You're going to have to use the eval() (doc) function. A lot of people have a lot of feelings about this function. JSON is best for transporting data, not functions (see JSON). The functions ought to lay in the script on the page.
Also there's a syntax error in your posted code (function is wrapped in single quotes ('), and so is console.log's first parameter).
But...
json = "{\"run\":\"function() { console.log('running...'); }\"}"; //Fixed, thanks
obj = JSON.parse(json);
eval(obj.run); //Logs "running..."
Update:
Oh, and I was mistaken. Eval doesn't seem to like anonymous functions. With the revised code, it will parse json into an object with a run property that is a String, with value "function() { console.log('running...'); }". But when you eval(obj.run);, you will get a SyntaxError declaring an unexpected (. Presumably, this is the ( in function ().
So, I can think of two ways of dealing with this:
- Remove the anonymous function in your actual JSON string (so, make your PHP forget about
function () {), and eval it. This means it will be called as soon as you eval it.
What I think you want, is to be able to evaluate it to an anonymous function, that will be called when you want. So, you could write a wrapper function (you would need to follow option 1 for this as well):
function returnEval(str) {
return function () { eval(str); }
}
This would allow you to call it. So:
obj = JSON.parse(json);
obj.run = returnEval(obj.run);
obj.run(); //Logs "running..."
Hope this helps!
eval(json.substring(10, json.length-2))();? =) – Claudiu Oct 21 '10 at 21:49