This example illustrates one method of serializing and recreating class instances by using the replacer
and reviver
parameters to JSON.stringify
and JSON.parse
respectively.
(stringify results here)
The CaveMan class
For this example, we'll use a class CaveMan, with a property discovered
that holds a Date
instance, and a method getName
.
YUI().use("node", "json", function(Y) { function CaveMan(name,discovered) { this.name = name; this.discovered = discovered; }; CaveMan.prototype.getName = function () { return this.name + ", the cave man"; } ...
Add freeze
and thaw
static methods
We'll add the methods responsible for serializing and reconstituting instances to the CaveMan class as static methods.
// Static method to convert to a basic structure with a class identifier CaveMan.freeze = function (cm) { return { _class : 'CaveMan', n : cm.name, d : cm.discovered // remains a Date for standard JSON serialization }; }; // Static method to reconstitute a CaveMan from the basic structure CaveMan.thaw = function (o) { return new CaveMan(o.n, o.d); };
Reference the methods in replacer and reviver functions
We'll create an example
namespace to hold our moving parts. In it, we'll add a method to pass to JSON.stringify
that calls our custom serializer, and another method to pass to JSON.parse
that detects the serialized structure and calls our thawing method.
var example = { cryo : function (k,o) { return (o instanceof CaveMan) ? CaveMan.freeze(o) : o; }, revive : function (k,v) { // Check for cavemen by the _class key if (v instanceof Object && v._class == 'CaveMan') { return CaveMan.thaw(v); } // default to returning the value unaltered return v; } };
The data to be serialized
We'll create a CaveMan instance and nest it in another object structure to illustrate how the thawing process still operates normally for all other data.
example.data = { count : 1, type : 'Hominid', specimen : [ new CaveMan('Ed',new Date(1946,6,6)) ] };
Thawing from the inside out and the Date
instance
The reviver function passed to JSON.parse
is applied to all key:value pairs in the raw parsed object from the deepest keys to the highest level. In our case, this means that the name
and discovered
properties will be passed through the reviver, and then the object containing those keys will be passed through.
We'll take advantage of this by watching for UTC formatted date strings (the default JSON serialization for Dates) and reviving them into proper Date
instances before the containing object gets its turn in the reviver.
var example = { dateRE : /^(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})T(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2})(?:\.\d+)?Z$/, cryo : function (k,o) { return (o instanceof CaveMan) ? CaveMan.freeze(o) : o; }, revive : function (k,v) { // Turn anything that looks like a UTC date string into a Date instance var match = Y.Lang.isString(v) ? v.match(example.dateRE) : null, d; if (match) { d = new Date(); d.setUTCFullYear(match[1], (match[2] - 1), match[3]); d.setUTCHours(match[4], match[5], match[6]); return d; } // Check for cavemen by the _class key if (v instanceof Object && v._class == 'CaveMan') { return CaveMan.thaw(v); } // default to returning the value unaltered return v; } };
Now when the reviver function is evaluating the object it determines to be a CaveMan, the discovered
property is correctly containing a Date
instance.
Choose your serialization
You'll note there are two freeze and thaw operations going on in this example. One for our CaveMan class and one for Date
instances. Their respective serialization and recreation techniques are very different. You are free to decide the serialized format of your objects. Choose whatever makes sense for your application.
Note: There is no explicit Date
serialization method listed inline because JSON
natively supports Date
serialization. However, it is outside the scope of the parser's duty to create Date instances, so it's up to you to recreate them in the parse
phase. Feel free to use the method included here.
Show and Tell
Now we add the event handlers to the example buttons to call JSON.stringify
and parse
with our example.cryo
and example.revive
methods, respectively.
Y.one('#demo_freeze').on('click',function (e) { example.jsonString = Y.JSON.stringify(example.data, example.cryo); Y.one('#demo_frozen').set('innerHTML', example.jsonString); Y.one('#demo_thaw').set('disabled',false); }); Y.one('#demo_thaw').on('click',function (e) { var x = Y.JSON.parse(example.jsonString, example.revive); cm = x.specimen[0]; Y.one('#demo_thawed').set('innerHTML', "<p>Specimen count: " + x.count + "</p>"+ "<p>Specimen type: " + x.type + "</p>"+ "<p>Instanceof CaveMan: " + (cm instanceof CaveMan) + "</p>"+ "<p>Name: " + cm.getName() + "</p>"+ "<p>Discovered: " + cm.discovered + "</p>"); }); }); // end of YUI(..).use(.., function (Y) {
Full Code Listing
<style> #demo pre { background: #fff; border: 1px solid #ccc; margin: 1em; padding: 1em; white-space: pre-wrap; /* css-3 */ word-wrap: break-word; /* Internet Explorer 5.5+ */ } </style> <div id="demo"> <input type="button" id="demo_freeze" value="Freeze"> <input type="button" id="demo_thaw" disabled="disabled" value="Thaw"> <pre id="demo_frozen">(stringify results here)</pre> <div id="demo_thawed"></div> </div> <script type="text/javascript"> YUI().use("node", "json", function(Y) { var example = { data : null, jsonString : null, dateRE : /^(\d{4})-(\d{2})-(\d{2})T(\d{2}):(\d{2}):(\d{2})(?:\.\d+)?Z$/, cryo : function (k,o) { return (o instanceof CaveMan) ? CaveMan.freeze(o) : o; }, revive : function (k,v) { // Turn anything that looks like a UTC date string into a Date instance var match = Y.Lang.isString(v) ? v.match(example.dateRE) : null, d; if (match) { d = new Date(); d.setUTCFullYear(match[1], (match[2] - 1), match[3]); d.setUTCHours(match[4], match[5], match[6]); return d; } // Check for cavemen by the _class key if (v instanceof Object && v._class == 'CaveMan') { return CaveMan.thaw(v); } // default to returning the value unaltered return v; } }; function CaveMan(name,discovered) { this.name = name; this.discovered = discovered; }; CaveMan.prototype.getName = function () { return this.name + ", the cave man"; } // Static methods to convert to and from a basic object structure CaveMan.thaw = function (o) { return new CaveMan(o.n, o.d); }; // Convert to a basic object structure including a class identifier CaveMan.freeze = function (cm) { return { _class : 'CaveMan', n : cm.name, d : cm.discovered // remains a Date for standard JSON serialization }; }; example.data = { count : 1, type : 'Hominid', specimen : [ new CaveMan('Ed',new Date(1946,6,6)) ] }; Y.one('#demo_freeze').on('click',function (e) { // Format the string with 4 space indentation example.jsonString = Y.JSON.stringify(example.data, example.cryo, 4); Y.one('#demo_frozen').set('text', example.jsonString); Y.one('#demo_thaw').set('disabled',false); }); Y.one('#demo_thaw').on('click',function (e) { var parsedData = Y.JSON.parse(example.jsonString, example.revive); cm = parsedData.specimen[0]; Y.one('#demo_thawed').set('innerHTML', "<p>Specimen count: " + parsedData.count + "</p>"+ "<p>Specimen type: " + parsedData.type + "</p>"+ "<p>Instanceof CaveMan: " + (cm instanceof CaveMan) + "</p>"+ "<p>Name: " + cm.getName() + "</p>"+ "<p>Discovered: " + cm.discovered + "</p>"); }); // Expose the example objects for inspection example.CaveMan = CaveMan; YUI.example = example; }); </script>