json-rel
:link: Transparent references in JSON
json-rel
converges the following standards and libraries in order to help normalize JSON reference/relationship descriptors:
- JsonPath
- JsonPointer
- JsonQuery
The goal is to increase developer transparency and to provide a unified, semantic interface for working with related JSON data.
Aside from being all around simple, json-rel
spares library developers from having to:
- decide between which reference specifications(s) to support in your projects
- write an interface for when more than one standard needs support
- bottleneck integrators of your library into a certain specificaton
- write a mechanism that provides a consistent return format (e.g. array vs. element)
Installation
npm install json-rel
Usage
This example shows how to use the main feature of json-rel
, which is being able to provide any relationship or reference string to $
, an "operator" which will automatically identify the correct specification to use based on the relation itself:
import $ from 'json-rel'
const data = {
foo: {
bar: true
}
}
let query = $('foo.bar').use(data).get()
let path = $('$.foo.bar').use(data).get()
let pointer = $('/foo/bar').use(data).get()
If you want to be slightly more concise:
let query = $('foo[bar]', data).get()
let path = $('$.foo.bar', data).get()
let pointer = $('/foo/bar', data).get()
You may also, of course, access and use each specification individually:
import {query, path, pointer} from 'json-rel'
query('foo[bar]', data).get()
path('$.foo.bar', data).get()
pointer('/foo/bar', data).get()
You can also infer the specification directly from the relation itself via which
:
import which from 'json-rel'
which('foo[bar]')
which('$.foo.bar')
which('/foo/bar')