Json Escape
Json Escape use escape character in string to store types that normally not allowed in JSON
asc character 0x1b is used for the escaping
examples
const JsonEsc = require('jsonesc').default;
JsonEsc.stringify( [
NaN,
-Infinity,
new Date(),
new Uint8Array([1,2,3,4]),
undefined
], 1);
[
"\u001bNaN",
"\u001b-Inf",
"\u001bDate:2018-02-07T19:07:18.207Z",
"\u001bBin:wFg{A",
"\u001b?"
]
Advantage
JsonEsc allows additional data types to be serialized in JSON, such as binary date (Uint8Array) and Date, while still keeps the verbose nature of JSON.
The output string is still a 100% valid JSON, and compatible with any JSON editing/parsing tool or library. This makes JsonEsc much easier to debug and trouble shoot than binary formats like BSON and MsgPack
Performance
Modern browsers and nodejs are hightly optimized for JSON. This allows JsonEsc to be encoded and decoded faster than the other 2 formats in most of the cases.
benchmark result
Benchmark with sample data on Chrome 67, Firefox59, Edge 42
Time are all in ms, smaller is better
| Chrome Encode | Chrome Decode | Firefox Encode | Firefox Decode | Edge Encode | Edge Decode |
---|
JsonEsc | 0.1161 | 0.1606 | 0.1394 | 0.1553 | 0.0899 | 0.0753 |
MsgPack | 0.2465 | 0.1191 | 0.8663 | 0.2313 | 0.5752 | 0.2653 |
BSON | 0.1255 | 0.1170 | 0.3634 | 0.6124 | 0.27005 | 0.37705 |
API
JsonEsc.stringify(inpt:any, space?:number, sortKeys?:boolean = false);
JsonEsc.parse(inpt:string);
Custom Types
JsonEsc's register API make it really simple to add custom type into json encoding/decoding
class MyClass {
constructor(str) {
this.myStr = str;
}
}
let myJson = new JsonEsc();
myJson.register('My', MyClass,
(obj) => obj.myStr,
(str) => new MyClass(str)
);
myJson.stringify(new MyClass("hello"));
Base93 encoding
JsonEsc use Base93 to encode binary data, it's more compact than Base64.
If you still prefer Base64, just use these lines to register Uint8Array with a base64 encoder/decoder
const JsonEsc = require('jsonesc').default;
const Base64 = require("base64-js");
let myJson = new JsonEsc();
myJson.register('B64', Uint8Array,
(uint8arr) => Base64.fromByteArray(uint8arr),
(str) => new Uint8Array(Base64.toByteArray(str.substr(5)))
);
myJson.stringify({ binary:new Uint8Array([1,2,3,4])});