json-arraybuffer-reviver v2.0.0
json-arraybuffer-reviver
Utility functions for JSON.parse and JSON.stringify to work with typed arrays and array buffers.
Installation
Install the library via NPM:
# npm install json-arraybuffer-reviverUsage
Setup
Before you can use the functionality in your project, you need to import it to your project:
// Import the Price Oracle library.
import { replacer, reviver } from 'json-arraybuffer-reviver`;Usage
When you need to JSON.stringify() or JSON.parse() data that contains ArrayBuffers, DataViews or BigInts, simply pass in the replacer and reviver functions:
// Create some data to encode.
const inputData = new Uint8Array();
// Encode the data into JSON.
const encodedData = JSON.stringify(inputData, replacer);
// Decode the data from JSON.
const outputData = JSON.parse(encodedData, reviver);Details
The replacer function looks at the data that you are trying to encode into JSON and instead of using the default toString() methods it encodes the data in a human readable form as follows:
BigIntegers:
{
$BigInt: 'The integer number as a string'
}ArrayBuffers:
{
$ArrayBuffer:
{
View: "Name of the ArrayBuffer or DataView type, as a string",
Data: "Hexadecimal representation of the bytes that make up the ArrayBuffer",
}
}Compatibility Notes
Currently, Internet Explorer and Safari browsers do not support BigIntArrays.
Credits
The code for these utility functions was inspired by a gist by Jimmy Wärting, but rebuilt from scratch in order to be:
- human readable,
- clear in purpose,
- properly documented and
- well tested.