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Generated on Apr 30, 2024 via pnpm

jsonparse 0.0.1

This is a pure-js JSON streaming parser for node.js
Package summary
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issue
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critical severity
license
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license
1
N/A
Package created
18 Jan 2011
Version published
18 Jan 2011
Maintainers
1
Total deps
1
Direct deps
0
License
UNKNOWN

Issues

1

1 critical severity issue

critical
Recommendation: Check the package code and files for license information
via: jsonparse@0.0.1
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Licenses

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1 Packages, Including:
jsonparse@0.0.1
Disclaimer

This deed highlights only some of the key features and terms of the actual license. It is not a license and has no legal value. You should carefully review all of the terms and conditions of the actual license before using the licensed material.

Sandworm is not a law firm and does not provide legal services. Distributing, displaying, or linking to this deed or the license that it summarizes does not create a lawyer-client or any other relationship.

Direct Dependencies

0
All Dependencies CSV
β“˜ This is a list of jsonparse 's direct dependencies. Data on all dependencies, including transitive ones, is available via CSV download.
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Frequently Asked Questions

What does jsonparse do?

JSONParse is a powerful tool for Node.js that allows for the parsing of JSON data in a stream. This is a pure JavaScript solution, so it's effortless to integrate and use within your JavaScript or Node.js projects. Unlike traditional parsing methods, JSONParse reads in data continually, making it a perfect solution for working with large JSON files that may otherwise cause memory issues or require cumbersome parsing methods.

How do you use jsonparse?

Using JSONParse is a fairly straightforward process. It's designed to work seamlessly with Node.js streams, so you can pipe your data directly through the parser. Here's a basic example of how to use JSONParse in your code:

var JSONStream = require('JSONStream');
var jsonparse = new JSONStream();

jsonparse.on('data', function(data) {
    // The 'data' event will fire whenever the parser has finished parsing a top-level element.
    console.log(data);
});

// You can pipe any readable stream to the parser:
someReadableStream.pipe(jsonparse);

This will output each top-level JSON object parsed from the stream. JSONParse will handle all the memory management and incremental parsing for you, making it a highly efficient way to deal with large or streaming JSON data.

Where are the jsonparse docs?

Unfortunately, the README does not contain a link to more extensive documentation. However, since JSONParse is an npm package, you can find further information on the npm package page for JSONParse, as well as the GitHub repository link provided. JSONParse's simplicity makes it a fairly easy tool to use even without lengthy documentation, especially if you're familiar with JavaScript and Node.js streams. It's also open source so users are free to delve into the package's source code if they're interested in its internal workings. The best place to get full details about this package would be on the GitHub page: github - JSONParse