📄 json.js
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/* json.js 2008-05-25 Public Domain No warranty expressed or implied. Use at your own risk. This file has been superceded by http://www.JSON.org/json2.js See http://www.JSON.org/js.html This file adds these methods to JavaScript: array.toJSONString(whitelist) boolean.toJSONString() date.toJSONString() number.toJSONString() object.toJSONString(whitelist) string.toJSONString() These methods produce a JSON text from a JavaScript value. It must not contain any cyclical references. Illegal values will be excluded. The default conversion for dates is to an ISO string. You can add a toJSONString method to any date object to get a different representation. The object and array methods can take an optional whitelist argument. A whitelist is an array of strings. If it is provided, keys in objects not found in the whitelist are excluded. string.parseJSON(filter) This method parses a JSON text to produce an object or array. It can throw a SyntaxError exception. The optional filter parameter is a function which can filter and transform the results. It receives each of the keys and values, and its return value is used instead of the original value. If it returns what it received, then structure is not modified. If it returns undefined then the member is deleted. Example: // Parse the text. If a key contains the string 'date' then // convert the value to a date. myData = text.parseJSON(function (key, value) { return key.indexOf('date') >= 0 ? new Date(value) : value; }); This file will break programs with improper for..in loops. See http://yuiblog.com/blog/2006/09/26/for-in-intrigue/ This file creates a global JSON object containing two methods: stringify and parse. JSON.stringify(value, replacer, space) value any JavaScript value, usually an object or array. replacer an optional parameter that determines how object values are stringified for objects without a toJSON method. It can be a function or an array. space an optional parameter that specifies the indentation of nested structures. If it is omitted, the text will be packed without extra whitespace. If it is a number, it will specify the number of spaces to indent at each level. If it is a string (such as '\t' or ' '), it contains the characters used to indent at each level. This method produces a JSON text from a JavaScript value. When an object value is found, if the object contains a toJSON method, its toJSON method will be called and the result will be stringified. A toJSON method does not serialize: it returns the value represented by the name/value pair that should be serialized, or undefined if nothing should be serialized. The toJSON method will be passed the key associated with the value, and this will be bound to the object holding the key. For example, this would serialize Dates as ISO strings. Date.prototype.toJSON = function (key) { function f(n) { // Format integers to have at least two digits. return n < 10 ? '0' + n : n; } return this.getUTCFullYear() + '-' + f(this.getUTCMonth() + 1) + '-' + f(this.getUTCDate()) + 'T' + f(this.getUTCHours()) + ':' + f(this.getUTCMinutes()) + ':' + f(this.getUTCSeconds()) + 'Z'; }; You can provide an optional replacer method. It will be passed the key and value of each member, with this bound to the containing object. The value that is returned from your method will be serialized. If your method returns undefined, then the member will be excluded from the serialization. If the replacer parameter is an array, then it will be used to select the members to be serialized. It filters the results such that only members with keys listed in the replacer array are stringified. Values that do not have JSON representations, such as undefined or functions, will not be serialized. Such values in objects will be dropped; in arrays they will be replaced with null. You can use a replacer function to replace those with JSON values. JSON.stringify(undefined) returns undefined. The optional space parameter produces a stringification of the value that is filled with line breaks and indentation to make it easier to read. If the space parameter is a non-empty string, then that string will be used for indentation. If the space parameter is a number, then the indentation will be that many spaces. Example: text = JSON.stringify(['e', {pluribus: 'unum'}]); // text is '["e",{"pluribus":"unum"}]' text = JSON.stringify(['e', {pluribus: 'unum'}], null, '\t'); // text is '[\n\t"e",\n\t{\n\t\t"pluribus": "unum"\n\t}\n]' text = JSON.stringify([new Date()], function (key, value) { return this[key] instanceof Date ? 'Date(' + this[key] + ')' : value; }); // text is '["Date(---current time---)"]' JSON.parse(text, reviver) This method parses a JSON text to produce an object or array. It can throw a SyntaxError exception. The optional reviver parameter is a function that can filter and transform the results. It receives each of the keys and values, and its return value is used instead of the original value. If it returns what it received, then the structure is not modified. If it returns undefined then the member is deleted. Example: // Parse the text. Values that look like ISO date strings will // be converted to Date objects. myData = JSON.parse(text, function (key, value) { var a; if (typeof value === 'string') { a =/^(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})T(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2}(?:\.\d*)?)Z$/.exec(value); if (a) { return new Date(Date.UTC(+a[1], +a[2] - 1, +a[3], +a[4], +a[5], +a[6])); } } return value; }); myData = JSON.parse('["Date(09/09/2001)"]', function (key, value) { var d; if (typeof value === 'string' && value.slice(0, 5) === 'Date(' && value.slice(-1) === ')') { d = new Date(value.slice(5, -1)); if (d) { return d; } } return value; }); It is expected that these methods will formally become part of the JavaScript Programming Language in the Fourth Edition of the ECMAScript standard in 2008. This is a reference implementation. You are free to copy, modify, or redistribute. This code should be minified before deployment. See http://javascript.crockford.com/jsmin.html USE YOUR OWN COPY. IT IS EXTREMELY UNWISE TO LOAD CODE FROM SERVERS YOU DO NOT CONTROL.*//*jslint evil: true *//*global JSON *//*members "", "\b", "\t", "\n", "\f", "\r", "\"", JSON, "\\", call, charCodeAt, getUTCDate, getUTCFullYear, getUTCHours, getUTCMinutes, getUTCMonth, getUTCSeconds, hasOwnProperty, join, lastIndex, length, parse, parseJSON, propertyIsEnumerable, prototype, push, replace, slice, stringify, test, toJSON, toJSONString, toString*/if (!this.JSON) {// Create a JSON object only if one does not already exist. We create the// object in a closure to avoid global variables. JSON = function () { function f(n) { // Format integers to have at least two digits. return n < 10 ? '0' + n : n; } Date.prototype.toJSON = function (key) { return this.getUTCFullYear() + '-' + f(this.getUTCMonth() + 1) + '-' + f(this.getUTCDate()) + 'T' + f(this.getUTCHours()) + ':' + f(this.getUTCMinutes()) + ':' + f(this.getUTCSeconds()) + 'Z'; }; var cx = /[\u0000\u00ad\u0600-\u0604\u070f\u17b4\u17b5\u200c-\u200f\u2028-\u202f\u2060-\u206f\ufeff\ufff0-\uffff]/g, escapeable = /[\\\"\x00-\x1f\x7f-\x9f\u00ad\u0600-\u0604\u070f\u17b4\u17b5\u200c-\u200f\u2028-\u202f\u2060-\u206f\ufeff\ufff0-\uffff]/g, gap, indent, meta = { // table of character substitutions '\b': '\\b', '\t': '\\t', '\n': '\\n', '\f': '\\f', '\r': '\\r', '"' : '\\"', '\\': '\\\\' }, rep; function quote(string) {// If the string contains no control characters, no quote characters, and no// backslash characters, then we can safely slap some quotes around it.// Otherwise we must also replace the offending characters with safe escape// sequences. escapeable.lastIndex = 0; return escapeable.test(string) ? '"' + string.replace(escapeable, function (a) { var c = meta[a]; if (typeof c === 'string') { return c; } return '\\u' + ('0000' + (+(a.charCodeAt(0))).toString(16)).slice(-4); }) + '"' : '"' + string + '"'; } function str(key, holder) {// Produce a string from holder[key].
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