Luis Figueiredo 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
..
bin 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
images 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
lib 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
test 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
.jshintrc 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
.npmignore 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
.travis.yml 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
Authors.md 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
CONTRIBUTING.md 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
History.md 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
LICENSE 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
README.md 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años
package.json 70d448e272 Initial commit hace 8 años

README.md

prettyjson Build Status NPM version Coverage Status

Package for formatting JSON data in a coloured YAML-style, perfect for CLI output.

How to install

Just install it via NPM:

$ npm install -g prettyjson

This will install prettyjson globally, so it will be added automatically to your PATH.

Using it (from the CLI)

This package installs a command line interface to render JSON data in a more convenient way. You can use the CLI in three different ways:

Decode a JSON file: If you want to see the contents of a JSON file, just pass it as the first argument to the CLI:

$ prettyjson package.json

Example 1

Decode the stdin: You can also pipe the result of a command (for example an HTTP request) to the CLI to see the JSON result in a clearer way:

$ curl https://api.github.com/users/rafeca | prettyjson

Example 2

Decode random strings: if you call the CLI with no arguments, you'll get a prompt where you can past JSON strings and they'll be automatically displayed in a clearer way:

Example 3

Command line options

It's possible to customize the output through some command line options:

# Change colors
$ prettyjson --string=red --keys=blue --dash=yellow --number=green package.json

# Do not use colors
$ prettyjson --nocolor=1 package.json

# Change indentation
$ prettyjson --indent=4 package.json

# Render arrays elements in a single line
$ prettyjson --inline-arrays=1 package.json

Deprecation Notice: The old configuration through environment variables is deprecated and it will be removed in the next major version (1.0.0).

Using it (from Node.js)

It's pretty easy to use it. You just have to include it in your script and call the render() method:

var prettyjson = require('prettyjson');

var data = {
  username: 'rafeca',
  url: 'https://github.com/rafeca',
  twitter_account: 'https://twitter.com/rafeca',
  projects: ['prettyprint', 'connfu']
};

var options = {
  noColor: true
};

console.log(prettyjson.render(data, options));

And will output:

Example 4

You can also configure the colors of the hash keys and array dashes (using colors.js colors syntax):

var prettyjson = require('prettyjson');

var data = {
  username: 'rafeca',
  url: 'https://github.com/rafeca',
  twitter_account: 'https://twitter.com/rafeca',
  projects: ['prettyprint', 'connfu']
};

console.log(prettyjson.render(data, {
  keysColor: 'rainbow',
  dashColor: 'magenta',
  stringColor: 'white'
}));

Will output something like:

Example 5

Running Tests

To run the test suite first invoke the following command within the repo, installing the development dependencies:

$ npm install

then run the tests:

$ npm test

On windows, you can run the tests with:

C:\git\prettyjson> npm run-script testwin