Stringify an object/array like JSON.stringify just without all the double-quotes
Useful for when you want to get the string representation of an object in a formatted way.
It also handles circular references and lets you specify quote type.
$ npm install stringify-object
```js const stringifyObject = require('stringify-object');
const obj = { foo: 'bar', 'arr': [1, 2, 3], nested: { hello: "world" } };
const pretty = stringifyObject(obj, { indent: ' ', singleQuotes: false });
console.log(pretty); / { foo: "bar", arr: [ 1, 2, 3 ], nested: { hello: "world" } } / ```
Circular references will be replaced with "[Circular]"
.
Type: Object
Array
Type: string
Default: \t
Preferred indentation.
Type: boolean
Default: true
Set to false to get double-quoted strings.
Type: Function
Expected to return a boolean
of whether to include the property prop
of the object obj
in the output.
Type: Function
Default: undefined
Expected to return a string
that transforms the string that resulted from stringifying obj[prop]
. This can be used to detect special types of objects that need to be stringified in a particular way. The transform
function might return an alternate string in this case, otherwise returning the originalResult
.
Here's an example that uses the transform
option to mask fields named "password":
```js const obj = { user: 'becky', password: 'secret' }
const pretty = stringifyObject(obj, { transform: (obj, prop, originalResult) => { if (prop === 'password') { return originalResult.replace(/\w/g, '*'); } else { return originalResult; } } });
console.log(pretty); / { user: 'becky', password: '*' } */ ```
Type: number
When set, will inline values up to inlineCharacterLimit
length for the sake of more terse output.
For example, given the example at the top of the README:
```js const obj = { foo: 'bar', 'arr': [1, 2, 3], nested: { hello: "world" } };
const pretty = stringifyObject(obj, { indent: ' ', singleQuotes: false, inlineCharacterLimit: 12 });
console.log(pretty); / { foo: "bar", arr: [1, 2, 3], nested: { hello: "world" } } / ```
As you can see, arr
was printed as a one-liner because its string was shorter than 12 characters.
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