How do I convert the entries from a HTML5 FormData
object to JSON?
The solution should not use jQuery. Also, it should not simply serialize the entire FormData
object, but only its key/value entries.
You could also use forEach
on the FormData
object directly:
var object = {};
formData.forEach(function(value, key){
object[key] = value;
});
var json = JSON.stringify(object);
And for those who prefer the same solution with ES6 arrow functions:
var object = {};
formData.forEach((value, key) => object[key] = value);
var json = JSON.stringify(object);
And for those who want support for multi select lists or other form elements with multiple values (since there are so many comments below the answer regarding this issue I will add a possible solution):
var object = {};
formData.forEach((value, key) => {
// Reflect.has in favor of: object.hasOwnProperty(key)
if(!Reflect.has(object, key)){
object[key] = value;
return;
}
if(!Array.isArray(object[key])){
object[key] = [object[key]];
}
object[key].push(value);
});
var json = JSON.stringify(object);
Here a Fiddle demonstrating the use of this method with a simple multi select list.
As a side note for those ending up here; in case the purpose of converting the form data to json is to send it through an XMLHttpRequest to a server you can send the FormData
object directly without converting it. As simple as this:
var request = new XMLHttpRequest();
request.open('POST', 'http://example.com/submitform.php');
request.send(formData);
See also Using FormData Objects on MDN for reference.
Or alternatively you can do the same with the modern day Fetch API:
fetch('http://example.com/submitform.php', {
method: 'POST',
body: formData
}).then((response) => {
// do something with response here...
});
See also Using The Fetch API on MDN for reference.
As mentioned in one of the comments below my answer the JSON stringify
method won't work out of the box for all types of objects. For more information on what types are supported I would like to refer to the Description section in the MDN documentation of JSON.stringify
.
In the description is also mentioned that:
If the value has a toJSON() method, it's responsible to define what data will be serialized.
This means that you can supply your own toJSON
serialization method with logic for serializing your custom objects. Like that you can quickly and easily build serialization support for more complex object trees.
<SELECT MULTIPLE>
and <INPUT type="checkbox">
with same name, by converting the value to an array.
JSON.stringify(Object.fromEntries(formData));
is so much nicer
Nov 6, 2019 at 21:15
In 2019, this kind of task became super-easy.
JSON.stringify(Object.fromEntries(formData));
Object.fromEntries
: Supported in Chrome 73+, Firefox 63+, Safari 12.1
As mentioned in the comments, please note: FormData
can contain multiple values with the same key (e.g. checkboxes with the same name). Object.fromEntries()
throws away duplicates and only keeps the last one.
<select multiple>
or <input type="checkbox">
😞
JSON.stringify(Object.fromEntries(formData.entries()));
Here's a way to do it in a more functional style, without the use of a library.
Array.from(formData.entries()).reduce((memo, [key, value]) => ({
...memo,
[key]: value,
}), {});
Example:
document.getElementById('foobar').addEventListener('submit', (e) => {
e.preventDefault();
const formData = new FormData(e.target);
const data = Array.from(formData.entries()).reduce((memo, [key, value]) => ({
...memo,
[key]: value,
}), {});
document.getElementById('output').innerHTML = JSON.stringify(data);
});
<form id='foobar'>
<input name='baz' />
<input type='submit' />
</form>
<pre id='output'>Input some value and submit</pre>
pair
with [key, value]
in order to exploit destructuring and improve readibility
Jan 31, 2022 at 16:30
If you have multiple entries with the same name, for example if you use <SELECT multiple>
or have multiple <INPUT type="checkbox">
with the same name, you need to take care of that and make an array of the value. Otherwise you only get the last selected value.
Here is the modern ES6-variant:
function formToJSON( elem ) {
let output = {};
new FormData( elem ).forEach(
( value, key ) => {
// Check if property already exist
if ( Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call( output, key ) ) {
let current = output[ key ];
if ( !Array.isArray( current ) ) {
// If it's not an array, convert it to an array.
current = output[ key ] = [ current ];
}
current.push( value ); // Add the new value to the array.
} else {
output[ key ] = value;
}
}
);
return JSON.stringify( output );
}
Slightly older code (but still not supported by IE11, since it doesn't support ForEach
or entries
on FormData
)
function formToJSON( elem ) {
var current, entries, item, key, output, value;
output = {};
entries = new FormData( elem ).entries();
// Iterate over values, and assign to item.
while ( item = entries.next().value )
{
// assign to variables to make the code more readable.
key = item[0];
value = item[1];
// Check if key already exist
if (Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call( output, key)) {
current = output[ key ];
if ( !Array.isArray( current ) ) {
// If it's not an array, convert it to an array.
current = output[ key ] = [ current ];
}
current.push( value ); // Add the new value to the array.
} else {
output[ key ] = value;
}
}
return JSON.stringify( output );
}
If you need support for serializing nested fields, similar to how PHP handles form fields, you can use the following function
function update(data, keys, value) {
if (keys.length === 0) {
// Leaf node
return value;
}
let key = keys.shift();
if (!key) {
data = data || [];
if (Array.isArray(data)) {
key = data.length;
}
}
// Try converting key to a numeric value
let index = +key;
if (!isNaN(index)) {
// We have a numeric index, make data a numeric array
// This will not work if this is a associative array
// with numeric keys
data = data || [];
key = index;
}
// If none of the above matched, we have an associative array
data = data || {};
let val = update(data[key], keys, value);
data[key] = val;
return data;
}
function serializeForm(form) {
return Array.from((new FormData(form)).entries())
.reduce((data, [field, value]) => {
let [_, prefix, keys] = field.match(/^([^\[]+)((?:\[[^\]]*\])*)/);
if (keys) {
keys = Array.from(keys.matchAll(/\[([^\]]*)\]/g), m => m[1]);
value = update(data[prefix], keys, value);
}
data[prefix] = value;
return data;
}, {});
}
document.getElementById('output').textContent = JSON.stringify(serializeForm(document.getElementById('form')), null, 2);
<form id="form">
<input name="field1" value="Field 1">
<input name="field2[]" value="Field 21">
<input name="field2[]" value="Field 22">
<input name="field3[a]" value="Field 3a">
<input name="field3[b]" value="Field 3b">
<input name="field3[c]" value="Field 3c">
<input name="field4[x][a]" value="Field xa">
<input name="field4[x][b]" value="Field xb">
<input name="field4[x][c]" value="Field xc">
<input name="field4[y][a]" value="Field ya">
<input name="field5[z][0]" value="Field z0">
<input name="field5[z][]" value="Field z1">
<input name="field6.z" value="Field 6Z0">
<input name="field6.z" value="Field 6Z1">
</form>
<h2>Output</h2>
<pre id="output">
</pre>
I've seen no mentions of FormData.getAll method so far.
Besides returning all the values associated with a given key from within a FormData object, it gets really simple using the Object.fromEntries method as specified by others here.
var formData = new FormData(document.forms[0])
var obj = Object.fromEntries(
Array.from(formData.keys()).map(key => [
key, formData.getAll(key).length > 1 ?
formData.getAll(key) : formData.get(key)
])
)
Snippet in action
var formData = new FormData(document.forms[0])
var obj = Object.fromEntries(Array.from(formData.keys()).map(key => [key, formData.getAll(key).length > 1 ? formData.getAll(key) : formData.get(key)]))
document.write(`<pre>${JSON.stringify(obj)}</pre>`)
<form action="#">
<input name="name" value="Robinson" />
<input name="items" value="Vin" />
<input name="items" value="Fromage" />
<select name="animals" multiple id="animals">
<option value="tiger" selected>Tigre</option>
<option value="turtle" selected>Tortue</option>
<option value="monkey">Singe</option>
</select>
</form>
You can achieve this by using the FormData() object. This FormData object will be populated with the form's current keys/values using the name property of each element for the keys and their submitted value for the values. It will also encode file input content.
Example:
var myForm = document.getElementById('myForm');
myForm.addEventListener('submit', function(event)
{
event.preventDefault();
var formData = new FormData(myForm),
result = {};
for (var entry of formData.entries())
{
result[entry[0]] = entry[1];
}
result = JSON.stringify(result)
console.log(result);
});
for (const [key, value] of formData.entries())
Mar 22, 2017 at 8:15
This post is already a year old... but, I really, really like the ES6 @dzuc answer. However it is incomplete by not been able to handle multiple selects or checkboxes. This has already pointed and code solutions has been offered. I find them heavy and not optimized. So I wrote a 2 versions based on @dzuc to handle these cases:
let r=Array.from(fd).reduce(
(o , [k,v]) => (
(!o[k])
? {...o , [k] : v}
: {...o , [k] : [...o[k] , v]}
)
,{}
);
let obj=JSON.stringify(r);
One line Hotshot version:
Array.from(fd).reduce((o,[k,v])=>((!o[k])?{...o,[k]:v}:{...o,[k]:[...o[k],v]}),{});
[]
suffix.let r=Array.from(fd).reduce(
(o , [k,v]) => (
(k.split('[').length>1)
? (k=k.split('[')[0]
, (!o[k])
? {...o , [k] : [v]}
: {...o , [k] : [...o[k] , v ]}
)
: {...o , [k] : v}
)
,{}
);
let obj=JSON.stringify(r);
One line Hotshot version:
Array.from(fd).reduce((o,[k,v])=>((k.split('[').length>1)?(k=k.split('[')[0],(!o[k])?{...o,[k]:[v]}:{...o,[k]:[...o[k],v]}):{...o,[k]:v}),{});
Since last time I wrote the previous second case, at work it came a case that the PHP form has checkboxes on multi-levels. I wrote a new case to support previous case and this one. I created a snippet to better showcase this case, the result show on the console for this demo, modify this to your need. Tried to optimize it the best I could without compromising performance, however, it compromise some human readability. It takes advantage that arrays are objects and variables pointing to arrays are kept as reference. No hotshot for this one, be my guest.
let nosubmit = (e) => {
e.preventDefault();
const f = Array.from(new FormData(e.target));
const obj = f.reduce((o, [k, v]) => {
let a = v,
b, i,
m = k.split('['),
n = m[0],
l = m.length;
if (l > 1) {
a = b = o[n] || [];
for (i = 1; i < l; i++) {
m[i] = (m[i].split(']')[0] || b.length) * 1;
b = b[m[i]] = ((i + 1) == l) ? v : b[m[i]] || [];
}
}
return { ...o, [n]: a };
}, {});
console.log(obj);
}
document.querySelector('#theform').addEventListener('submit', nosubmit, {capture: true});
<h1>Multilevel Form</h1>
<form action="#" method="POST" enctype="multipart/form-data" id="theform">
<input type="hidden" name="_id" value="93242" />
<input type="hidden" name="_fid" value="45c0ec96929bc0d39a904ab5c7af70ef" />
<label>Select:
<select name="uselect">
<option value="A">A</option>
<option value="B">B</option>
<option value="C">C</option>
</select>
</label>
<br /><br />
<label>Checkboxes one level:<br/>
<input name="c1[]" type="checkbox" checked value="1"/>v1
<input name="c1[]" type="checkbox" checked value="2"/>v2
<input name="c1[]" type="checkbox" checked value="3"/>v3
</label>
<br /><br />
<label>Checkboxes two levels:<br/>
<input name="c2[0][]" type="checkbox" checked value="4"/>0 v4
<input name="c2[0][]" type="checkbox" checked value="5"/>0 v5
<input name="c2[0][]" type="checkbox" checked value="6"/>0 v6
<br/>
<input name="c2[1][]" type="checkbox" checked value="7"/>1 v7
<input name="c2[1][]" type="checkbox" checked value="8"/>1 v8
<input name="c2[1][]" type="checkbox" checked value="9"/>1 v9
</label>
<br /><br />
<label>Radios:
<input type="radio" name="uradio" value="yes">YES
<input type="radio" name="uradio" checked value="no">NO
</label>
<br /><br />
<input type="submit" value="Submit" />
</form>
Array.from(fd).reduce((obj, [k, v]) => ({...obj, [k]: v}), {});
hotshot version es2018
Feb 5, 2019 at 0:45
Easy To Use Function
I Have Created A Function For This
function FormDataToJSON(FormElement){
var formData = new FormData(FormElement);
var ConvertedJSON= {};
for (const [key, value] of formData.entries())
{
ConvertedJSON[key] = value;
}
return ConvertedJSON
}
Example Usage
var ReceivedJSON = FormDataToJSON(document.getElementById('FormId'));
In this code I have created empty JSON variable using for
loop I have used key
s from formData Object to JSON Keys in every Itration.
You Find This Code In My JS Library On GitHub Do Suggest Me If It Needs Improvement I Have Placed Code Here https://github.com/alijamal14/Utilities/blob/master/Utilities.js
<select multiple>
or <input type="checkbox">
.
I think this is the simplest way to get the result you want from a formData
FormData object:
const jsonData = {};
for(const [key, value] of formData) {
jsonData[key] = value;
}
Even though the answer from @dzuc is already very good, you could use array destructuring (available in modern browsers or with Babel) to make it even a bit more elegant:
// original version from @dzuc
const data = Array.from(formData.entries())
.reduce((memo, pair) => ({
...memo,
[pair[0]: pair[1],
}), {})
// with array destructuring
const data = Array.from(formData.entries())
.reduce((memo,[key, value]) => ({
...memo,
[key]: value,
}), {})
If the following items meet your needs, you're in luck:
[['key','value1'], ['key2','value2']
(like what FormData gives you) into a key->value object like {key1: 'value1', key2: 'value2'}
and the convert it to a JSON string.Here is the code you'll need:
const data = new FormData(document.querySelector('form'));
const json = JSON.stringify(Array.from(data).reduce((o,[k,v])=>(o[k]=v,o),{}));
Hope this helps someone.
Abusive one-liner!
Array.from(fd).reduce((obj, [k, v]) => ({...obj, [k]: v}), {});
Today I learned firefox has object spread support and array destructuring!
Here is a function that turns a formData object into a JSON-string.
For example you can have the following form fields:
<select name="select[]" multiple></select>
<input name="check[a][0][]" type="checkbox" value="test"/>
Usage:
let json = form2json(formData);
The function:
function form2json(data) {
let method = function (object,pair) {
let keys = pair[0].replace(/\]/g,'').split('[');
let key = keys[0];
let value = pair[1];
if (keys.length > 1) {
let i,x,segment;
let last = value;
let type = isNaN(keys[1]) ? {} : [];
value = segment = object[key] || type;
for (i = 1; i < keys.length; i++) {
x = keys[i];
if (i == keys.length-1) {
if (Array.isArray(segment)) {
segment.push(last);
} else {
segment[x] = last;
}
} else if (segment[x] == undefined) {
segment[x] = isNaN(keys[i+1]) ? {} : [];
}
segment = segment[x];
}
}
object[key] = value;
return object;
}
let object = Array.from(data).reduce(method,{});
return JSON.stringify(object);
}
function
before the first statement and you are golden.)
If you are using lodash it can be done concisely with fromPairs
import {fromPairs} from 'lodash';
const object = fromPairs(Array.from(formData.entries()));
You can try this
formDataToJSON($('#form_example'));
# Create a function to convert the serialize and convert the form data
# to JSON
# @param : $('#form_example');
# @return a JSON Stringify
function formDataToJSON(form) {
let obj = {};
let formData = form.serialize();
let formArray = formData.split("&");
for (inputData of formArray){
let dataTmp = inputData.split('=');
obj[dataTmp[0]] = dataTmp[1];
}
return JSON.stringify(obj);
}
Another approach that works with select multiple or inputs with same name attribute:
function form_to_json() {
const form_data = new FormData(document.querySelector('form'))
const uniqueKeys = [...new Set(form_data.keys())]
const obj = {}
uniqueKeys.forEach((value, key) => {
obj[value] = (form_data.getAll(value).length > 1) ? form_data.getAll(value) : form_data.get(value)
})
const json = JSON.stringify(obj)
alert(json)
}
<form>
<input type="text" name="name" value="Cesar"></br>
<select name="cars" id="cars" multiple>
<option value="volvo" selected>Volvo</option>
<option value="saab" selected>Saab</option>
</select>
<input type="button" onclick="form_to_json()" value="Ok">
</form>
EDIT: I saw there already is an answer which yields very similar results.
Two main differences:
Ignore any lack of efficiency. This will handle unlimited nesting, and duplicate keys for arrays. This obviously will not convert things such as files, but I don't need it so I didn't add it.
Here's a JSFiddle with an example conversion that can be achieved with this function
A great example usage for this (which is also my use case) would be to create a new FormData object from an html form element, and easily convert it to JSON for sending.
/**
* @param {FormData} formData
* @return {Object}
*/
function formDataToObject(formData) {
const object = {};
for (let pair of formData.entries()) {
const key = pair[0];
const value = pair[1];
const isArray = key.endsWith('[]');
const name = key.substring(0, key.length - (2 * isArray));
const path = name.replaceAll(']', '');
const pathParts = path.split('[');
const partialsCount = pathParts.length;
let iterationObject = object;
for (let i = 0; i < partialsCount; i++) {
let part = pathParts[i];
let iterationObjectElement = iterationObject[part];
if (i !== partialsCount - 1) {
if (!iterationObject.hasOwnProperty(part) || typeof iterationObjectElement !== "object") {
iterationObject[part] = {};
}
iterationObject = iterationObject[part];
} else {
if (isArray) {
if (!iterationObject.hasOwnProperty(part)) {
iterationObject[part] = [value];
} else {
iterationObjectElement.push(value);
}
} else {
iterationObject[part] = value;
}
}
}
}
return object;
}
Worked for me
var myForm = document.getElementById("form");
var formData = new FormData(myForm),
obj = {};
for (var entry of formData.entries()){
obj[entry[0]] = entry[1];
}
console.log(obj);
<select multiple>
or <input type="checkbox">
Making use of toJSON
as described in JSON.stringify()
If the value has a
toJSON()
method, it's responsible to define what data will be serialized.
Here is a little hack.
var fd = new FormData(document.forms[0]);
fd.toJSON = function() {
const o = {};
this.forEach((v, k) => {
v = this.getAll(k);
o[k] = v.length == 1 ? v[0] : (v.length >= 1 ? v : null);
});
return o;
};
document.write(`<pre>${JSON.stringify(fd)}</pre>`)
<form action="#">
<input name="name" value="Robinson" />
<input name="items" value="Vin" />
<input name="items" value="Fromage" />
<select name="animals" multiple id="animals">
<option value="tiger" selected>Tigre</option>
<option value="turtle" selected>Tortue</option>
<option value="monkey">Singe</option>
</select>
</form>
This solved my issue and this is for an Object
const formDataObject = (formData) => {
for (const key in formData) {
if (formData[key].startsWith('{') || formData[key].startsWith('[')) {
try {
formData[key] = JSON.parse(formData[key]);
console.log("key is :", key, "form data is :", formData[key]);
} catch (error) {
console.log("error :", key);
}
}
}
console.log("object", formData)
}
In my case form Data was data , fire base was expecting an object but data contains object as well as all other stuffs so i tried data.value it worked!!!
I am arriving late here. However, I made a simple method that checks for the input type="checkbox"
var formData = new FormData($form.get(0));
var objectData = {};
formData.forEach(function (value, key) {
var updatedValue = value;
if ($('input[name="' + key + '"]').attr("type") === "checkbox" && $('input[name="' + key + '"]').is(":checked")) {
updatedValue = true; // we don't set false due to it is by default on HTML
}
objectData[key] = updatedValue;
});
var jsonData = JSON.stringify(objectData);
I hope this helps somebody else.
if you want the json string :
var jsonStr = JSON.stringify($('#formId').serializeObject());
if you want a json Object
var jsonObj = JSON.parse(JSON.stringify($('#formId').serializeObject()));
Years later in vanillaJs (es6)
let body = new FormData()
body.set('key1', 'value AA')
body.set('key2', 'value BB')
let data = [...body.keys()].reduce( (acc, key, idx) => {
acc[key] = body.get(key)
return acc
} , {} )
console.log(JSON.stringify(data)) // {key1: 'value AA', key2: 'value BB'}
Here's a way that includes a simple way to handle multiple values. If a key ends with []
, it combines the values into an array (like in the old php convention), and drops the []
from the key:
function formDataToJson(f) {
return Object.fromEntries(Array.from(f.keys(), k =>
k.endsWith('[]') ? [k.slice(0, -2), f.getAll(k)] : [k, f.get(k)]));
}
For example, if you have:
const f = new FormData();
f.append("a", "1");
f.append("a", "2");
f.append("b[]", "3");
f.append("b[]", "4");
formDataToJson(f) // --> produces {a: "1", b: ["3","4"]}
For my purposes that included multiselects like checkboxes, this was good:
JSON.stringify(Array.from((new FormData(document.querySelector('form'))).entries()).reduce((map = {}, [key, value]) => {
return {
...map,
[key]: map[key] ? [...map[key], value] : value,
};
}, {}));
Here is a function to convert FormData
to plain JavaScript object which can be converted to JSON
.
function formDataToObject(formData) {
let object = {}
const debug = (message) => {
//console.log(message)
}
/**
* Parses FormData key xxx`[x][x][x]` fields into array
*/
const parseKey = (key) => {
const subKeyIdx = key.indexOf('[');
if (subKeyIdx !== -1) {
const keys = [key.substring(0, subKeyIdx)]
key = key.substring(subKeyIdx)
for (const match of key.matchAll(/\[(?<key>.*?)]/gm)) {
keys.push(match.groups.key)
}
return keys
} else {
return [key]
}
}
/**
* Recursively iterates over keys and assigns key/values to object
*/
const assign = (keys, value, object) => {
const key = keys.shift()
debug(key)
debug(keys)
// When last key in the iterations
if (key === '' || key === undefined) {
return object.push(value)
}
if (Reflect.has(object, key)) {
debug('hasKey ' + key)
// If key has been found, but final pass - convert the value to array
if (keys.length === 0) {
if (!Array.isArray(object[key])) {
debug('isArray ' + object[key])
object[key] = [object[key], value]
return
}
}
// Recurse again with found object
return assign(keys, value, object[key])
}
// Create empty object for key, if next key is '' do array instead, otherwise set value
if (keys.length >= 1) {
debug(`undefined '${key}' key: remaining ${keys.length}`)
object[key] = keys[0] === '' ? [] : {}
return assign(keys, value, object[key])
} else {
debug("set value: " + value)
object[key] = value
}
}
for (const pair of formData.entries()) {
assign(parseKey(pair[0]), pair[1], object)
}
return object
}
var formData = new FormData(document.querySelector('form'))
object = formDataToObject(formData)
console.log(object)
<form id="form">
<input type="text" name="test" value="BBBB">
<input type="text" name="testX" value="WEE">
<input type="text" name="testX" value="FFF">
<input type="text" name="testX[]" value="1">
<input type="text" name="test1[]" value="2">
<input type="text" name="test1[]" value="3">
<input type="text" name="test1[]" value="4">
<input type="text" name="test1[]" value="5">
<input type="text" name="test2[a]" value="5">
<input type="text" name="test2[a]" value="77">
<input type="text" name="test3[a]" value="67">
<input type="text" name="test3[1][]" value="22">
<input type="text" name="test3[1][]" value="33">
<input type="text" name="test3[1][]" value="44">
<input type="text" name="test4[xAx][1]" value="3">
<input type="text" name="test4[xAx][2]" value="23">
<input type="text" name="test4[xAx][3]" value="33">
</form>
This works for me. 🙂 Click here to see the details code
let formToJson = function(){
let form = new FormData($("form#formData")[0]);
//console.log(form);
let jsonData = Object.fromEntries(form.entries());
//console.log(jsonData);
$("#jsonData").html(JSON.stringify(jsonData));
}
<script src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.3.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<title>Document</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="">
<form action="#" method="post" id="formData">
<input type="text" name="fName" id="fName" value="Mad"><br>
<input type="text" name="lName" id="lName" value="Coder"><br>
<input type="button" onclick="formToJson()" value="Boom Yeah">
</form>
</div>
<div id="jsonData">
</div>
</body>
</html>
I know its late, but here's the solution;
new URLSearchParams(new FormData(formElement)).toString()
Now, this can be sent as the body. Sadly, its not JSON.
JSON.stringify()
helps? Maybe you try to fix something that may be done in other way?let data = new URLSearchParams(formData)