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Stringify an object/array like JSON.stringify just without all the double-quotes

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stringify-object

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.

Install

npm install stringify-object

Usage

import stringifyObject from 'stringify-object';

const object = {
	foo: 'bar',
	'arr': [1, 2, 3],
	nested: {
		hello: "world"
	}
};

const pretty = stringifyObject(object, {
	indent: '  ',
	singleQuotes: false
});

console.log(pretty);
/*
{
  foo: "bar",
  arr: [
    1,
    2,
    3
  ],
  nested: {
    hello: "world"
  }
}
*/

API

stringifyObject(input, options?)

Circular references will be replaced with "[Circular]".

Object keys are only quoted when necessary, for example, {'foo-bar': true}.

input

Type: object | Array

options

Type: object

indent

Type: string
Default: \t

Preferred indentation.

singleQuotes

Type: boolean
Default: true

Set to false to get double-quoted strings.

filter(object, property)

Type: Function

Expected to return a boolean of whether to include the property property of the object object in the output.

transform(object, property, originalResult)

Type: Function
Default: undefined

Expected to return a string that transforms the string that resulted from stringifying object[property]. 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":

import stringifyObject from 'stringify-object';

const object = {
	user: 'becky',
	password: 'secret'
};

const pretty = stringifyObject(object, {
	transform: (object, property, originalResult) => {
		if (property === 'password') {
			return originalResult.replace(/\w/g, '*');
		}

		return originalResult;
	}
});

console.log(pretty);
/*
{
	user: 'becky',
	password: '******'
}
*/
inlineCharacterLimit

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:

import stringifyObject from 'stringify-object';

const object = {
	foo: 'bar',
	'arr': [1, 2, 3],
	nested: {
		hello: "world"
	}
};

const pretty = stringifyObject(object, {
	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.