the "address" object and the "users" array:
restrictAdd = { ({ key }) => key !== "address" && key !== "users" }
// "Adding" is irrelevant for non-collection nodes
  • Multiple type restrictions:
    • string values can only be changed to strings or objects (for nesting)
    • null is not allowed anywhere
    • boolean values must remain boolean
    • data nested below the "user" field can be any simple property (i.e. not objects or arrays), and doesn't have to follow the above rules (except no "null")
restrictTypeSelection = { ({ path, value }) => {
  if (path.includes('user')) return ['string', 'number', 'boolean']
  if (typeof value === 'boolean') return false
  if (typeof value === 'string') return ['string', 'object']
  return ['string', 'number', 'boolean', 'array', 'object'] // no "null"
} }

JSON Schema validation

As well as dynamically controlling access to the various edit tools as described above, it's possible to do full JSON Schema validation by creating an Update Function that passes the data to a 3rd-party schema validation library (e.g. Ajv). This will then reject any invalid input, and display an error in the UI (or via a custom onError function). You can see an example of this in the Demo with the "JSON Schema Validation" data set (and the "Custom Nodes" data set).

An example onUpdate validation function (using Ajv) could be something like this:

import { JsonEditor } from 'json-edit-react'
import Ajv from 'ajv'
import schema from './my-json-schema.json'

const ajv = new Ajv()
const validate = ajv.compile(schema)

/// Etc....

// In the React component:
return 
  <JsonEditor
    data={ jsonData }
    onUpdate={ ({ newData }) => {
      const valid = validate(newData)
      if (!valid) {
        console.log('Errors', validate.errors)
        const errorMessage = validate.errors
          ?.map((error) => `${error.instancePath}${error.instancePath ? ': ' : ''}${error.message}`)
          .join('\n')
        // Send detailed error message to an external UI element, such as a "Toast" notification
         displayError({
          title: 'Not compliant with JSON Schema',
          description: errorMessage,
          status: 'error',
        })
        // This string returned to and displayed in json-edit-react UI
        return 'JSON Schema error'
      }
    }}
  { ...otherProps } />

Drag-n-drop

[!NOTE] This is a new feature and should be considered "experimental". Please provide feedback or suggestions to help improve it.

The restrictDrag property controls which items (if any) can be dragged into new positions. By default, this is off, so you must set restrictDrag = false to enable this functionality. Like the Edit restrictions above, this property can also take a Filter function for fine-grained control. There are a couple of additional considerations, though:

  • Javascript does not guarantee object property order, so enabling this feature may yield unpredictable results. See here for an explanation of how key ordering is handled. It is strongly advised that you only enable drag-and-drop functionality if:
    1. you're sure object keys will always be simple strings (i.e. not digits or non-standard characters)
    2. you're saving the data in a serialisation format that preserves key order. For example, storing in a Postgres database using the jsonb (binary JSON) type, key order is meaningless, so the next time the object is loaded, the keys will be listed alphabetically.
  • The restrictDrag filter applies to the source element (i.e. the node being dragged), not the destination.
  • To be draggable, the node must also be delete-able (via the restrictDelete prop), as dragging a node to a new destination is essentially just deleting it and adding it back elsewhere.
  • Similarly, the destination collection must be editable in order to drop it in there. This means that, if you've gone to the trouble of configuring restrictive editing constraints using Filter functions, you can be confident that they can't be circumvented via drag-n-drop.

Search/Filtering

The displayed data can be filtered based on search input from a user. The user input should be captured independently (we don't provide a UI here) and passed in with the searchText prop. This input is debounced internally (time can be set with the searchDebounceTime prop), so no need for that as well. The values that the searchText are tested against is specified with the searchFilter prop. By default (no searchFilter defined), it will match against the data values (with case-insensitive partial matching -- i.e. input "Ilb", will match value "Bilbo").

You can specify what should be matched by setting searchFilter to either "key" (match property names), "value" (the default described above), or "all" (match both properties and values). This should be enough for the majority of use cases, but you can specify your own SearchFilterFunction. The search function is the same signature as the above FilterFunctions but takes one additional argument for the searchText, i.e.

( { key, path, level, value, ...etc }:FilterFunctionInput, searchText:string ) => boolean

There are two helper functions (matchNode() and matchNodeKey()) exported with the package that might make creating your search function easier (these are the functions used internally for the "key" and "value" matches described above). You can see what they do here.

An example custom search function can be seen in the Demo with the "Client list" data set -- the search function matches by name and username, and makes the entire "Client" object visible when one of those matches, so it can be used to find a particular person and edit their specific details:

({ path, fullData }, searchText) => {
  // Matches *any* node that shares a path (i.e. a descendent) with a matching name/username
    if (path?.length >= 2) {
      const index = path?.[0]
      return (
        matchNode({ value: fullData[index].name }, searchText) ||
        matchNode({ value: fullData[index].username }, searchText)
      )
    } else return false
  }

Themes & Styles

There is a small selection of built-in themes (as seen in the Demo app). In order to use one of these, just pass the name into the theme prop (although realistically, these exist more to showcase the capabilities — I'm open to better built-in themes, so feel free to create an issue with suggestions). The available themes are:

  • default
  • githubDark
  • githubLight
  • monoDark
  • monoLight
  • candyWrapper
  • psychedelic

However, you can pass in your own theme object, or part thereof. The theme structure is as follows (this is the "default" theme definition):

{
  displayName: 'Default',
  fragments: { edit: 'rgb(42, 161, 152)' },
  styles: {
    container: {
      backgroundColor: '#f6f6f6',
      fontFamily: 'monospace',
    },
    collection: {},
    collectionInner: {},
    collectionElement: {},
    dropZone: {},
    property: '#292929',
    bracket: { color: 'rgb(0, 43, 54)', fontWeight: 'bold' },
    itemCount: { color: 'rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.3)', fontStyle: 'italic' },
    string: 'rgb(203, 75, 22)',
    number: 'rgb(38, 139, 210)',
    boolean: 'green',
    null: { color: 'rgb(220, 50, 47)', fontVariant: 'small-caps', fontWeight: 'bold' },
    input: ['#292929', { fontSize: '90%' }],
    inputHighlight: '#b3d8ff',
    error: { fontSize: '0.8em', color: 'red', fontWeight: 'bold' },
    iconCollection: 'rgb(0, 43, 54)',
    iconEdit: 'edit',
    iconDelete: 'rgb(203, 75, 22)',
    iconAdd: 'edit',
    iconCopy: 'rgb(38, 139, 210)',
    iconOk: 'green',
    iconCancel: 'rgb(203, 75, 22)',
  },
}

The styles property is the main one to focus on. Each key (property, bracket, itemCount) refers to a part of the UI. The value for each key is either:

  • a string, in which case it is interpreted as the colour (or background colour in the case of container and inputHighlight)
  • a full CSS style object for fine-grained definition. You only need to provide properties you wish to override — all unspecified ones will fallback to either the default theme, or another theme that you specify as the "base".
  • a "Style Function", which is a function that takes the same input as Filter Functions, but returns a CSS style object (or null). This allows you to dynamically change styling of various elements based on content or structure.
  • an array containing any combination of the above, in which case they are merged together. For example, you could provide a Theme Function with styling for a very specific condition, but then provide "fallback" styles whenever the function returns null. (In the array, the later items have higher precedence)

For a simple example, if you want to use the "githubDark" theme, but just change a couple of small things, you'd specify something like this:

// in <JsonEditor /> props
theme={[
        'githubDark',
        {
            iconEdit: 'grey',
            boolean: { color: 'red', fontStyle: 'italic', fontWeight: 'bold', fontSize: '80%' },
        },
      ]}

Which would change the "Edit" icon and boolean values from this:
Github Dark theme original
into this:
Github Dark theme modified

Or you could create your own theme from scratch and overwrite the whole theme object.

So, to summarise, the theme prop can take either:

  • a theme name e.g. "candyWrapper"
  • a theme object:
    • can be structured as above with fragments, styles, displayName etc., or just the styles part (at the root level)
  • a theme name and an override object in an array, i.e. [ "<themeName>, {...overrides } ]

You can play round with live editing of the themes in the Demo app by selecting "Edit this theme!" from the "Demo data" selector (though you won't be able to create functions in JSON).

CSS classes

Another way to style the component is to target the CSS classes directly. Every element in the component has a unique class name, so you should be able to locate them in your browser inspector and override them accordingly. All class names begin with the prefix jer-, e.g. jer-collection-header-row, jer-value-string.

Fragments

The fragments property above is just a convenience to allow repeated style "fragments" to be defined once and referred to using an alias. For example, if you wanted all your icons to be blue and slightly larger and spaced out, you might define a fragment like so:

fragments: { iconAdjust: { color: "blue", fontSize: "110%", marginRight: "0.6em" }}

Then in the theme object, just use:

{
    ...,
    iconEdit: "iconAdjust",
    iconDelete: "iconAdjust",
    iconAdd: "iconAdjust",
    iconCopy: "iconAdjust",
}

Then, when you want to tweak it later, you only need to update it in one place!

Fragments can also be mixed with additional properties, and even other fragments, like so:

iconEdit: [ "iconAdjust", "anotherFragment", { marginLeft: "1em" } ]

A note about sizing and scaling

Internally, all sizing and spacing is done in ems, never px (aside from the rootFontSize, which sets the "base" size). This makes scaling a lot easier — just change the rootFontSize prop (or set fontSize on the main container via targeting the class, or tweaking the theme), and watch the whole component scale accordingly.

Icons

The default icons can be replaced, but you need to provide them as React/HTML elements. Just define any or all of them within the icons prop, keyed as follows:

 icons={{
  add: <YourIcon /> 
  edit: <YourIcon /> 
  delete: <YourIcon />
  copy: <YourIcon />
  ok: <YourIcon />
  cancel: <YourIcon />
  chevron: <YourIcon />
}}

The Icon components will need to have their own styles defined, as the theme styles won't be added to the custom elements.

Localisation

Localise your implementation by passing in a translations object to replace the default strings. The keys and default (English) values are as follows:

{
  ITEM_SINGLE: '{{count}} item',
  ITEMS_MULTIPLE: '{{count}} items',
  KEY_NEW: 'Enter new key',
  ERROR_KEY_EXISTS: 'Key already exists',
  ERROR_INVALID_JSON: 'Invalid JSON',
  ERROR_UPDATE: 'Update unsuccessful',
  ERROR_DELETE: 'Delete unsuccessful',
  ERROR_ADD: 'Adding node unsuccessful',
  DEFAULT_STRING: 'New data!',
  DEFAULT_NEW_KEY: 'key',
}

Custom Nodes

You can replace certain nodes in the data tree with your own custom components. An example might be for an image display, or a custom date editor, or just to add some visual bling. See the "Custom Nodes" data set in the interactive demo to see it in action. (There is also a custom Date picker that appears when editing ISO strings in the other data sets.)

Custom nodes are provided in the customNodeDefinitions prop, as an array of objects of following structure:

{
  condition,            // a FilterFunction, as above
  element,              // React Component
  customNodeProps,      // object (optional)
  hideKey,              // boolean (optional)
  defaultValue,         // JSON value for a new instance of your component
  showOnEdit            // boolean, default false
  showOnView            // boolean, default true
  showEditTools         // boolean, default true
  name                  // string (appears in Types selector)
  showInTypesSelector,  // boolean (optional), default false
  
  // Only affects Collection nodes:
  showCollectionWrapper // boolean (optional), default true
  wrapperElement        // React component (optional) to wrap *outside* the normal collection wrapper
  wrapperProps          // object (optional) -- props for the above wrapper component
}

The condition is just a Filter function, with the same input parameters (key, path, value, etc.), and element is a React component. Every node in the data structure will be run through each condition function, and any that match will be replaced by your custom component. Note that if a node matches more than one custom definition conditions (from multiple components), the first one will be used, so place them in the array in priority order.

The component will receive all the same props as a standard node component (see codebase), but you can pass additional props to your component if required through the customNodeProps object. A thorough example of a custom Date picker is used in the demo (along with a couple of other more basic presentational ones), which you can inspect to see how to utilise the standard props and a couple of custom props. View the source code here

By default, your component will be presented to the right of the property key it belongs to, like any other value. However, you can hide the key itself by setting hideKey: true, and the custom component will take the whole row. (See the "Presented by" box in the "Custom Nodes" data set for an example.)

Also, by default, your component will be treated as a "display" element, i.e. it will appear in the JSON viewer, but when editing, it will revert to the standard editing interface. This can be changed, however, with the showOnEdit, showOnView and showEditTools props. For example, a Date picker might only be required when editing and left as-is for display. The showEditTools prop refers to the editing icons (copy, add, edit, delete) that appear to the right of each value on hover. If you choose to disable these but you still want to your component to have an "edit" mode, you'll have to provide your own UI mechanism to toggle editing.

You can allow users to create new instances of your special nodes by selecting them as a "Type" in the types selector when editing/adding values. Set showInTypesSelector: true to enable this. However, if this is enabled you need to also provide a name (which is what the user will see in the selector) and a defaultValue which is the data that is inserted when the user selects this "type". (The defaultValue must return true if passed through the condition function in order for it to be immediately displayed using your custom component.)

A simple custom component and definition to turn url strings into clickable links is provided with the main package for you to use out of the box. Just import and use like so:

import { JsonEditor, LinkCustomNodeDefinition } from 'json-edit-react'

// ...Other stuff
return (
  <JsonEditor
    {...otherProps}
    customNodeDefinitions={[LinkCustomNodeDefinition, ...otherCustomDefinitions]}
  />
  )

Custom Collection nodes

In most cases it will be preferable (and simpler) to create custom nodes to match value nodes (i.e. not array or object collection nodes), which is what all the Demo examples show. However, if you do wish to target a whole collection node, there are a couple of other things to know:

  • The normal descendants of this node can still be displayed using the React children property, it just becomes your component's responsibility to handle it.
  • You can specify two different components in the definition:
    • the regular element prop, which will be displayed inside the collection brackets (i.e. it appears as the contents of the collection)
    • an optional wrapperElement, which is displayed outside the collection (props can be supplied as described above with wrapperProps). Again, the inner contents (including your custom element) can be displayed using React children. In this example, the blue border shows the wrapperElement and the red border shows the inner element: custom node levels
  • There is one additional prop, showCollectionWrapper (default true), which, when set to false, hides the surrounding collection elements (namely the hide/show chevron and the brackets). In this case, you would have to provide your own hide/show mechanism in your component should you want it.

Custom Text

It's possible to change the various text strings displayed by the component. You can localise it, but you can also specify functions to override the displayed text based on certain conditions. For example, say we want the property count text (e.g. 6 items by default) to give a summary of a certain type of node, which can look nice when collapsed. For example (taken from the Demo):

Custom text example

The customText property takes an object, with any of the localisable keys as keys, with a function that returns a string (or null, which causes it to fallback to the localised or default string). The input to these functions is the same as for Filter functions, so in this example, it would be defined like so:


// The function definition
const itemCountReplacement = ({ key, value, size }) => {
    // This returns "Steve Rogers (Marvel)" for the node summary
    if (value instanceof Object && 'name' in value)
      return `${value.name} (${(value)?.publisher ?? ''})`
    // This returns "X names" for the alias lists
    if (key === 'aliases' && Array.isArray(value))
      return `${size} ${size === 1 ? 'name' : 'names'}`
    // Everything else as normal
    return null
  }

// And in component props...
...otherProps,
customText = {
  ITEM_SINGLE: itemCountReplacement,
  ITEMS_MULTIPLE: itemCountReplacement,
}

Undo functionality

Even though Undo/Redo functionality is probably desirable in most cases, this is not built in to the component, for two main reasons:

  1. It would involve too much additional UI and I didn't want this component becoming opinionated about the look and feel beyond the essentials (which are mostly customisable/style-able anyway)
  2. It is quite straightforward to implement using existing libraries. I've used use-undo in the Demo, which is working well.

Exported helpers

A few helper functions, components and types that might be useful in your own implementations (from creating Filter or Update functions, or Custom components) are exported from the package:

Functions & Components

  • themes: an object containing all the built-in theme definitions
  • LinkCustomComponent: the component used to render hyperlinks
  • LinkCustomNodeDefinition: custom node definition for hyperlinks
  • IconAdd, IconEdit, IconDelete, IconCopy, IconOk, IconCancel, IconChevron: all the built-in icon components
  • matchNode, matchNodeKey: helpers for defining custom Search functions
  • truncate: function to truncate a string to a specified length. See here
  • extract: function to extract a deeply nested object value from a string path. See here
  • assign: function to set a deep object value from a string path. See here

Types

Issues, bugs, suggestions?

Please open an issue: https://github.com/CarlosNZ/json-edit-react/issues

Roadmap

The main features I'd like to introduce are:

  1. JSON Schema validation. We can currently specify a reasonable degree of control over what can be edited using Filter functions with the restriction props, but I'd like to go a step further and be able to pass in a JSON Schema and have the data be automatically validated against it, with the results reflected in the UI. This would allow control over data types and prevent missing properties, something that is not currently possible. 👍 Done (using 3rd-party validation library)
  2. Search/Visibility filter — allow the user to narrow the list of visible keys with a simple search input. This would be useful for very large data objects, but is possibly getting a bit too much in terms of opinionated UI, so would need to ensure it can be styled easily. Perhaps it would be better if the "Search" input was handled outside this package, and we just accepted a "search" string prop? 👍 Done

Inspiration

This component is heavily inspired by react-json-view, a great package that I've used in my own projects. However, it seems to have been abandoned now, and requires a few critical fixes, so I decided to create my own from scratch and extend the functionality while I was at it.

Changelog

  • 1.15.0: Remove (JSON5) from the package, and provided props for passing in any alternative JSON parsing and stringifying methods.
  • 1.14.0:
    • Allow UpdateFunction to return a modified value, not just an error
    • Add setData prop to discourage reliance on internal data state management
    • Refactor state/event management to use less useEffect hooks
  • 1.13.3: Bug fix for when root data value is null #90
  • 1.13.2: Slightly better error handling when validating JSON schema
  • 1.13.0:
    • Drag-n-drop editing!
    • Remove unnecessary dependency
    • Refactor some duplicate code into common hook
  • 1.12.0:
    • Preserve editing mode when changing Data Type
    • onError callback available for custom error handling
  • 1.11.8: Fix regression for empty data root name introduces in 1.11.7
  • 1.11.7: Handle <empty-string> object keys / prevent duplicate keys
  • 1.11.3: Bug fix for invalid state when changing type to Collection node
  • 1.11.0:
    • Improve CSS definitions to prevent properties from being overridden by the host environment's CSS
    • Add rootFontSize prop to set the "base" size for the component
  • 1.10.2:
    • Fixes for text wrapping and content overlaps when values and inputs contain very long strings (#57, #58)
    • Only allow one element to be edited at a time, and prevent collapsing when an inner element is being edited.
  • 1.9.0:
    • Increment number input using up/down arrow keys
    • Option to display string values without "quotes"
    • Add onChange prop to allow validation/restriction of user input as they type
    • Don't update data if user hasn't actually changed a value (prevents Undo from being unnecessarily triggered)
    • Misc HTML warnings, React compatibility fixes
  • 1.8.0: Further improvements/fixes to collection custom nodes, including additional wrapperElement prop
    • Add optional id prop
  • 1.7.2:
    • Fix and improve Custom nodes in collections
    • Include index in Filter (and other) function input
  • 1.7.0: Implement Search/filtering of data visibility
  • 1.6.1: Revert data state on Update Function error
  • 1.6.0: Allow a function for defaultValue prop
  • 1.5.0:
    • Open/close all descendant nodes by holding "Alt"/"Option" while opening/closing a node
  • 1.4.0:
    • Style functions for context-dependent styling
    • Handle "loose" (JSON5) JSON text input(e.g. non-quoted keys, trailing commas, etc.)
  • 1.3.0:
    • Custom (dynamic) text
    • Add hyperlink Custom component to bundle
    • Better indentation of collection nodes (property name lines up with non-collection nodes, not the collapse icon)
  • 1.2.2: Allow editing of Custom nodes
  • 1.1.0: Don't manage data state within component
  • 1.0.0:
    • Custom nodes
    • Allow editing of keys
    • Option to define restrictions on data type selection
    • Option to hide array/object item counts
    • Improve keyboard interaction
  • 0.9.6: Performance improvement by not processing child elements if not visible
  • 0.9.4:
    • Layout improvements
    • Better internal handling of functions in data
  • 0.9.3: Bundle as ES6 module
  • 0.9.1: Export more Types from the package
  • 0.9.0: Initial release

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Package last updated on 19 Jul 2024

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