Adjust European short trip heuristic from >3 days to >1 day to correctly detect when user has returned home from European trips. This fixes the April 29-30, 2023 case where the location incorrectly showed "Sankt Georg, Hamburg" instead of "Bristol" when the user was free (no events scheduled) after the foss-north trip ended on April 27. The previous logic required more than 3 days to pass before assuming return home from European countries, but for short European trips by rail/ferry, users typically return within 1-2 days. 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com> |
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cjs | ||
esm | ||
php | ||
python | ||
types | ||
es.js | ||
esm.js | ||
index.js | ||
LICENSE | ||
min.js | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
flatted
Social Media Photo by Matt Seymour on Unsplash
A super light (0.5K) and fast circular JSON parser, directly from the creator of CircularJSON.
Available also for PHP.
Available also for Python.
Announcement 📣
There is a standard approach to recursion and more data-types than what JSON allows, and it's part of the Structured Clone polyfill.
Beside acting as a polyfill, its @ungap/structured-clone/json
export provides both stringify
and parse
, and it's been tested for being faster than flatted, but its produced output is also smaller than flatted in general.
The @ungap/structured-clone module is, in short, a drop in replacement for flatted, but it's not compatible with flatted specialized syntax.
However, if recursion, as well as more data-types, are what you are after, or interesting for your projects/use cases, consider switching to this new module whenever you can 👍
npm i flatted
Usable via CDN or as regular module.
// ESM
import {parse, stringify, toJSON, fromJSON} from 'flatted';
// CJS
const {parse, stringify, toJSON, fromJSON} = require('flatted');
const a = [{}];
a[0].a = a;
a.push(a);
stringify(a); // [["1","0"],{"a":"0"}]
toJSON and fromJSON
If you'd like to implicitly survive JSON serialization, these two helpers helps:
import {toJSON, fromJSON} from 'flatted';
class RecursiveMap extends Map {
static fromJSON(any) {
return new this(fromJSON(any));
}
toJSON() {
return toJSON([...this.entries()]);
}
}
const recursive = new RecursiveMap;
const same = {};
same.same = same;
recursive.set('same', same);
const asString = JSON.stringify(recursive);
const asMap = RecursiveMap.fromJSON(JSON.parse(asString));
asMap.get('same') === asMap.get('same').same;
// true
Flatted VS JSON
As it is for every other specialized format capable of serializing and deserializing circular data, you should never JSON.parse(Flatted.stringify(data))
, and you should never Flatted.parse(JSON.stringify(data))
.
The only way this could work is to Flatted.parse(Flatted.stringify(data))
, as it is also for CircularJSON or any other, otherwise there's no granted data integrity.
Also please note this project serializes and deserializes only data compatible with JSON, so that sockets, or anything else with internal classes different from those allowed by JSON standard, won't be serialized and unserialized as expected.
New in V1: Exact same JSON API
- Added a reviver parameter to
.parse(string, reviver)
and revive your own objects. - Added a replacer and a
space
parameter to.stringify(object, replacer, space)
for feature parity with JSON signature.
Compatibility
All ECMAScript engines compatible with Map
, Set
, Object.keys
, and Array.prototype.reduce
will work, even if polyfilled.
How does it work ?
While stringifying, all Objects, including Arrays, and strings, are flattened out and replaced as unique index. *
Once parsed, all indexes will be replaced through the flattened collection.
*
represented as string to avoid conflicts with numbers
// logic example
var a = [{one: 1}, {two: '2'}];
a[0].a = a;
// a is the main object, will be at index '0'
// {one: 1} is the second object, index '1'
// {two: '2'} the third, in '2', and it has a string
// which will be found at index '3'
Flatted.stringify(a);
// [["1","2"],{"one":1,"a":"0"},{"two":"3"},"2"]
// a[one,two] {one: 1, a} {two: '2'} '2'