jsonpos
Get the text position [start, end] of a property in a JSON document.
Given the following JSON:
{
"foo": {
"bar": "baz"
^^^^^
}
}
The position of /foo/bar
(or ["foo", "bar"]
if provided as an array), is:
{
start: { line: 3, column: 16, offset: 30 },
end: { line: 3, column: 21, offset: 35 }
}
where offset
is the character offset in the JSON string.
If the property "bar" is wanted, instead of the value, set markIdentifier
to true
, see Simple usage.
Install
npm i jsonpos
or yarn add jsonpos
Versions
- Since v2 this is a pure ESM package, and requires Node.js >=12.20
- Since v3 the API has changed. The
dataPath
option has been renamed with changed semantics.
- Dot-based (string)
dataPath
is now dotPath
. It's not recommended to use as it's not safe for certain characters.
- Also, it now requires an initial
.
. Only the path .
represents the root object.
- Array-based
dataPath
is now simply path
.
- An empty object represents the root object, like in v2.
- New slash-based (string)
pointerPath
is allowed, following JSON Pointer encoding.
Exports
The package exports the following functions:
jsonpos
the main function, getting the location of a value in a JSON document- AST helper functions:
- Location helper function:
- Path helper functions:
Simple usage
Definition
jsonpos( json, options: LocationOptions ): Location
where LocationOptions
is:
interface LocationOptions
markIdentifier?: boolean;
// Only one of the following
dotPath: string;
path: Array< string | number >;
pointerPath: string;
}
and Location
is:
interface Location
{
start: Position | undefined;
end: Position | undefined;
}
where Position
is:
interface Position
{
line: number;
column: number;
offset: number;
}
As dot-separated textual path:
import { jsonpos } from 'jsonpos'
const loc = jsonpos(
'{ "foo": { "bar": "baz" } }',
{ dotPath: '.foo.bar' }
);
Note that dot-separated paths are strongly advised against.
As /-separated textual path:
import { jsonpos } from 'jsonpos'
const loc = jsonpos(
'{ "foo": { "bar": "baz" } }',
{ pointerPath: '/foo/bar' }
);
As array path:
import { jsonpos } from 'jsonpos'
const loc = jsonpos(
'{ "foo": { "bar": "baz" } }',
{ path: [ 'foo', 'bar' ] }
);
Advanced usage
The jsonpos
function is a shorthand for getLocation( getAstByString( json ), options )
Extract the AST (using json-to-ast) with getAstByString
or getAstByObject
. The result is an object of type ParsedJson
:
interface ParsedJson
{
json: any;
jsonString: string;
jsonAST: ValueNode;
}
getAstByString
import { getAstByString } from 'jsonpos'
const ast = getAstByString( '{ "foo": "bar" }' );
const { json, jsonString, jsonAST } = ast;
getAstByObject
getAstByObject
will stringify the JSON using JSON.stringify(obj, null, 4)
and use that to parse the AST.
import { getAstByObject } from 'jsonpos'
const ast = getAstByObject( { foo: "bar" } );
const { json, jsonString, jsonAST } = ast;
getAstByObject
takes an optional second argument indent
which can be set to something else than 4
if necessary, e.g. 2
:
const ast = getAstByObject( { foo: "bar" }, 2 );
getLocation
The getLocation
takes an ast object as returned by getAstByString
or getAstByObject
and returns a Location
object.
Definitins
getLocation( ast: ParsedJson, options: LocationOptions ): Location
Example
import { getAstByString, getLocation } from 'jsonpos'
const ast = getAstByString( '{ "foo": "bar" }' );
const loc = getLocation( ast, { pointerPath: '/foo' } );
Path helpers
This package understand array paths ["foo", "bar"]
, dot-path ".foo.bar"
and JSON Pointer paths /foo/bar
. Support for dot-path is to understand older paths from Ajv. Array paths are often the most practical programatically.
parsePath
The parsePath
function is what jsonpos
uses to parse the path. It takes on object containing either path
(an array), dotPath
or pointerPath
(strings), and it returns the path as an array.
parsePath( { path: [ "foo", "bar" ] } );
parsePath( { dotPath: ".foo.bar" } );
parsePath( { pointerPath: "/foo/bar" } );
JSON Pointer paths
JSON Pointer paths support the slash character (/
) in a path segment, and encodes it with ~1
and ~0
. encodeJsonPointerSegment
and parseJsonPointerSegment
does this:
encodeJsonPointerSegment( "f/o/o" );
parseJsonPointerSegment( "f~1o~1o" );
For complete paths (of segments), use encodeJsonPointerPath
and parseJsonPointerPath
:
encodeJsonPointerPath( [ "f/o/o", "bar" ] );
parseJsonPointerPath( "/f~1o~1o/bar" );