As the name implies, jackson-js
is heavily inspired by the famous Java FasterXML/jackson library.
It can be used on both client (browser) and server (Node.js) side.
This project inherits the incredible work of outfoxx and pichillilorenzo.
It mainly focuses on performance issues due to the low performance of the reflect-metadata
project by trying to reduce its usage and other little code optimization.
Why this library? What's the difference between using this library instead of JSON.parse
and JSON.stringify
?
For simple cases, you don't need this library of course, you can just use JSON.parse
and JSON.stringify
to serialize/deserialize JSON.
With jackson-js
, you can easily manipulate your JavaScript objects/values serialization/deserialization using decorators such as @JsonProperty()
, @JsonFormat()
, @JsonIgnore()
, and more. However, this library uses JSON.parse
and JSON.stringify
under the hood.
Furthermore:
- it not only deserializes JSON text into a JavaScript object, it also converts it into an instance of the class specified in the
context
option (similar packages are: class-transformer and TypedJSON); instead, withJSON.parse
you will get just a simple plain (literal) JavaScript object (justObject
type); - it supports more advanced Object concepts such as polymorphism and Object identity;
- it supports cyclic object serialization/deserialization;
- it supports serialization/deserialization of other native JavaScript types:
Map
,Set
,BigInt
, Typed Arrays (such asInt8Array
);
This library can be useful in more complex cases, for example when you want to:
- manipulate JSON in depth;
- restore a JavaScript type (a similar package is class-transformer);
- preserve type information (using polymorphic type handling decorators:
@JsonTypeInfo
,@JsonSubTypes
, and@JsonTypeName
. A similar package is TypedJSON); - hide some properties for certain HTTP endpoints or some other external service;
- have different JSON responses for some external applications or manage different JSON data coming from other applications (for example you need to communicate with a Spring Boot application that uses different JSON Schema for the same model or with other applications made with Python, PHP, etc...);
- manage cyclic references;
- manage other JavaScript native types such as Maps and Sets;
- etc.
Most of the use cases of the Java FasterXML/jackson annotations are similar or equal.
npm install --save @badetitoujackson-js
API docs can be found here.
The main classes that jackson-js
offers to serialize and deserialize JavaScript objects are ObjectMapper
, JsonStringifier
, and JsonParser
.
ObjectMapper
provides functionality for both reading and writing JSON and applies jackson-js
decorators. It will use instances of JsonParser
and JsonStringifier
for implementing the actual reading/writing of JSON. It has two methods:
stringify(obj: T, context?: JsonStringifierContext): string
: a method for serializing a JavaScript object or a value to a JSON string with decorators applied;parse(text: string, context?: JsonParserContext): T
: a method for deserializing a JSON string into a JavaScript object/value (of typeT
, based on the context given) with decorators applied.
JsonParser
provides functionality for writing JSON and applies jackson-js
decorators. The main methods are:
parse(text: string, context?: JsonParserContext): T
: a method for deserializing a JSON string into a JavaScript object/value (of typeT
, based on the context given) with decorators applied;transform(value: any, context?: JsonParserContext): any
: a method for applyingjackson-js
decorators to a JavaScript object/value parsed. It returns a JavaScript object/value with decorators applied.
JsonStringifier
provides functionality for reading JSON and applies jackson-js
decorators. The main methods are:
stringify(obj: T, context?: JsonStringifierContext): string
: a method for serializing a JavaScript object or a value to a JSON string with decorators applied;transform(value: any, context?: JsonStringifierContext): any
: a method for applyingjackson-js
decorators to a JavaScript object/value. It returns a JavaScript object/value with decorators applied and ready to be JSON serialized.
Decorators available:
- JsonAlias (decorator options: JsonAliasOptions)
- JsonAnyGetter (decorator options: JsonAnyGetterOptions)
- JsonAnySetter (decorator options: JsonAnySetterOptions)
- JsonAppend (decorator options: JsonAppendOptions)
- JsonBackReference (decorator options: JsonBackReferenceOptions)
- JsonClassType (decorator options: JsonClassTypeOptions)
- JsonCreator (decorator options: JsonCreatorOptions)
- JsonDeserialize (decorator options: JsonDeserializeOptions)
- JsonFilter (decorator options: JsonFilterOptions)
- JsonFormat (decorator options: JsonFormatOptions)
- JsonGetter (decorator options: JsonGetterOptions)
- JsonIdentityInfo (decorator options: JsonIdentityInfoOptions)
- JsonIdentityReference (decorator options: JsonIdentityReferenceOptions)
- JsonIgnore (decorator options: JsonIgnoreOptions)
- JsonIgnoreProperties (decorator options: JsonIgnorePropertiesOptions)
- JsonIgnoreType (decorator options: JsonIgnoreTypeOptions)
- JsonInclude (decorator options: JsonIncludeOptions)
- JsonInject (decorator options: JsonInjectOptions)
- JsonManagedReference (decorator options: JsonManagedReferenceOptions)
- JsonNaming (decorator options: JsonNamingOptions)
- JsonProperty (decorator options: JsonPropertyOptions)
- JsonPropertyOrder (decorator options: JsonPropertyOrderOptions)
- JsonRawValue (decorator options: JsonRawValueOptions)
- JsonRootName (decorator options: JsonRootNameOptions)
- JsonSerialize (decorator options: JsonSerializeOptions)
- JsonSetter (decorator options: JsonSetterOptions)
- JsonSubTypes (decorator options: JsonSubTypesOptions)
- JsonTypeId (decorator options: JsonTypeIdOptions)
- JsonTypeIdResolver (decorator options: JsonTypeIdResolverOptions)
- JsonTypeInfo (decorator options: JsonTypeInfoOptions)
- JsonTypeName (decorator options: JsonTypeNameOptions)
- JsonUnwrapped (decorator options: JsonUnwrappedOptions)
- JsonValue (decorator options: JsonValueOptions)
- JsonView (decorator options: JsonViewOptions)
The most important decorators are:
@JsonProperty()
: each class property (or its getter/setter) must be decorated with this decorator, otherwise deserialization and serialization will not work properly! That's because, for example, given a JavaScript class, there isn't any way or API (such as Reflection API for Java) to get for sure all the class properties; also because, sometimes, compilers such as TypeScript and Babel, can strip class properties after compilation from the class properties declaration;@JsonClassType()
: this decorator is used to define the type of a class property or method parameter. This information is used during serialization and, more important, during deserialization to know about the type of a property/parameter. This is necessary because JavaScript isn't a strongly-typed programming language, so, for example, during deserialization, without the usage of this decorator, there isn't any way to know the specific type of a class property, such as aDate
or a custom Class type.
Here is a quick example about these two decorators:
class Book {
@JsonProperty() @JsonClassType({type: () => [String]})
name: string;
@JsonProperty() @JsonClassType({type: () => [String]})
category: string;
}
class Writer {
@JsonProperty() @JsonClassType({type: () => [Number]})
id: number;
@JsonProperty() @JsonClassType({type: () => [String]})
name: string;
@JsonProperty() @JsonClassType({type: () => [Array, [Book]]})
books: Book[] = [];
}
- Jackson-js: Powerful JavaScript decorators to serialize/deserialize objects into JSON and vice versa (Part 1) - Article available at [itnext.io | dev.to].
- Jackson-js: Examples for client (Angular) and server (Node.js) side (Part 2) - Article available at [medium.com | dev.to]
Code examples can be found inside the tests
folder and in this example repository. The example repository gives a simple example using the jackson-js
library with Angular 9 for the client side and two examples for the server side: one using Node.js + Express + SQLite3 (with Sequelize 5) and another one using Node.js + LoopBack 4.