1.0.1 • Published 1 year ago

json-apply v1.0.1

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
1 year ago

json-apply

A CLI tool to transform JSON files with custom JS functions

Features:

  • take the JS function to apply from a file
  • the function may return async results
  • preview the transformation results with the --diff option

NPM License Node

Summary

Install

npm install --global json-apply

How To

Basic

# Transform one json file at a time
json-apply some_transform_function.js some_data.json > some_data_transformed.json
# Transform many json files
json-apply -i some_transform_function.js *.json

where some_transform_function.js just needs to export a JS function. This should work both with the ESM export syntax

// some_transform_function.js
export default function (doc) {
  doc.total = doc.a + doc.b
  if (doc.total % 2 === 0) {
    return doc
  } else {
    // returning null or undefined drops the entry
  }
}

or with the CommonJS export syntax

// some_transform_function.js
module.exports = function (doc) {
  doc.total = doc.a + doc.b
  if (doc.total % 2 === 0) {
    return doc
  } else {
    // returning null or undefined drops the entry
  }
}

Async

That function can also be async:

import { getSomeExtraData } from './path/to/get_some_extra_data.js'

// some_async_transform_function.js
export default async function (doc) {
  doc.total = doc.a + doc.b
  if (doc.total % 2 === 0) {
    doc.extraData = await getSomeExtraData(doc)
    return doc
  } else {
    // returning null or undefined drops the entry
  }
}

Diff mode

As a way to preview the results of your transformation, you can use the diff mode

json-apply some_transform_function.js some_data.json --diff

which will display a colored diff of each line before and after transformation.

For more readability, each line diff output is indented and on several lines.

Use sub-function

Given a function_collection.js file like:

// function_collection.js
export function foo (obj) {
  obj.timestamp = Date.now()
  return obj
}

export function bar (obj) {
  obj.count += obj.count
  return obj
}

You can use those subfunction by passing their key as an additional argument

json-apply function_collection.js#foo some_data.json
json-apply function_collection.js#bar some_data.json

This should also work with the CommonJS syntax:

// function_collection.cjs
module.exports = {
  foo: (obj) => {
    obj.timestamp = Date.now()
    return obj
  },
  bar: (obj) => {
    obj.count += obj.count
    return obj
  }
}

See also