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https://github.com/antonmedv/fx
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2.4 KiB
2.4 KiB
Command-line JSON processing tool
Features
- Don't need to learn new syntax
- Plain JavaScript
- Formatting and highlighting
Install
$ npm install -g fx
Usage
Pipe into fx
any JSON and anonymous function for reducing it.
$ fx [code ...]
Pretty print JSON without passing any arguments:
$ echo '{"key":"value"}' | fx
{
"key": "value"
}
Anonymous function
Use an anonymous function as reducer which gets JSON and processes it:
$ echo '{"foo": [{"bar": "value"}]}' | fx 'x => x.foo[0].bar'
"value"
This Binding
If you don't pass anonymous function param => ...
, code will be automatically transformed into anonymous function.
And you can get access to JSON by this
keyword:
$ echo '{"foo": [{"bar": "value"}]}' | fx 'this.foo[0].bar'
"value"
Chain
You can pass any number of anonymous functions for reducing JSON:
$ echo '{"foo": [{"bar": "value"}]}' | fx 'x => x.foo' 'this[0]' 'this.bar'
"value"
Generator
If passed code contains yield
keyword, generator expression
will be used:
$ curl ... | fx 'for (let user of this) if (user.login.startsWith("a")) yield user'
Access to JSON through this
keyword:
$ echo '["a", "b"]' | fx 'yield* this'
[
"a",
"b"
]
$ echo '["a", "b"]' | fx 'yield* this; yield "c";'
[
"a",
"b",
"c"
]
Update
You can update existing JSON using spread operator:
$ echo '{"count": 0}' | fx '{...this, count: 1}'
{
"count": 1
}
Use npm package
Use any npm package by installing it globally:
$ npm install -g lodash
$ cat package.json | fx 'require("lodash").keys(this.dependencies)'
Other examples
Convert object to array:
$ cat package.json | fx 'Object.keys(this.dependencies)'
[
"cardinal",
"get-stdin",
"meow"
]
Related
- jq – cli JSON processor on C
- jsawk – like awk, but for JSON
- json – another JSON manipulating cli library
- jl – functional sed for JSON on Haskell
License
MIT