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Object serialization made easy with decorators.

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ts json serializer

This typescript serializer project should bring ease when using objects on both ends of a json based communication. Most of the time, interfaces are sufficent since there are no methods on the communication objects. But what happens when "calculated fields" are used (like a read only property). This library does register the used type as classes in a type system and uses a special notation to transfer the objects over the wire. After that, the deserialized objects are real instances (so instanceof does work), even with references to other types (i.e. in circular references).

Shield me.

Build Status npm Coverage status license

Installation

To install this package, simply run

NPM

Usage

To use the ts-json-serializer instantiate an instance of it and throw your decorated models in it.

models.ts:

import { Serializable } from 'ts-json-serializer';

@Serializable()
export class User {
    public name: string;
    public surname: string;
    public address: Address;
}

@Serializable()
export class Address {
    public street: string;
    public city: string;
    public zip: number;
}

Now when you wan't to send your models to another client, just use the TsSerializer:

import { User, Address } from './models';
import { TsSerializer } from 'ts-json-serializer';

const address = new Address();
address.street = 'Foobar';
address.city = 'SomewhereThere';
address.zip = 1337

const user1 = new User();
user1.name = 'Sally';
user1.surname = `O'Brien`;
user1.address = address;

const user2 = new User();
user2.name = 'Jake';
user2.surname = `O'Brien`;
user2.address = address;

const serializer = new TsSerializer();

serializer.serialize([user1, user2]); // <- This returns a transmittable string

To deserialize, just use the json string that is returned by serialize and reverse the process.

const deserializer = new TsSerializer();

const deserialized = deserializer.deserialize<User[]>(jsonString);

const user1 = deserialized[0];
const user2 = deserialized[1];

user1.address === user2.address; // --> TRUE.

Actually, you can serialize normal objects, or array of objects. The library does recognize the array and does parse the objects one by one. The generic type T is not mandatory, but strongly recommended. This is especally useful, if you transmit multiple objects that can be identified by an interface or an abstract class. The types are instantiated with the concrete class, but you could use the interface as type generic information and just parse them all:

interface Foobar {
    sayHello(): void;
}

class FooOne implements Foobar {
    public sayHello(): void {
        console.log('hello from FooOne');
    }
}

class FooTwo implements Foobar {
    public sayHello(): void {
        console.log('hello from FooTwo');
    }
}

const serializer = new TsSerializer();

const foobarThings = serializer.deserializer<Foobar[]>(string);

for(let foo of foobarThings){
    foo.sayHello();
}

Changelog

The changelog is based on keep a changelog and is located here:

Changelog

Licence

This software is licenced under the MIT licence.

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Object serialization made easy with decorators.

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  • JavaScript 2.3%