formatio
Pretty formatting of arbitrary JavaScript values. Currently only supports ascii
formatting, suitable for command-line utilities. Like JSON.stringify
, it
formats objects recursively, but unlike JSON.stringify
, it can handle
regular expressions, functions, circular objects and more.
formatio
is a general-purpose library. It works in browsers (including old
and rowdy ones, like IE6) and Node. If you need to use it with AMD or as a global, then there's a UMD version in dist/
.
Installation
npm install @sinonjs/formatio
formatio.ascii
API
formatio.ascii
can take any JavaScript object and format it nicely as plain
text. It uses the helper functions described below to format different types of
objects.
formatio.ascii(object)
object
can be any kind of object, including DOM elements.
Simple object
var formatio = require("@sinonjs/formatio");
var object = { name: "Christian" };
console.log(formatio.ascii(object));
// Outputs:
// { name: "Christian" }
Complex object
var formatio = require("@sinonjs/formatio");
var developer = {
name: "Christian",
interests: ["Programming", "Guitar", "TV"],
location: {
language: "Norway",
city: "Oslo",
getLatLon: function getLatLon(callback) {
// ...
},
distanceTo: function distanceTo(location) {
}
},
speak: function () {
return "Oh hi!";
}
};
console.log(formatio.ascii(developer));
// Outputs:
// {
// interests: ["Programming", "Guitar", "TV"],
// location: {
// city: "Oslo",
// distanceTo: function distanceTo() {},
// getLatLon: function getLatLon() {},
// language: "Norway"
// },
// name: "Christian",
// speak: function () {}
// }
Custom constructor
If the object to format is not a generic Object
object, formatio
displays the type of object (i.e. name of constructor). Set the
excludeConstructors
(see below) property to control what constructors to
include in formatted output.
var formatio = require("@sinonjs/formatio");
function Person(name) { this.name = name; }
var dude = new Person("Dude");
console.log(format.ascii(dude));
// Outputs:
// [Person] { name: "Dude" }
DOM elements
DOM elements are formatted as abbreviated HTML source. 20 characters of
innerHTML
is included, and if the content is longer, it is truncated with
"[...]"
. Future editions will add the possibility to format nested markup
structures.
var p = document.createElement("p");
p.id = "sample";
p.className = "notice";
p.setAttribute("data-custom", "42");
p.innerHTML = "Hey there, here's some text for ya there buddy";
console.log(formatio.ascii(p));
// Outputs
// <p id="sample" class="notice" data-custom="42">Hey there, here's so[...]</p></code></pre>
formatio.ascii.func(func)
Formats a function like "function [name]() {}"
. The name is retrieved from
formatio.functionName
.
formatio.ascii.array(array)
Formats an array as "[item1, item2, item3]"
where each item is formatted
with formatio.ascii
. Circular references are represented in the resulting
string as "[Circular]"
.
formatio.ascii.object(object)
Formats all properties of the object with formatio.ascii
. If the object can
be fully represented in 80 characters, it's formatted in one line. Otherwise,
it's nicely indented over as many lines as necessary. Circular references are
represented by "[Circular]"
.
Objects created with custom constructors will be formatted as
"[ConstructorName] { ... }"
. Set the excludeConstructors
property to
control what constructors are included in the output like this.
formatio.ascii.element(element)
Formats a DOM element as HTML source. The tag name is represented in lower-case
and all attributes and their values are included. The element's content is
included, up to 20 characters. If the length exceeds 20 characters, it's
truncated with a "[...]"
.
formatio.functionName(func)
Guesses a function's name. If the function defines the displayName
property
(used by some debugging tools <http://trac.webkit.org/changeset/42478>
_) it is
preferred. If it is not found, the name
property is tried. If no name can be
found this way, an attempt is made to find the function name by looking at the
function's toString()
representation.
formatio.constructorName(object)
Attempts to guess the name of the constructor that created the object. It does
so by getting the name of object.constructor
using functionName
. If a
name is found, excludeConstructors
is consulted. If the constructor name
matches any of these elements, an empty string is returned, otherwise the name
is returned.
formatio.ascii
properties
quoteStrings(true)
Whether or not to quote simple strings. When set to false
, simple strings
are not quoted. Strings in arrays and objects will still be quoted, but
ascii("Some string")
will not gain additional quotes.
limitChildrenCount(number)
This property allows to limit the number of printed array elements or object properties. When set to 0, all elements will be included in output, any number greater than zero will set the limit to that number.
excludeConstructors (["Object", /^.$/])
An array of strings and/or regular expressions naming constructors that should
be stripped from the formatted output. The default value skips objects created
by Object
and constructors that have one character names (which are
typically used in Object.create
shims).
While you can set this property directly on formatio.ascii
, it is
recommended to create an instance of formatio.ascii
and override the
property on that object.
Strings represent constructor names that should not be represented in the formatted output. Regular expressions are tested against constructor names when formatting. If the expression is a match, the constructor name is not included in the formatted output.
function Person(name) {
this.name = name;
}
var person = new Person("Chris");
console.log(formatio.ascii(person));
// Outputs
// [Person] { name: "Chris" }
var formatter = Object.create(formatio);
formatter.excludeConstructors = ["Object", /^.$/, "Person"];
console.log(formatter.ascii(person));
// Outputs
// { name: "Chris" }
// Global overwrite, generally not recommended
formatio.excludeConstructors = ["Object", /^.$/, "Person"];
console.log(formatio.ascii(person));
// Outputs
// { name: "Chris" }