How can I display JSON in an easy-to-read (for human readers) format? I'm looking primarily for indentation and whitespace, with perhaps even colors / font-styles / etc.
<pre>
tag. - anyone JSON.stringify(data, null, 2)
to format data, then use AceEditor, CodeMirror, or Monaco Editor to display it. - anyone Pretty-printing is implemented natively in JSON.stringify()
. The third argument enables pretty printing and sets the spacing to use:
var str = JSON.stringify(obj, null, 2); // spacing level = 2
If you need syntax highlighting, you might use some regex magic like so:
function syntaxHighlight(json) {
if (typeof json != 'string') {
json = JSON.stringify(json, undefined, 2);
}
json = json.replace(/&/g, '&').replace(/</g, '<').replace(/>/g, '>');
return json.replace(/("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g, function (match) {
var cls = 'number';
if (/^"/.test(match)) {
if (/:$/.test(match)) {
cls = 'key';
} else {
cls = 'string';
}
} else if (/true|false/.test(match)) {
cls = 'boolean';
} else if (/null/.test(match)) {
cls = 'null';
}
return '<span class="' + cls + '">' + match + '</span>';
});
}
See in action here: jsfiddle
Or a full snippet provided below:
function output(inp) {
document.body.appendChild(document.createElement('pre')).innerHTML = inp;
}
function syntaxHighlight(json) {
json = json.replace(/&/g, '&').replace(/</g, '<').replace(/>/g, '>');
return json.replace(/("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g, function (match) {
var cls = 'number';
if (/^"/.test(match)) {
if (/:$/.test(match)) {
cls = 'key';
} else {
cls = 'string';
}
} else if (/true|false/.test(match)) {
cls = 'boolean';
} else if (/null/.test(match)) {
cls = 'null';
}
return '<span class="' + cls + '">' + match + '</span>';
});
}
var obj = {a:1, 'b':'foo', c:[false,'false',null, 'null', {d:{e:1.3e5,f:'1.3e5'}}]};
var str = JSON.stringify(obj, undefined, 4);
output(str);
output(syntaxHighlight(str));
pre {outline: 1px solid #ccc; padding: 5px; margin: 5px; }
.string { color: green; }
.number { color: darkorange; }
.boolean { color: blue; }
.null { color: magenta; }
.key { color: red; }
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
<pre>
, though. - anyone stringify(...)
works on JSON objects, not on JSON strings. If you have a string, you need to JSON.parse(...)
first - anyone User Pumbaa80's answer is great if you have an object you want pretty printed. If you're starting from a valid JSON string that you want to pretty printed, you need to convert it to an object first:
var jsonString = '{"some":"json"}';
var jsonPretty = JSON.stringify(JSON.parse(jsonString),null,2);
This builds a JSON object from the string, and then converts it back to a string using JSON stringify's pretty print.
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
<pre></pre>
tags. - anyone Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
<pre>RESULT</pre>
to see formatted in html page too. - anyone var jsonObj = {"streetLabel": "Avenue Anatole France", "city": "Paris 07", "postalCode": "75007", "countryCode": "FRA", "countryLabel": "France" };
document.getElementById("result-before").innerHTML = JSON.stringify(jsonObj);
In case of displaying in HTML, you should to add a balise <pre></pre>
document.getElementById("result-after").innerHTML = "<pre>"+JSON.stringify(jsonObj,undefined, 2) +"</pre>"
Example:
var jsonObj = {"streetLabel": "Avenue Anatole France", "city": "Paris 07", "postalCode": "75007", "countryCode": "FRA", "countryLabel": "France" };
document.getElementById("result-before").innerHTML = JSON.stringify(jsonObj);
document.getElementById("result-after").innerHTML = "<pre>"+JSON.stringify(jsonObj,undefined, 2) +"</pre>"
div { float:left; clear:both; margin: 1em 0; }
<div id="result-before"></div>
<div id="result-after"></div>
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
I think you're looking for something like this :
JSON.stringify(obj, null, '\t');
This "pretty-prints" your JSON string, using a tab for indentation.
If you prefer to use spaces instead of tabs, you could also use a number for the number of spaces you'd like :
JSON.stringify(obj, null, 2);
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Based on Pumbaa80's answer I have modified the code to use the console.log colours (working on Chrome for sure) and not HTML. Output can be seen inside console. You can edit the _variables inside the function adding some more styling.
function JSONstringify(json) {
if (typeof json != 'string') {
json = JSON.stringify(json, undefined, '\t');
}
var
arr = [],
_string = 'color:green',
_number = 'color:darkorange',
_boolean = 'color:blue',
_null = 'color:magenta',
_key = 'color:red';
json = json.replace(/("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g, function (match) {
var style = _number;
if (/^"/.test(match)) {
if (/:$/.test(match)) {
style = _key;
} else {
style = _string;
}
} else if (/true|false/.test(match)) {
style = _boolean;
} else if (/null/.test(match)) {
style = _null;
}
arr.push(style);
arr.push('');
return '%c' + match + '%c';
});
arr.unshift(json);
console.log.apply(console, arr);
}
Here is a bookmarklet you can use:
javascript:function JSONstringify(json) {if (typeof json != 'string') {json = JSON.stringify(json, undefined, '\t');}var arr = [],_string = 'color:green',_number = 'color:darkorange',_boolean = 'color:blue',_null = 'color:magenta',_key = 'color:red';json = json.replace(/("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g, function (match) {var style = _number;if (/^"/.test(match)) {if (/:$/.test(match)) {style = _key;} else {style = _string;}} else if (/true|false/.test(match)) {style = _boolean;} else if (/null/.test(match)) {style = _null;}arr.push(style);arr.push('');return '%c' + match + '%c';});arr.unshift(json);console.log.apply(console, arr);};void(0);
Usage:
var obj = {a:1, 'b':'foo', c:[false,null, {d:{e:1.3e5}}]};
JSONstringify(obj);
Edit: I just tried to escape the % symbol with this line, after the variables declaration:
json = json.replace(/%/g, '%%');
But I find out that Chrome is not supporting % escaping in the console. Strange... Maybe this will work in the future.
Cheers!
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
You can use console.dir()
, which is a shortcut for console.log(util.inspect())
.
(The only difference is that it bypasses any custom inspect()
function defined on an object.)
It uses syntax-highlighting, smart indentation, removes quotes from keys and just makes the output as pretty as it gets.
const object = JSON.parse(jsonString)
console.dir(object, {depth: null, colors: true})
and for the command line:
cat package.json | node -e "process.stdin.pipe(new stream.Writable({write: chunk => console.dir(JSON.parse(chunk), {depth: null, colors: true})}))"
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
I use the JSONView Chrome extension (it is as pretty as it gets :):
Edit: added jsonreport.js
I've also released an online stand-alone JSON pretty print viewer, jsonreport.js, that provides a human readable HTML5 report you can use to view any JSON data.
You can read more about the format in New JavaScript HTML5 Report Format.
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
If you are using ES5, simply call JSON.stringify with:
JSON.stringify(anObject, null, '\t');
Source: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON/stringify
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Here's user123444555621's awesome HTML one adapted for terminals. Handy for debugging Node scripts:
function prettyJ(json) {
if (typeof json !== 'string') {
json = JSON.stringify(json, undefined, 2);
}
return json.replace(/("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g,
function (match) {
let cls = "\x1b[36m";
if (/^"/.test(match)) {
if (/:$/.test(match)) {
cls = "\x1b[34m";
} else {
cls = "\x1b[32m";
}
} else if (/true|false/.test(match)) {
cls = "\x1b[35m";
} else if (/null/.test(match)) {
cls = "\x1b[31m";
}
return cls + match + "\x1b[0m";
}
);
}
Usage:
// thing = any json OR string of json
prettyJ(thing);
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
For debugging purpose I use:
console.debug("%o", data);
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
You can use JSON.stringify(your object, null, 2)
The second parameter can be used as a replacer function which takes key and Val as parameters.This can be used in case you want to modify something within your JSON object.
more reference : https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON/stringify
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Unsatisfied with other pretty printers for Ruby, I wrote my own (NeatJSON) and then ported it to JavaScript including a free online formatter. The code is free under MIT license (quite permissive).
Features (all optional):
I'll copy the source code here so that this is not just a link to a library, but I encourage you to go to the GitHub project page, as that will be kept up-to-date and the code below will not.
(function(exports){
exports.neatJSON = neatJSON;
function neatJSON(value,opts){
opts = opts || {}
if (!('wrap' in opts)) opts.wrap = 80;
if (opts.wrap==true) opts.wrap = -1;
if (!('indent' in opts)) opts.indent = ' ';
if (!('arrayPadding' in opts)) opts.arrayPadding = ('padding' in opts) ? opts.padding : 0;
if (!('objectPadding' in opts)) opts.objectPadding = ('padding' in opts) ? opts.padding : 0;
if (!('afterComma' in opts)) opts.afterComma = ('aroundComma' in opts) ? opts.aroundComma : 0;
if (!('beforeComma' in opts)) opts.beforeComma = ('aroundComma' in opts) ? opts.aroundComma : 0;
if (!('afterColon' in opts)) opts.afterColon = ('aroundColon' in opts) ? opts.aroundColon : 0;
if (!('beforeColon' in opts)) opts.beforeColon = ('aroundColon' in opts) ? opts.aroundColon : 0;
var apad = repeat(' ',opts.arrayPadding),
opad = repeat(' ',opts.objectPadding),
comma = repeat(' ',opts.beforeComma)+','+repeat(' ',opts.afterComma),
colon = repeat(' ',opts.beforeColon)+':'+repeat(' ',opts.afterColon);
return build(value,'');
function build(o,indent){
if (o===null || o===undefined) return indent+'null';
else{
switch(o.constructor){
case Number:
var isFloat = (o === +o && o !== (o|0));
return indent + ((isFloat && ('decimals' in opts)) ? o.toFixed(opts.decimals) : (o+''));
case Array:
var pieces = o.map(function(v){ return build(v,'') });
var oneLine = indent+'['+apad+pieces.join(comma)+apad+']';
if (opts.wrap===false || oneLine.length<=opts.wrap) return oneLine;
if (opts.short){
var indent2 = indent+' '+apad;
pieces = o.map(function(v){ return build(v,indent2) });
pieces[0] = pieces[0].replace(indent2,indent+'['+apad);
pieces[pieces.length-1] = pieces[pieces.length-1]+apad+']';
return pieces.join(',\n');
}else{
var indent2 = indent+opts.indent;
return indent+'[\n'+o.map(function(v){ return build(v,indent2) }).join(',\n')+'\n'+indent+']';
}
case Object:
var keyvals=[],i=0;
for (var k in o) keyvals[i++] = [JSON.stringify(k), build(o[k],'')];
if (opts.sorted) keyvals = keyvals.sort(function(kv1,kv2){ kv1=kv1[0]; kv2=kv2[0]; return kv1<kv2?-1:kv1>kv2?1:0 });
keyvals = keyvals.map(function(kv){ return kv.join(colon) }).join(comma);
var oneLine = indent+"{"+opad+keyvals+opad+"}";
if (opts.wrap===false || oneLine.length<opts.wrap) return oneLine;
if (opts.short){
var keyvals=[],i=0;
for (var k in o) keyvals[i++] = [indent+' '+opad+JSON.stringify(k),o[k]];
if (opts.sorted) keyvals = keyvals.sort(function(kv1,kv2){ kv1=kv1[0]; kv2=kv2[0]; return kv1<kv2?-1:kv1>kv2?1:0 });
keyvals[0][0] = keyvals[0][0].replace(indent+' ',indent+'{');
if (opts.aligned){
var longest = 0;
for (var i=keyvals.length;i--;) if (keyvals[i][0].length>longest) longest = keyvals[i][0].length;
var padding = repeat(' ',longest);
for (var i=keyvals.length;i--;) keyvals[i][0] = padRight(padding,keyvals[i][0]);
}
for (var i=keyvals.length;i--;){
var k=keyvals[i][0], v=keyvals[i][1];
var indent2 = repeat(' ',(k+colon).length);
var oneLine = k+colon+build(v,'');
keyvals[i] = (opts.wrap===false || oneLine.length<=opts.wrap || !v || typeof v!="object") ? oneLine : (k+colon+build(v,indent2).replace(/^\s+/,''));
}
return keyvals.join(',\n') + opad + '}';
}else{
var keyvals=[],i=0;
for (var k in o) keyvals[i++] = [indent+opts.indent+JSON.stringify(k),o[k]];
if (opts.sorted) keyvals = keyvals.sort(function(kv1,kv2){ kv1=kv1[0]; kv2=kv2[0]; return kv1<kv2?-1:kv1>kv2?1:0 });
if (opts.aligned){
var longest = 0;
for (var i=keyvals.length;i--;) if (keyvals[i][0].length>longest) longest = keyvals[i][0].length;
var padding = repeat(' ',longest);
for (var i=keyvals.length;i--;) keyvals[i][0] = padRight(padding,keyvals[i][0]);
}
var indent2 = indent+opts.indent;
for (var i=keyvals.length;i--;){
var k=keyvals[i][0], v=keyvals[i][1];
var oneLine = k+colon+build(v,'');
keyvals[i] = (opts.wrap===false || oneLine.length<=opts.wrap || !v || typeof v!="object") ? oneLine : (k+colon+build(v,indent2).replace(/^\s+/,''));
}
return indent+'{\n'+keyvals.join(',\n')+'\n'+indent+'}'
}
default:
return indent+JSON.stringify(o);
}
}
}
function repeat(str,times){ // http://stackoverflow.com/a/17800645/405017
var result = '';
while(true){
if (times & 1) result += str;
times >>= 1;
if (times) str += str;
else break;
}
return result;
}
function padRight(pad, str){
return (str + pad).substring(0, pad.length);
}
}
neatJSON.version = "0.5";
})(typeof exports === 'undefined' ? this : exports);
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Thanks a lot @all! Based on the previous answers, here is another variant method providing custom replacement rules as parameter:
renderJSON : function(json, rr, code, pre){
if (typeof json !== 'string') {
json = JSON.stringify(json, undefined, '\t');
}
var rules = {
def : 'color:black;',
defKey : function(match){
return '<strong>' + match + '</strong>';
},
types : [
{
name : 'True',
regex : /true/,
type : 'boolean',
style : 'color:lightgreen;'
},
{
name : 'False',
regex : /false/,
type : 'boolean',
style : 'color:lightred;'
},
{
name : 'Unicode',
regex : /"(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?/,
type : 'string',
style : 'color:green;'
},
{
name : 'Null',
regex : /null/,
type : 'nil',
style : 'color:magenta;'
},
{
name : 'Number',
regex : /-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?/,
type : 'number',
style : 'color:darkorange;'
},
{
name : 'Whitespace',
regex : /\s+/,
type : 'whitespace',
style : function(match){
return ' ';
}
}
],
keys : [
{
name : 'Testkey',
regex : /("testkey")/,
type : 'key',
style : function(match){
return '<h1>' + match + '</h1>';
}
}
],
punctuation : {
name : 'Punctuation',
regex : /([\,\.\}\{\[\]])/,
type : 'punctuation',
style : function(match){
return '<p>________</p>';
}
}
};
if('undefined' !== typeof jQuery){
rules = $.extend(rules, ('object' === typeof rr) ? rr : {});
}else{
for(var k in rr ){
rules[k] = rr[k];
}
}
var str = json.replace(/([\,\.\}\{\[\]]|"(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g, function (match) {
var i = 0, p;
if (rules.punctuation.regex.test(match)) {
if('string' === typeof rules.punctuation.style){
return '<span style="'+ rules.punctuation.style + '">' + match + '</span>';
}else if('function' === typeof rules.punctuation.style){
return rules.punctuation.style(match);
} else{
return match;
}
}
if (/^"/.test(match)) {
if (/:$/.test(match)) {
for(i=0;i<rules.keys.length;i++){
p = rules.keys[i];
if (p.regex.test(match)) {
if('string' === typeof p.style){
return '<span style="'+ p.style + '">' + match + '</span>';
}else if('function' === typeof p.style){
return p.style(match);
} else{
return match;
}
}
}
return ('function'===typeof rules.defKey) ? rules.defKey(match) : '<span style="'+ rules.defKey + '">' + match + '</span>';
} else {
return ('function'===typeof rules.def) ? rules.def(match) : '<span style="'+ rules.def + '">' + match + '</span>';
}
} else {
for(i=0;i<rules.types.length;i++){
p = rules.types[i];
if (p.regex.test(match)) {
if('string' === typeof p.style){
return '<span style="'+ p.style + '">' + match + '</span>';
}else if('function' === typeof p.style){
return p.style(match);
} else{
return match;
}
}
}
}
});
if(true === pre)str = '<pre>' + str + '</pre>';
if(true === code)str = '<code>' + str + '</code>';
return str;
}
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
It works well:
console.table()
Read more here: https://developer.mozilla.org/pt-BR/docs/Web/API/Console/table
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Here is a simple JSON format/color component written in React:
const HighlightedJSON = ({ json }: Object) => {
const highlightedJSON = jsonObj =>
Object.keys(jsonObj).map(key => {
const value = jsonObj[key];
let valueType = typeof value;
const isSimpleValue =
["string", "number", "boolean"].includes(valueType) || !value;
if (isSimpleValue && valueType === "object") {
valueType = "null";
}
return (
<div key={key} className="line">
<span className="key">{key}:</span>
{isSimpleValue ? (
<span className={valueType}>{`${value}`}</span>
) : (
highlightedJSON(value)
)}
</div>
);
});
return <div className="json">{highlightedJSON(json)}</div>;
};
See it working in this CodePen: https://codepen.io/benshope/pen/BxVpjo
Hope that helps!
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Quick pretty human-readable JSON output in 1 line code (without colors):
document.documentElement.innerHTML='<pre>'+JSON.stringify(obj, null, 2)+'</pre>';
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
If you're looking for a nice library to prettify json on a web page...
Prism.js is pretty good.
I found using JSON.stringify(obj, undefined, 2) to get the indentation, and then using prism to add a theme was a good approach.
If you're loading in JSON via an ajax call, then you can run one of Prism's utility methods to prettify
For example:
Prism.highlightAll()
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Couldn't find any solution that had good syntax highlighting for the console, so here's my 2p
npm install cli-highlight --save
const highlight = require('cli-highlight').highlight
console.logjson = (obj) => console.log(
highlight( JSON.stringify(obj, null, 4),
{ language: 'json', ignoreIllegals: true } ));
console.logjson({foo: "bar", someArray: ["string1", "string2"]});
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
I'd like to show my jsonAnalyze
method here, it does a pretty print of the JSON structure only, but in some cases can be more usefull that printing the whole JSON.
Say you have a complex JSON like this:
let theJson = {
'username': 'elen',
'email': 'elen@test.com',
'state': 'married',
'profiles': [
{'name': 'elenLove', 'job': 'actor' },
{'name': 'elenDoe', 'job': 'spy'}
],
'hobbies': ['run', 'movies'],
'status': {
'home': {
'ownsHome': true,
'addresses': [
{'town': 'Mexico', 'address': '123 mexicoStr'},
{'town': 'Atlanta', 'address': '4B atlanta 45-48'},
]
},
'car': {
'ownsCar': true,
'cars': [
{'brand': 'Nissan', 'plate': 'TOKY-114', 'prevOwnersIDs': ['4532354531', '3454655344', '5566753422']},
{'brand': 'Benz', 'plate': 'ELEN-1225', 'prevOwnersIDs': ['4531124531', '97864655344', '887666753422']}
]
}
},
'active': true,
'employed': false,
};
Then the method will return the structure like this:
username
email
state
profiles[]
profiles[].name
profiles[].job
hobbies[]
status{}
status{}.home{}
status{}.home{}.ownsHome
status{}.home{}.addresses[]
status{}.home{}.addresses[].town
status{}.home{}.addresses[].address
status{}.car{}
status{}.car{}.ownsCar
status{}.car{}.cars[]
status{}.car{}.cars[].brand
status{}.car{}.cars[].plate
status{}.car{}.cars[].prevOwnersIDs[]
active
employed
So this is the jsonAnalyze()
code:
function jsonAnalyze(obj) {
let arr = [];
analyzeJson(obj, null, arr);
return logBeautifiedDotNotation(arr);
function analyzeJson(obj, parentStr, outArr) {
let opt;
if (!outArr) {
return "no output array given"
}
for (let prop in obj) {
opt = parentStr ? parentStr + '.' + prop : prop;
if (Array.isArray(obj[prop]) && obj[prop] !== null) {
let arr = obj[prop];
if ((Array.isArray(arr[0]) || typeof arr[0] == "object") && arr[0] != null) {
outArr.push(opt + '[]');
analyzeJson(arr[0], opt + '[]', outArr);
} else {
outArr.push(opt + '[]');
}
} else if (typeof obj[prop] == "object" && obj[prop] !== null) {
outArr.push(opt + '{}');
analyzeJson(obj[prop], opt + '{}', outArr);
} else {
if (obj.hasOwnProperty(prop) && typeof obj[prop] != 'function') {
outArr.push(opt);
}
}
}
}
function logBeautifiedDotNotation(arr) {
retStr = '';
arr.map(function (item) {
let dotsAmount = item.split(".").length - 1;
let dotsString = Array(dotsAmount + 1).join(' ');
retStr += dotsString + item + '\n';
console.log(dotsString + item)
});
return retStr;
}
}
jsonAnalyze(theJson);
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Here's something to spruce up this oldie but goodie question. What if you want to dump a formatted object to console but it keeps dumping like a wrapped mess with hidden chars like this???
'{\n "_id": "630577bba145ff4f1",\n "role": "user"}'
But you want this loveliness??:
{
"_id": "630557672d877bba145ff4f1",
"role": "user"
}
The trick is To wrap your JSON.stringify() in a console.log() statement. If you hate typing, try building the snippet to do the heavy lifting...
This is really useful if you're working with big objects.
add a snippet to your 'Snippets' section in browser dev tools like this (more...):
let o = <object to print>
console.log(JSON.stringify(o, null, 4))
console.log(o)
then simply replace with your object (which will be available from the current context) and run the snippet.
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Douglas Crockford's JSON in JavaScript library will pretty print JSON via the stringify method.
You may also find the answers to this older question useful: How can I pretty-print JSON in (unix) shell script?
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
If you need this to work in a textarea the accepted solution will not work.
<textarea id='textarea'></textarea>
$("#textarea").append(formatJSON(JSON.stringify(jsonobject),true));
function formatJSON(json,textarea) {
var nl;
if(textarea) {
nl = " ";
} else {
nl = "<br>";
}
var tab = "    ";
var ret = "";
var numquotes = 0;
var betweenquotes = false;
var firstquote = false;
for (var i = 0; i < json.length; i++) {
var c = json[i];
if(c == '"') {
numquotes ++;
if((numquotes + 2) % 2 == 1) {
betweenquotes = true;
} else {
betweenquotes = false;
}
if((numquotes + 3) % 4 == 0) {
firstquote = true;
} else {
firstquote = false;
}
}
if(c == '[' && !betweenquotes) {
ret += c;
ret += nl;
continue;
}
if(c == '{' && !betweenquotes) {
ret += tab;
ret += c;
ret += nl;
continue;
}
if(c == '"' && firstquote) {
ret += tab + tab;
ret += c;
continue;
} else if (c == '"' && !firstquote) {
ret += c;
continue;
}
if(c == ',' && !betweenquotes) {
ret += c;
ret += nl;
continue;
}
if(c == '}' && !betweenquotes) {
ret += nl;
ret += tab;
ret += c;
continue;
}
if(c == ']' && !betweenquotes) {
ret += nl;
ret += c;
continue;
}
ret += c;
} // i loop
return ret;
}
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
I ran into an issue today with @Pumbaa80's code. I'm trying to apply JSON syntax highlighting to data that I'm rendering in a Mithril view, so I need to create DOM nodes for everything in the JSON.stringify
output.
I split the really long regex into its component parts as well.
render_json = (data) ->
# wraps JSON data in span elements so that syntax highlighting may be
# applied. Should be placed in a `whitespace: pre` context
if typeof(data) isnt 'string'
data = JSON.stringify(data, undefined, 2)
unicode = /"(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?/
keyword = /\b(true|false|null)\b/
whitespace = /\s+/
punctuation = /[,.}{\[\]]/
number = /-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?/
syntax = '(' + [unicode, keyword, whitespace,
punctuation, number].map((r) -> r.source).join('|') + ')'
parser = new RegExp(syntax, 'g')
nodes = data.match(parser) ? []
select_class = (node) ->
if punctuation.test(node)
return 'punctuation'
if /^\s+$/.test(node)
return 'whitespace'
if /^\"/.test(node)
if /:$/.test(node)
return 'key'
return 'string'
if /true|false/.test(node)
return 'boolean'
if /null/.test(node)
return 'null'
return 'number'
return nodes.map (node) ->
cls = select_class(node)
return Mithril('span', {class: cls}, node)
Code in context on Github here
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
This is nice:
https://github.com/mafintosh/json-markup from mafintosh
const jsonMarkup = require('json-markup')
const html = jsonMarkup({hello:'world'})
document.querySelector('#myElem').innerHTML = html
HTML
<link ref="stylesheet" href="style.css">
<div id="myElem></div>
Example stylesheet can be found here
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mafintosh/json-markup/master/style.css
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
To highlight and beautify it in HTML
using Bootstrap
:
function prettifyJson(json, prettify) {
if (typeof json !== 'string') {
if (prettify) {
json = JSON.stringify(json, undefined, 4);
} else {
json = JSON.stringify(json);
}
}
return json.replace(/("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g,
function(match) {
let cls = "<span>";
if (/^"/.test(match)) {
if (/:$/.test(match)) {
cls = "<span class='text-danger'>";
} else {
cls = "<span>";
}
} else if (/true|false/.test(match)) {
cls = "<span class='text-primary'>";
} else if (/null/.test(match)) {
cls = "<span class='text-info'>";
}
return cls + match + "</span>";
}
);
}
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
<!-- here is a complete example pretty print with more space between lines-->
<!-- be sure to pass a json string not a json object -->
<!-- use line-height to increase or decrease spacing between json lines -->
<style type="text/css">
.preJsonTxt{
font-size: 18px;
text-overflow: ellipsis;
overflow: hidden;
line-height: 200%;
}
.boxedIn{
border: 1px solid black;
margin: 20px;
padding: 20px;
}
</style>
<div class="boxedIn">
<h3>Configuration Parameters</h3>
<pre id="jsonCfgParams" class="preJsonTxt">{{ cfgParams }}</pre>
</div>
<script language="JavaScript">
$( document ).ready(function()
{
$(formatJson);
<!-- this will do a pretty print on the json cfg params -->
function formatJson() {
var element = $("#jsonCfgParams");
var obj = JSON.parse(element.text());
element.html(JSON.stringify(obj, undefined, 2));
}
});
</script>
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
based on @user123444555621, just slightly more modern.
const clsMap = [
[/^".*:$/, "key"],
[/^"/, "string"],
[/true|false/, "boolean"],
[/null/, "key"],
[/.*/, "number"],
]
const syntaxHighlight = obj => JSON.stringify(obj, null, 4)
.replace(/&/g, '&')
.replace(/</g, '<')
.replace(/>/g, '>')
.replace(/("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g, match => `<span class="${clsMap.find(([regex]) => regex.test(match))[1]}">${match}</span>`);
you can also specify the colors inside js (no CSS needed)
const clsMap = [
[/^".*:$/, "red"],
[/^"/, "green"],
[/true|false/, "blue"],
[/null/, "magenta"],
[/.*/, "darkorange"],
]
const syntaxHighlight = obj => JSON.stringify(obj, null, 4)
.replace(/&/g, '&')
.replace(/</g, '<')
.replace(/>/g, '>')
.replace(/("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g, match => `<span style="color:${clsMap.find(([regex]) => regex.test(match))[1]}">${match}</span>`);
and a version with less regex
const clsMap = [
[match => match.startsWith('"') && match.endsWith(':'), "red"],
[match => match.startsWith('"'), "green"],
[match => match === "true" || match === "false" , "blue"],
[match => match === "null", "magenta"],
[() => true, "darkorange"],
];
const syntaxHighlight = obj => JSON.stringify(obj, null, 4)
.replace(/&/g, '&')
.replace(/</g, '<')
.replace(/>/g, '>')
.replace(/("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g, match => `<span style="color:${clsMap.find(([fn]) => fn(match))[1]}">${match}</span>`);
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
it's for Laravel, Codeigniter
Html:
<pre class="jsonPre"> </pre>
Controller: Return the JSON value from the controller as like as
return json_encode($data, JSON_PRETTY_PRINT);
In script:
<script> $('.jsonPre').html(result); </script>
result will be
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58
Here is how you can print without using native function.
function pretty(ob, lvl = 0) {
let temp = [];
if(typeof ob === "object"){
for(let x in ob) {
if(ob.hasOwnProperty(x)) {
temp.push( getTabs(lvl+1) + x + ":" + pretty(ob[x], lvl+1) );
}
}
return "{\n"+ temp.join(",\n") +"\n" + getTabs(lvl) + "}";
}
else {
return ob;
}
}
function getTabs(n) {
let c = 0, res = "";
while(c++ < n)
res+="\t";
return res;
}
let obj = {a: {b: 2}, x: {y: 3}};
console.log(pretty(obj));
/*
{
a: {
b: 2
},
x: {
y: 3
}
}
*/
Answered 2023-09-20 20:17:58