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.
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; }
-
27Super awesome. I added a function to pop open this in a new window for debugging: var json = syntaxHighlight(JSON.stringify(obj,undefined,4);); var w = window.open(); var html = "<head><style>pre {outline: 1px solid #ccc; padding: 5px; margin: 5px; } .string { color: green; } "; html+= " .number { color: darkorange; } .boolean { color: blue; } .null { color: magenta; } .key { color: red; }</style></head><body>"; html+= "<pre>"+json+"</pre>"; w.document.writeln(html); – JayCrossler Jul 30 '12 at 2:07
-
27
-
4for some reason, when I alert it out, it indeed shows formatted however still shows a flat string when I spit it out to a div via jQuery: $("#transactionResponse").show().html(prettifyObject(data), null, '\t'); where prettifyObject is a method I created that contains your first two lines above. – PositiveGuy Dec 16 '13 at 6:18
-
5@CoffeeAddict Make sure that your
#transactionResponse
element haswhite-space: pre;
as a CSS style. – user123444555621 Dec 16 '13 at 8:52 -
85Note that
stringify(...)
works on JSON objects, not on JSON strings. If you have a string, you need toJSON.parse(...)
first – Vihung Aug 5 '14 at 12:40
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.
-
11This worked for me, but threw an error using
JSON.parse
so I modified it to beJSON.stringify(jsonString, null, 2)
. Depends on your JSON/Object. – Jazzy Aug 2 '14 at 22:20 -
24Note that when displaying the string you need to wrap it in
<pre></pre>
tags. – Undistraction Feb 10 '17 at 16:05 -
7@Jazzy
JSON.parse
only dies if you have an invalid JSON str or it is already converted to an object... make sure you know what datatype your are dealing with before trying toJSON.parse
– Kolob Canyon Apr 5 '17 at 0:16 -
9@Jazzy If you had to do that, you didn't have a JSON string, you had a normal object. JSON is always a string. It's just a string-based representation of a Javascript object. – Clonkex Jan 3 '18 at 2:53
-
3Thanks! This solution is what I was personally looking for because I wanted to simply put an indented JSON in a <textarea> – Turbo Oct 24 '18 at 21:44
-
3This is better because you using only basic javascript function that doesn't require additional computation which could cause performance issues if operation is repeated many times. Only thing was missing for me this to work was <pre> tags. – C.L. Aug 26 '19 at 13:47
-
Perfect and exactly what I was looking for! Short, sweet and to the point. – John Mar 29 '20 at 12:40
-
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>
-
3
-
2
-
3The
<pre>
is a must if you show the JSON in a<div>
. Upvoted just for that hint! – Manuel Feb 4 '20 at 11:25
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!
-
1I used ur code but i am getting the output in json format but i am not getting the color and also in the last i am getting color tag this is the output { "error": { "code": 0, "message": "O" } },color:red,,color:red,,color:darkorange – ramesh027 Apr 25 '14 at 9:05
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.
-
1I needed a Javascript *.js library that could pretty print a JSON string adding html elements and classes. Something like var result = prettyPrint('{"key":"value"}'); – Mark Jan 30 '11 at 19:23
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})}))"
-
-
-
in Chrome Developer Tools I must click the little triangle to get at th objects keys, any way to have it auto expanded? snag.gy/7wPqsl.jpg – Daniel Sokolowski Jul 22 '16 at 13:08
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);
For debugging purpose I use:
console.debug("%o", data);
-
3-1; this is equivalent to just doing
console.debug(data);
in (at least) Chrome and Firefox. It doesn't show a JSON representation ofdata
, let alone a pretty-printed one. – Mark Amery May 31 '14 at 21:06 -
1@MarkAmery 2 year ago this feature was new for browser and work only as I described. If you too young - I am happy for you! Also syntax like
console.debug("%s: %o x %d", str, data, cnt);
may still be helpful to someone. – gavenkoa May 31 '14 at 21:15 -
2Also look into
console.dir
which allows to navigate the data. – Christophe Roussy Sep 25 '14 at 13:19
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):
- Set a line width and wrap in a way that keeps objects and arrays on the same line when they fit, wrapping one value per line when they don't.
- Sort object keys if you like.
- Align object keys (line up the colons).
- Format floating point numbers to specific number of decimals, without messing up the integers.
- 'Short' wrapping mode puts opening and closing brackets/braces on the same line as values, providing a format that some prefer.
- Granular control over spacing for arrays and objects, between brackets, before/after colons and commas.
- Function is made available to both web browsers and Node.js.
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);
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;
}
-
-
1@manking ... rules = $.extend(rules, ('object' === typeof rr) ? rr : {}); ... it is to extend the ruleset by an rulset object. (maybe you find updates: github.com/frdl/-Flow/blob/master/api-d/4/js-api/library.js/… ) – webfan Apr 28 '17 at 8:32
It works well:
console.table()
Read more here: https://developer.mozilla.org/pt-BR/docs/Web/API/Console/table
-
console.table () uses the development well I work with it – user5044606 Apr 3 '17 at 8:37
Here is a simple JSON format/color component written in React:
const HighlightedJSON = ({ json }: Object) => {
const highlightedJSON = jsonObj =>
Object.keys(jsonObj).map(key => {
const value = jsonObj[key];
let valueType = typeof value;
const isSimpleValue =
["string", "number", "boolean"].includes(valueType) || !value;
if (isSimpleValue && valueType === "object") {
valueType = "null";
}
return (
<div key={key} className="line">
<span className="key">{key}:</span>
{isSimpleValue ? (
<span className={valueType}>{`${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!
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?
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
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;
}
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()
Couldn't find any solution that had good syntax highlighting for the console, so here's my 2p
Install & Add cli-highlight dependency
npm install cli-highlight --save
Define logjson globally
const highlight = require('cli-highlight').highlight
console.logjson = (obj) => console.log(
highlight( JSON.stringify(obj, null, 4),
{ language: 'json', ignoreIllegals: true } ));
Use
console.logjson({foo: "bar", someArray: ["string1", "string2"]});
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
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
-
3
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>";
}
);
}
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
}
}
*/
The simplest way to display an object for debugging purposes:
console.log("data",data) // lets you unfold the object manually
If you want to display the object in the DOM, you should consider that it could contain strings that would be interpreted as HTML. Therefore, you need to do some escaping...
var s = JSON.stringify(data,null,2) // format
var e = new Option(s).innerHTML // escape
document.body.insertAdjacentHTML('beforeend','<pre>'+e+'</pre>') // display
<!-- 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>
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);
<pre>
tag. – Ryan Walker Mar 30 '18 at 4:36