pretty-format
Stringify any JavaScript value.
- Supports all built-in JavaScript types
- primitive types:
Boolean
, null
, Number
, String
, Symbol
,
undefined
- other non-collection types:
Date
, Error
, Function
, RegExp
- collection types:
arguments
, Array
, ArrayBuffer
, DataView
, Float32Array
,
Float64Array
, Int8Array
, Int16Array
, Int32Array
, Uint8Array
,
Uint8ClampedArray
, Uint16Array
, Uint32Array
,Map
, Set
, WeakMap
, WeakSet
Object
- Blazingly fast
- similar performance to
JSON.stringify
in v8 - significantly faster than
util.format
in Node.js
- Serialize application-specific data types with built-in or user-defined
plugins
Installation
$ yarn add pretty-format
Usage
const prettyFormat = require('pretty-format');
import prettyFormat from 'pretty-format';
const val = {object: {}};
val.circularReference = val;
val[Symbol('foo')] = 'foo';
val.map = new Map([['prop', 'value']]);
val.array = [-0, Infinity, NaN];
console.log(prettyFormat(val));
Usage with options
function onClick() {}
console.log(prettyFormat(onClick));
const options = {
printFunctionName: false,
};
console.log(prettyFormat(onClick, options));
key | type | default | description |
---|
callToJSON | boolean | true | call toJSON method (if it exists) on objects |
escapeRegex | boolean | false | escape special characters in regular expressions |
highlight | boolean | false | highlight syntax with colors in terminal (some plugins) |
indent | number | 2 | spaces in each level of indentation |
maxDepth | number | Infinity | levels to print in arrays, objects, elements, and so on |
min | boolean | false | minimize added space: no indentation nor line breaks |
plugins | array | [] | plugins to serialize application-specific data types |
printFunctionName | boolean | true | include or omit the name of a function |
theme | object | | colors to highlight syntax in terminal |
Property values of theme
are from
ansi-styles colors
const DEFAULT_THEME = {
comment: 'gray',
content: 'reset',
prop: 'yellow',
tag: 'cyan',
value: 'green',
};
Usage with plugins
The pretty-format
package provides some built-in plugins, including:
ReactElement
for elements from react
ReactTestComponent
for test objects from react-test-renderer
const prettyFormat = require('pretty-format');
const ReactElement = prettyFormat.plugins.ReactElement;
const ReactTestComponent = prettyFormat.plugins.ReactTestComponent;
const React = require('react');
const renderer = require('react-test-renderer');
import prettyFormat from 'pretty-format';
const {ReactElement, ReactTestComponent} = prettyFormat.plugins;
import React from 'react';
import renderer from 'react-test-renderer';
const onClick = () => {};
const element = React.createElement('button', {onClick}, 'Hello World');
const formatted1 = prettyFormat(element, {
plugins: [ReactElement],
printFunctionName: false,
});
const formatted2 = prettyFormat(renderer.create(element).toJSON(), {
plugins: [ReactTestComponent],
printFunctionName: false,
});
Usage in Jest
For snapshot tests, Jest uses pretty-format
with options that include some of
its built-in plugins. For this purpose, plugins are also known as snapshot
serializers.
To serialize application-specific data types, you can add modules to
devDependencies
of a project, and then:
In an individual test file, you can add a module as follows. It precedes any
modules from Jest configuration.
import serializer from 'my-serializer-module';
expect.addSnapshotSerializer(serializer);
For all test files, you can specify modules in Jest configuration. They
precede built-in plugins for React, HTML, and Immutable.js data types. For
example, in a package.json
file:
{
"jest": {
"snapshotSerializers": ["my-serializer-module"]
}
}
Writing plugins
A plugin is a JavaScript object.
If options
has a plugins
array: for the first plugin whose test(val)
method returns a truthy value, then prettyFormat(val, options)
returns the
result from either:
serialize(val, …)
method of the improved interface (available in
version 21 or later)print(val, …)
method of the original interface (if plugin does not have
serialize
method)
test
Write test
so it can receive val
argument of any type. To serialize
objects which have certain properties, then a guarded expression like
val != null && …
or more concise val && …
prevents the following errors:
TypeError: Cannot read property 'whatever' of null
TypeError: Cannot read property 'whatever' of undefined
For example, test
method of built-in ReactElement
plugin:
const elementSymbol = Symbol.for('react.element');
const test = val => val && val.$$typeof === elementSymbol;
Pay attention to efficiency in test
because pretty-format
calls it often.
serialize
The improved interface is available in version 21 or later.
Write serialize
to return a string, given the arguments:
val
which “passed the test”- unchanging
config
object: derived from options
- current
indentation
string: concatenate to indent
from config
- current
depth
number: compare to maxDepth
from config
- current
refs
array: find circular references in objects printer
callback function: serialize children
config
key | type | description |
---|
callToJSON | boolean | call toJSON method (if it exists) on objects |
colors | Object | escape codes for colors to highlight syntax |
escapeRegex | boolean | escape special characters in regular expressions |
indent | string | spaces in each level of indentation |
maxDepth | number | levels to print in arrays, objects, elements, and so on |
min | boolean | minimize added space: no indentation nor line breaks |
plugins | array | plugins to serialize application-specific data types |
printFunctionName | boolean | include or omit the name of a function |
spacingInner | strong | spacing to separate items in a list |
spacingOuter | strong | spacing to enclose a list of items |
Each property of colors
in config
corresponds to a property of theme
in
options
:
- the key is the same (for example,
tag
) - the value in
colors
is a object with open
and close
properties whose
values are escape codes from
ansi-styles for the color value in
theme
(for example, 'cyan'
)
Some properties in config
are derived from min
in options
:
spacingInner
and spacingOuter
are newline if min
is false
spacingInner
is space and spacingOuter
is empty string if min
is
true
Example of serialize and test
This plugin is a pattern you can apply to serialize composite data types. Of
course, pretty-format
does not need a plugin to serialize arrays :)
const SEPARATOR = ',';
function serializeItems(items, config, indentation, depth, refs, printer) {
if (items.length === 0) {
return '';
}
const indentationItems = indentation + config.indent;
return (
config.spacingOuter +
items
.map(
item =>
indentationItems +
printer(item, config, indentationItems, depth, refs),
)
.join(SEPARATOR + config.spacingInner) +
(config.min ? '' : SEPARATOR) +
config.spacingOuter +
indentation
);
}
const plugin = {
test(val) {
return Array.isArray(val);
},
serialize(array, config, indentation, depth, refs, printer) {
const name = array.constructor.name;
return ++depth > config.maxDepth
? '[' + name + ']'
: (config.min ? '' : name + ' ') +
'[' +
serializeItems(array, config, indentation, depth, refs, printer) +
']';
},
};
const val = {
filter: 'completed',
items: [
{
text: 'Write test',
completed: true,
},
{
text: 'Write serialize',
completed: true,
},
],
};
console.log(
prettyFormat(val, {
plugins: [plugin],
}),
);
console.log(
prettyFormat(val, {
indent: 4,
plugins: [plugin],
}),
);
console.log(
prettyFormat(val, {
maxDepth: 1,
plugins: [plugin],
}),
);
console.log(
prettyFormat(val, {
min: true,
plugins: [plugin],
}),
);
print
The original interface is adequate for plugins:
- that do not depend on options other than
highlight
or min
- that do not depend on
depth
or refs
in recursive traversal, and - if values either
- do not require indentation, or
- do not occur as children of JavaScript data structures (for example,
array)
Write print
to return a string, given the arguments:
val
which “passed the test”- current
printer(valChild)
callback function: serialize children - current
indenter(lines)
callback function: indent lines at the next level - unchanging
config
object: derived from options
- unchanging
colors
object: derived from options
The 3 properties of config
are min
in options
and:
spacing
and edgeSpacing
are newline if min
is false
spacing
is space and edgeSpacing
is empty string if min
is
true
Each property of colors
corresponds to a property of theme
in options
:
- the key is the same (for example,
tag
) - the value in
colors
is a object with open
and close
properties whose
values are escape codes from
ansi-styles for the color value in
theme
(for example, 'cyan'
)
Example of print and test
This plugin prints functions with the number of named arguments excluding
rest argument.
const plugin = {
print(val) {
return `[Function ${val.name || 'anonymous'} ${val.length}]`;
},
test(val) {
return typeof val === 'function';
},
};
const val = {
onClick(event) {},
render() {},
};
prettyFormat(val, {
plugins: [plugin],
});
prettyFormat(val);
This plugin ignores the printFunctionName
option. That limitation of the
original print
interface is a reason to use the improved serialize
interface, described above.
prettyFormat(val, {
plugins: [pluginOld],
printFunctionName: false,
});
prettyFormat(val, {
printFunctionName: false,
});