1380

If I defined an object in JS with:

var j={"name":"binchen"};

How can I convert the object to JSON? The output string should be:

'{"name":"binchen"}'
3
  • 77
    JSON.stringify() is the method you're looking for.
    – Gowtham
    Jun 24, 2016 at 5:33
  • 13
    There's always that first time when you have to learn it.
    – Egan Wolf
    Feb 14, 2018 at 8:28
  • JSON.stringify is also a good way to copy an object Jul 1, 2020 at 0:06

23 Answers 23

2049

All current browsers have native JSON support built in. So as long as you're not dealing with prehistoric browsers like IE6/7 you can do it just as easily as that:

var j = {
  "name": "binchen"
};
console.log(JSON.stringify(j));

6
  • 7
    download this script in order for JSON.stringify(j); to work
    – AabinGunz
    Jul 21, 2011 at 9:55
  • 2
    Work on nodejs because node use same engine
    – georgelviv
    May 3, 2015 at 20:33
  • 28
    This answer was posted a year before IE9 was released so at the time of writing IE8 was a modern browser indeed, or at least it was the newest IE available.
    – Andris
    Sep 11, 2015 at 13:52
  • JSON.stringify doesn't convert nested objects. Any solution for that..??
    – Ritesh
    Jun 7, 2017 at 8:49
  • 11
    If You need more readable json string You can use space parameter like var formattedJSON = JSON.stringify(j, null, 2);
    – Jacek Gzel
    Jan 10, 2018 at 9:58
123

With JSON.stringify() found in json2.js or native in most modern browsers.

JSON.stringify(value, replacer, space)
    value       any JavaScript value, usually an object or array.
    replacer    an optional parameter that determines how object
                values are stringified for objects. It can be a
                function or an array of strings.
    space       an optional parameter that specifies the indentation
                of nested structures. If it is omitted, the text will
                be packed without extra whitespace. If it is a number,
                it will specify the number of spaces to indent at each
                level. If it is a string (such as "\t" or " "),
                it contains the characters used to indent at each level.
1
  • 8
    For a bit more clarity: replacer is optional, so if you want to still use the space arg you put null for replacer. If you are interested in using this function for pretty printing I found this answer to be also useful: stackoverflow.com/a/7220510/857209 Jul 29, 2016 at 8:22
36

Check out updated/better way by Thomas Frank:

Update May 17, 2008: Small sanitizer added to the toObject-method. Now toObject() will not eval() the string if it finds any malicious code in it.For even more security: Don't set the includeFunctions flag to true.

Douglas Crockford, father of the JSON concept, wrote one of the first stringifiers for JavaScript. Later Steve Yen at Trim Path wrote a nice improved version which I have used for some time. It's my changes to Steve's version that I'd like to share with you. Basically they stemmed from my wish to make the stringifier:

  • handle and restore cyclical references
  • include the JavaScript code for functions/methods (as an option)
  • exclude object members from Object.prototype if needed.
0
34

You can use JSON.stringify() method to convert JSON object to String.

var j={"name":"binchen"};
JSON.stringify(j)

For reverse process, you can use JSON.parse() method to convert JSON String to JSON Object.

1
  • Thanks for adding the reverse process. Feb 15, 2017 at 15:24
14

JSON.stringify(j, null, 4) would give you beautified JSON in case you need beautification also

The second parameter is replacer. It can be used as Filter where you can filter out certain key values when stringifying. If set to null it will return all key value pairs

0
10

In angularJS

angular.toJson(obj, pretty);

obj: Input to be serialized into JSON.

pretty(optional):
If set to true, the JSON output will contain newlines and whitespace. If set to an integer, the JSON output will contain that many spaces per indentation.

(default: 2)

0
9

If you're using AngularJS, the 'json' filter should do it:

<span>{{someObject | json}}</span>
9

JSON.stringify turns a Javascript object into JSON text and stores that JSON text in a string.

The conversion is an Object to String

JSON.parse turns a string of JSON text into a Javascript object.

The conversion is a String to Object

var j={"name":"binchen"};

to make it a JSON String following could be used.

JSON.stringify({"key":"value"});

JSON.stringify({"name":"binchen"});

For more info you can refer to this link below.

https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/JSON/stringify

7

One custom defined for this , until we do strange from stringify method

var j={"name":"binchen","class":"awesome"};
var dq='"';
var json="{";
var last=Object.keys(j).length;
var count=0;
for(x in j)
{
json += dq+x+dq+":"+dq+j[x]+dq;
count++;
if(count<last)
   json +=",";
}
json+="}";
document.write(json);

OUTPUT

{"name":"binchen","class":"awesome"}

LIVE http://jsfiddle.net/mailmerohit5/y78zum6v/

3
  • 1
    does not escape strings with quotation marks like: "a \" in a string"
    – alphakevin
    Jan 19, 2016 at 8:14
  • 2
    That custom code is very incomplete. Does not support arrays, objects and special chars. Example: the json {"arr":["1", "2", "3"],"obj":{"a":"b"},"key\"with\\special}chars":"value"} will output {"arr":"1,2,3","obj":"[object Object]","key"with\special}chars":"value"} that is wrong! Feb 8, 2018 at 17:44
  • ofcourse this code is just an example of playing with codes .. we should always use stringify ... JS had done the job already for us Jun 16, 2020 at 19:51
7

I was having issues with stringify running out of memory and other solutions didnt seem to work (at least I couldn't get them to work) which is when I stumbled on this thread. Thanks to Rohit Kumar I just iterate through my very large JSON object to stop it from crashing

var j = MyObject;
var myObjectStringify = "{\"MyObject\":[";
var last = j.length
var count = 0;
for (x in j) {
    MyObjectStringify += JSON.stringify(j[x]);
    count++;
    if (count < last)
        MyObjectStringify += ",";
}
MyObjectStringify += "]}";

MyObjectStringify would give you your string representaion (just as mentioned other times in this thread) except if you have a large object, this should also work - just make sure you build it to fit your needs - I needed it to have a name than array

5

Woking... Easy to use

$("form").submit(function(evt){
  evt.preventDefault();
  var formData = $("form").serializeArray(); // Create array of object
  var jsonConvert = JSON.stringify(formData);  // Convert to json
});

Thanks

3

you can use native stringify function like this

const j={ "name": "binchen" }

/** convert json to string */
const jsonString = JSON.stringify(j)

console.log(jsonString) // {"name":"binchen"}

2

if you want to get json properties value in string format use the following way

var i = {"x":1}

var j = JSON.stringify(i.x);

var k = JSON.stringify(i);

console.log(j);

"1"

console.log(k);

'{"x":1}'
2

For debugging in Node JS you can use util.inspect(). It works better with circular references.

var util = require('util');
var j = {name: "binchen"};
console.log(util.inspect(j));
2

Just use JSON.stringify to do such conversion - however remember that fields which have undefined value will not be included into json

var j={"name":"binchen", "remember":undefined, "age": null };

var s=JSON.stringify(j);

console.log(s);

The field remember 'disappear' from output json

1
  • 1
    You just saved my day. I was not able to save my object. the key that fields which have undefined value will not be included into json solved my problem! Jan 8, 2020 at 7:00
2

The existing JSON replacements where too much for me, so I wrote my own function. This seems to work, but I might have missed several edge cases (that don't occur in my project). And will probably not work for any pre-existing objects, only for self-made data.

function simpleJSONstringify (obj) {
    var prop, str, val,
        isArray = obj instanceof Array;

    if (typeof obj !== "object")
        return false;

    str = isArray ? "[" : "{";

    function quote (str) {
        if (typeof str !== "string")
            str = str.toString ();

        // When the actual variable was a number, it was returning a number between quotation marks
        // return str.match(/^\".*\"$/) ? str : '"' + str.replace(/"/g, '\\"') + '"';

        // Now, we are verifing if is a number and, if it is, we remove the quotation marks
        str = str.match (/^\".*\"$/) ? str : '"' + str.replace (/"/g, '\\"') + '"';

        if (isNaN (str.replace (/^["]/, '').replace (/["]$/, '')))
            return str;
        else
            return str.replace (/^["]/, '').replace (/["]$/, '');
    }

    for (prop in obj) {
        if (!isArray) {
            // quote property
            str += quote (prop) + ": ";
        }

        // quote value
        val = obj [prop];
        str += typeof val === "object" ? simpleJSONstringify (val) : quote (val);
        str += ", ";
    }

    // Remove last colon, close bracket
    str = str.substr (0, str.length - 2) + ( isArray ? "]" : "}" );

    return str;
}
2

Use native function JSON.stringify()

let userJson = {
name : 'Richard'
}
let userJsonString = JSON.stringify(userJson)
1
So in order to convert a js object to JSON String: 

The simple syntax for converting an object to a string is

JSON.stringify(value)

The full syntax is: JSON.stringify(value[, replacer[, space]])

Let’s see some simple examples. Note that the whole string gets double quotes and all the data in the string gets escaped if needed.

JSON.stringify("foo bar"); // ""foo bar""
JSON.stringify(["foo", "bar"]); // "["foo","bar"]"
JSON.stringify({}); // '{}'
JSON.stringify({'foo':true, 'baz':false}); /* " 
{"foo":true,"baz":false}" */



const obj = { "property1":"value1", "property2":"value2"};
const JSON_response = JSON.stringify(obj);
console.log(JSON_response);/*"{ "property1":"value1", 
"property2":"value2"}"*/
0
0

use JSON.stringify(param1, param2, param3);

What is: -

param1 --> value to convert to JSON

param2 --> function to stringify in your own way. Alternatively, it serves as a white list for which objects need to be included in the final JSON.

param3 --> A Number data type which indicates number of whitespaces to add. Max allowed are 10.

0

convert str => obj

const onePlusStr = '[{"brand":"oneplus"},{"model":"7T"}]';

const onePLusObj = JSON.parse(onePlusStr);

convert obj => str

const onePLusObjToStr = JSON.stringify(onePlusStr);

References of JSON parsing in JS:
JSON.parse() : click
JSON.stringify() : click

1
0

The most popular way is below:

var obj = {name: "Martin", age: 30, country: "United States"};   
// Converting JS object to JSON string
var json = JSON.stringify(obj);
console.log(json);

0

You can use JSON.stringify() to do this

1
-2

Very easy to use method, but don't use it in release (because of possible compatibility problems).

Great for testing on your side.

Object.prototype.toSource()

//Usage:
obj.toSource();

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