
Research
/Security News
Critical Vulnerability in NestJS Devtools: Localhost RCE via Sandbox Escape
A flawed sandbox in @nestjs/devtools-integration lets attackers run code on your machine via CSRF, leading to full Remote Code Execution (RCE).
stringify-object-es5
Advanced tools
Stringify an object/array like JSON.stringify just without all the double-quotes (ES5 compatible)
This fork of yeoman/stringify-object is ES5 compatible
Stringify an object/array like JSON.stringify just without all the double-quotes.
Useful for when you want to get the string representation of an object in a formatted way.
It also handles circular references and lets you specify quote type.
$ npm install --save stringify-object
var obj = {
foo: 'bar',
'arr': [1, 2, 3],
nested: { hello: "world" }
};
var pretty = stringifyObject(obj, {
indent: ' ',
singleQuotes: false
});
console.log(pretty);
/*
{
foo: "bar",
arr: [
1,
2,
3
],
nested: {
hello: "world"
}
}
*/
Circular references will be replaced with "[Circular]"
.
Required
Type: object
, array
Type: string
Default: '\t'
Choose the indentation you prefer.
Type: boolean
Default: true
Set to false to get double-quoted strings.
Type: function
Expected to return a boolean of whether to keep the object.
Type: Function
Default: undefined
Expected to return a string
that transforms the string that resulted from stringifying obj[prop]
. This can be used to detect special types of objects that need to be stringified in a particular way. The transform
function might return an alternate string in this case, otherwise returning the originalResult
.
Here's an example that uses the transform
option to mask fields named "password":
const obj = {
user: 'becky',
password: 'secret'
}
const pretty = stringifyObject(obj, {
transform: function (obj, prop, originalResult) {
if (prop === 'password') {
return originalResult.replace(/\w/g,'*');
} else {
return originalResult;
}
}
});
console.log(pretty);
/*
{
user: 'becky',
password: '******'
}
*/
Type: number
Default: undefined
When set, will inline values up to inlineCharacterLimit
length for the sake
of more terse output.
For example, given the example at the top of the README:
var obj = {
foo: 'bar',
'arr': [1, 2, 3],
nested: { hello: "world" }
};
var pretty = stringifyObject(obj, {
indent: ' ',
singleQuotes: false,
inlineCharacterLimit: 12
});
console.log(pretty);
/*
{
foo: "bar",
arr: [1, 2, 3],
nested: {
hello: "world"
}
}
*/
As you can see, arr
was printed as a one-liner because its string was shorter
than 12 characters.
BSD license © Yeoman Team
FAQs
Stringify an object/array like JSON.stringify just without all the double-quotes (ES5 compatible)
The npm package stringify-object-es5 receives a total of 148,002 weekly downloads. As such, stringify-object-es5 popularity was classified as popular.
We found that stringify-object-es5 demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
/Security News
A flawed sandbox in @nestjs/devtools-integration lets attackers run code on your machine via CSRF, leading to full Remote Code Execution (RCE).
Product
Customize license detection with Socket’s new license overlays: gain control, reduce noise, and handle edge cases with precision.
Product
Socket now supports Rust and Cargo, offering package search for all users and experimental SBOM generation for enterprise projects.