toSource is a super simple function that converts JavaScript objects back to source code.
Motivation: JSON doesn't support serializing functions, dates, or regular expressions. I wanted a quick and simple way to push trusted data structures with code from Node down to the browser.
This should make it easier to share code and modules between the server and client.
npm install tosource
The following code:
import toSource from 'tosource';
console.log(
toSource([
4,
5,
6,
'hello',
{
a: 2,
b: 3,
'1': 4,
if: 5,
yes: true,
no: false,
nan: NaN,
infinity: Infinity,
undefined: undefined,
null: null,
foo: function (bar) {
console.log('woo! a is ' + a);
console.log('and bar is ' + bar);
},
},
/we$/gi,
new Date('Wed, 09 Aug 1995 00:00:00 GMT'),
]),
);
Output:
[ 4,
5,
6,
"hello",
{ 1:4,
a:2,
b:3,
"if":5,
yes:true,
no:false,
nan:NaN,
infinity:Infinity,
"undefined":undefined,
"null":null,
foo:function (bar) {
console.log('woo! a is ' + a);
console.log('and bar is ' + bar);
} },
/we$/gi,
new Date(807926400000) ]
See tosource.test.ts for more examples.
- numbers (including
NaN
,Infinity
, and-0
) - strings
- Arrays (including sparse arrays)
- object literals
- function
RegExp
instancesDate
instancesMap
Set
true
/false
undefined
null
- Functions are serialized with
func.toString()
, no closure properties are serialized - Multiple references to the same object become copies
- Circular references are encoded as
{$circularReference:true}
toSource is open source software under the zlib license.