Angular 2 pipe that transforms JSON object to pretty-printed JSON

124,151

Solution 1

I would like to add an even simpler way to do this, using the built-in json pipe:

<pre>{{data | json}}</pre>

This way, the formatting is preserved.

Solution 2

I would create a custom pipe for this:

@Pipe({
  name: 'prettyprint'
})
export class PrettyPrintPipe implements PipeTransform {
  transform(val) {
    return JSON.stringify(val, null, 2)
      .replace(' ', '&nbsp;')
      .replace('\n', '<br/>');
  }
}

and use it this way:

@Component({
  selector: 'my-app',
  template: `
    <div [innerHTML]="obj | prettyprint"></div>
  `,
  pipes: [ PrettyPrintPipe ]
})
export class AppComponent {
  obj = {
    test: 'testttt',
    name: 'nameeee'
  }
}

See this stackblitz: https://stackblitz.com/edit/angular-prettyprint

Solution 3

I had required this scenario and many times require it. I saw this question is still trending in 2021. So I created a detailed post explaining not how to just prettify it but add colors to it and built a small tool to play around with.

2021 solution: I built my own custom version of pipe (inspried by this answer) which not only prettifies but also adds colors to JSON like vscode. I don't use a built-in JSON pipe because it doesn't serve my full purpose.

This also gives you the freedom to add number lines and padding if you wish to. Try to play around even with the nested jsons!

Sample output like below

Demo

global stylesheet should contain colors as per your theme for e.g styles.scss

pre {
  font-weight: 400;

  .number-line {
    color: #adadaf;
  }
  .string {
    color: #95c602;
  }
  .number {
    color: #f2b619;
  }
  .boolean {
    color: #0097f1;
  }
  .null {
    color: #727990;
  }
  .key {
    color: #fff;
  }
}

Source code of the pipe

@Pipe({
  name: 'prettyjson',
  pure:true
})
export class PrettyJsonPipe implements PipeTransform {
  transform(value: any, args: any[]): any {
    try {
      /**
       * check and try to parse value if it's not an object
       * if it fails to parse which means it is an invalid JSON
       */
      return this.applyColors(
        typeof value === 'object' ? value : JSON.parse(value),
        args[0],
        args[1]
      );
    } catch (e) {
      return this.applyColors({ error: 'Invalid JSON' }, args[0], args[1]);
    }
  }

  applyColors(obj: any, showNumebrLine: boolean = false, padding: number = 4) {
    // line number start from 1
    let line = 1;

    if (typeof obj != 'string') {
      obj = JSON.stringify(obj, undefined, 3);
    }

    /**
     * Converts special charaters like &, <, > to equivalent HTML code of it
     */
    obj = obj.replace(/&/g, '&amp;').replace(/</g, '&lt;').replace(/>/g, '&gt;');
    /* taken from https://stackoverflow.com/a/7220510 */

    /**
     * wraps every datatype, key for e.g
     * numbers from json object to something like
     * <span class="number" > 234 </span>
     * this is why needed custom themeClass which we created in _global.css
     * @return final bunch of span tags after all conversion
     */
    obj = obj.replace(
      /("(\\u[a-zA-Z0-9]{4}|\\[^u]|[^\\"])*"(\s*:)?|\b(true|false|null)\b|-?\d+(?:\.\d*)?(?:[eE][+\-]?\d+)?)/g,
      (match: any) => {
        // class to be applied inside pre tag
        let themeClass = 'number';
        if (/^"/.test(match)) {
          if (/:$/.test(match)) {
            themeClass = 'key';
          } else {
            themeClass = 'string';
          }
        } else if (/true|false/.test(match)) {
          themeClass = 'boolean';
        } else if (/null/.test(match)) {
          themeClass = 'null';
        }
        return '<span class="' + themeClass + '">' + match + '</span>';
      }
    );

    /**
     * Regex for the start of the line, insert a number-line themeClass tag before each line
     */
    return showNumebrLine
      ? obj.replace(
          /^/gm,
          () =>
            `<span class="number-line pl-3 select-none" >${String(line++).padEnd(padding)}</span>`
        )
      : obj;
  }
}

now pass these params inside HTML like this. If you don't pass it by default value of showNumberline is false and padding is 4

<pre [innerHTML]="dummyJsonObject | prettyjson: [true, 3]"></pre>

Hope this helps🙂

Solution 4

As this is the first result on google, let me add a quick sum up:

  • if you only need to print JSON without proper formatting, the build-in json pipe suggested by Shane Hsu works perfectly: <pre>{{data | json}}</pre>

  • however, if you want to have a different output, you will need to create your own pipe as Thierry Templier suggested:

    1. ng g generate pipe prettyjson
    2. in prettyjson.pipe.ts:
import { Pipe, PipeTransform } from '@angular/core';

@Pipe({
  name: 'prettyjson'
})
export class PrettyjsonPipe implements PipeTransform {

  transform(value: any, ...args: any[]): any {
    return JSON.stringify(value, null, 2)
    .replace(/ /g, '&nbsp;') // note the usage of `/ /g` instead of `' '` in order to replace all occurences
    .replace(/\n/g, '<br/>'); // same here
  }

}
  1. Finally, and because we return HTML content, the pipe must be used inside an innerHTML function:
<div [innerHTML]="data | prettyjson"></div>

Solution 5

since my variable is two way binded with ngModel, I could not do it on html. I used on component side JSON.stringify(displayValue, null, 2) and it did the job.

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124,151
Derek
Author by

Derek

Updated on July 22, 2021

Comments

  • Derek
    Derek almost 3 years

    Trying to write an Angular 2 pipe that will take a JSON object string and return it pretty-printed/formatted to display to the user.

    For example, it would take this:

    { "id": 1, "number": "K3483483344", "state": "CA", "active": true }

    And return something that looks like this when displayed in HTML:

    enter image description here

    So in my view I could have something like:

    <td> {{ record.jsonData | prettyprint }} </td>
    
  • Derek
    Derek almost 8 years
    Worked! I had a json string, not a json object, so I just had to add this line before calling JSON.stringify: var jsonObject = JSON.parse(jsonString);
  • Paul Gorbas
    Paul Gorbas almost 8 years
    Unexpected syntax, I expect use to be more like using a standard pipe: <div>{{obj | prettyprint }}</div> but it worked!
  • David Souther
    David Souther almost 8 years
    As @shane-hsu points out, there is a built-in json pipe, as there is in Angular 1.
  • Matthias Sommer
    Matthias Sommer over 6 years
    Your missing implements PipeTransform after export class PrettyPrintPipe
  • davejoem
    davejoem over 6 years
    Why is this not the accepted anser? It answers the question asked, unlike the accepted answer
  • Jeppe
    Jeppe over 3 years
    Cool. Note that the formatting requires <pre> and won't work with e.g. <p>,<span>, etc.
  • Balage
    Balage about 3 years
    .replace() only replaces the first instance of the matched string. Should use .replace(/ /g, '&nbsp;').replace(/\n/g, '<br/>'); instead