mirror of https://github.com/jkjoy/sunpeiwen.git
118 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
118 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
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json-bigint
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===========
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[![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/sidorares/json-bigint.png)](http://travis-ci.org/sidorares/json-bigint)
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[![NPM](https://nodei.co/npm/json-bigint.png?downloads=true&stars=true)](https://nodei.co/npm/json-bigint/)
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JSON.parse/stringify with bigints support. Based on Douglas Crockford [JSON.js](https://github.com/douglascrockford/JSON-js) package and [bignumber.js](https://github.com/MikeMcl/bignumber.js) library.
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While most JSON parsers assume numeric values have same precision restrictions as IEEE 754 double, JSON specification _does not_ say anything about number precision. Any floating point number in decimal (optionally scientific) notation is valid JSON value. It's a good idea to serialize values which might fall out of IEEE 754 integer precision as strings in your JSON api, but `{ "value" : 9223372036854775807}`, for example, is still a valid RFC4627 JSON string, and in most JS runtimes the result of `JSON.parse` is this object: `{ value: 9223372036854776000 }`
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==========
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example:
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```js
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var JSONbig = require('json-bigint');
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var json = '{ "value" : 9223372036854775807, "v2": 123 }';
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console.log('Input:', json);
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console.log('');
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console.log('node.js bult-in JSON:')
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var r = JSON.parse(json);
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console.log('JSON.parse(input).value : ', r.value.toString());
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console.log('JSON.stringify(JSON.parse(input)):', JSON.stringify(r));
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console.log('\n\nbig number JSON:');
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var r1 = JSONbig.parse(json);
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console.log('JSON.parse(input).value : ', r1.value.toString());
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console.log('JSON.stringify(JSON.parse(input)):', JSONbig.stringify(r1));
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```
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Output:
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```
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Input: { "value" : 9223372036854775807, "v2": 123 }
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node.js bult-in JSON:
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JSON.parse(input).value : 9223372036854776000
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JSON.stringify(JSON.parse(input)): {"value":9223372036854776000,"v2":123}
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big number JSON:
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JSON.parse(input).value : 9223372036854775807
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JSON.stringify(JSON.parse(input)): {"value":9223372036854775807,"v2":123}
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```
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### Options
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The behaviour of the parser is somewhat configurable through 'options'
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#### options.strict, boolean, default false
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Specifies the parsing should be "strict" towards reporting duplicate-keys in the parsed string.
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The default follows what is allowed in standard json and resembles the behavior of JSON.parse, but overwrites any previous values with the last one assigned to the duplicate-key.
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Setting options.strict = true will fail-fast on such duplicate-key occurances and thus warn you upfront of possible lost information.
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example:
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```js
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var JSONbig = require('json-bigint');
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var JSONstrict = require('json-bigint')({"strict": true});
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var dupkeys = '{ "dupkey": "value 1", "dupkey": "value 2"}';
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console.log('\n\nDuplicate Key test with both lenient and strict JSON parsing');
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console.log('Input:', dupkeys);
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var works = JSONbig.parse(dupkeys);
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console.log('JSON.parse(dupkeys).dupkey: %s', works.dupkey);
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var fails = "will stay like this";
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try {
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fails = JSONstrict.parse(dupkeys);
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console.log('ERROR!! Should never get here');
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} catch (e) {
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console.log('Succesfully catched expected exception on duplicate keys: %j', e);
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}
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```
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Output
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```
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Duplicate Key test with big number JSON
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Input: { "dupkey": "value 1", "dupkey": "value 2"}
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JSON.parse(dupkeys).dupkey: value 2
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Succesfully catched expected exception on duplicate keys: {"name":"SyntaxError","message":"Duplicate key \"dupkey\"","at":33,"text":"{ \"dupkey\": \"value 1\", \"dupkey\": \"value 2\"}"}
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```
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#### options.storeAsString, boolean, default false
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Specifies if BigInts should be stored in the object as a string, rather than the default BigNumber.
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Note that this is a dangerous behavior as it breaks the default functionality of being able to convert back-and-forth without data type changes (as this will convert all BigInts to be-and-stay strings).
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example:
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```js
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var JSONbig = require('json-bigint');
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var JSONbigString = require('json-bigint')({"storeAsString": true});
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var key = '{ "key": 1234567890123456789 }';
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console.log('\n\nStoring the BigInt as a string, instead of a BigNumber');
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console.log('Input:', key);
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var withInt = JSONbig.parse(key);
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var withString = JSONbigString.parse(key);
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console.log('Default type: %s, With option type: %s', typeof withInt.key, typeof withString.key);
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```
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Output
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```
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Storing the BigInt as a string, instead of a BigNumber
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Input: { "key": 1234567890123456789 }
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Default type: object, With option type: string
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```
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### Links:
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- [RFC4627: The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)](http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt)
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- [Re: \[Json\] Limitations on number size?](http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/json/current/msg00297.html)
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- [Is there any proper way to parse JSON with large numbers? (long, bigint, int64)](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/18755125/node-js-is-there-any-proper-way-to-parse-json-with-large-numbers-long-bigint)
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- [What is JavaScript's Max Int? What's the highest Integer value a Number can go to without losing precision?](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/307179/what-is-javascripts-max-int-whats-the-highest-integer-value-a-number-can-go-t)
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- [Large numbers erroneously rounded in Javascript](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1379934/large-numbers-erroneously-rounded-in-javascript)
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