Bakhtina Sofya b84cb877be 1st comm 3 veckor sedan
..
test b84cb877be 1st comm 3 veckor sedan
.npmignore b84cb877be 1st comm 3 veckor sedan
CHANGELOG.md b84cb877be 1st comm 3 veckor sedan
LICENSE b84cb877be 1st comm 3 veckor sedan
Makefile b84cb877be 1st comm 3 veckor sedan
README.md b84cb877be 1st comm 3 veckor sedan
package.json b84cb877be 1st comm 3 veckor sedan
stringify.js b84cb877be 1st comm 3 veckor sedan

README.md

json-stringify-safe

Like JSON.stringify, but doesn't throw on circular references.

Usage

Takes the same arguments as JSON.stringify.

var stringify = require('json-stringify-safe');
var circularObj = {};
circularObj.circularRef = circularObj;
circularObj.list = [ circularObj, circularObj ];
console.log(stringify(circularObj, null, 2));

Output:

{
  "circularRef": "[Circular]",
  "list": [
    "[Circular]",
    "[Circular]"
  ]
}

Details

stringify(obj, serializer, indent, decycler)

The first three arguments are the same as to JSON.stringify. The last is an argument that's only used when the object has been seen already.

The default decycler function returns the string '[Circular]'. If, for example, you pass in function(k,v){} (return nothing) then it will prune cycles. If you pass in function(k,v){ return {foo: 'bar'}}, then cyclical objects will always be represented as {"foo":"bar"} in the result.

stringify.getSerialize(serializer, decycler)

Returns a serializer that can be used elsewhere. This is the actual function that's passed to JSON.stringify.

Note that the function returned from getSerialize is stateful for now, so do not use it more than once.