Safely serialize JavaScript expressions to a superset of JSON, which includes Dates, BigInts, and more.
- π± Reliable serialization and deserialization
- π Type safety with autocompletion
- πΎ Negligible runtime footprint
- π« Framework agnostic
- π Perfect fix for Next.js's serialisation limitations in
getServerSideProps
andgetInitialProps
At Blitz, we have struggled with the limitations of JSON. We often find ourselves working with Date
, Map
, Set
or BigInt
, but JSON.stringify
doesn't support any of them without going through the hassle of converting manually!
Superjson solves these issues by providing a thin wrapper over JSON.stringify
and JSON.parse
.
Superjson logo by NUMI:
Install the library with your package manager of choice, e.g.:
yarn add superjson
The easiest way to use Superjson is with its stringify
and parse
functions. If you know how to use JSON.stringify
, you already know Superjson!
Easily stringify any expression youβd like:
import superjson from 'superjson';
const jsonString = superjson.stringify({ date: new Date(0) });
// jsonString === '{"json":{"date":"1970-01-01T00:00:00.000Z"},"meta":{"values":{date:"Date"}}}'
And parse your JSON like so:
const object = superjson.parse<
{ date: Date }
>(jsonString);
// object === { date: new Date(0) }
For cases where you want lower level access to the json
and meta
data in the output, you can use the serialize
and deserialize
functions.
One great use case for this is where you have an API that you want to be JSON compatible for all clients, but you still also want to transmit the meta data so clients can use superjson to fully deserialize it.
For example:
const object = {
normal: 'string',
timestamp: new Date(),
test: /superjson/,
};
const { json, meta } = superjson.serialize(object);
/*
json = {
normal: 'string',
timestamp: "2020-06-20T04:56:50.293Z",
test: "/superjson/",
};
// note that `normal` is not included here; `meta` only has special cases
meta = {
values: {
timestamp: ['Date'],
test: ['regexp'],
}
};
*/
The getServerSideProps
, getInitialProps
, and getStaticProps
data hooks provided by Next.js do not allow you to transmit Javascript objects like Dates. It will error unless you convert Dates to strings, etc.
Thankfully, Superjson is a perfect tool to bypass that limitation!
Next.js SWC plugins are experimental, but promise a significant speedup.
To use the SuperJSON SWC plugin, install it and add it to your next.config.js
:
yarn add next-superjson-plugin
// next.config.js
module.exports = {
experimental: {
swcPlugins: [
[
'next-superjson-plugin',
{
excluded: [],
},
],
],
},
};
Install the library with your package manager of choice, e.g.:
yarn add babel-plugin-superjson-next
Add the plugin to your .babelrc. If you don't have one, create it.
{
"presets": ["next/babel"],
"plugins": [
...
"superjson-next" // π
]
}
Done! Now you can safely use all JS datatypes in your getServerSideProps
/ etc. .
Serializes any JavaScript value into a JSON-compatible object.
const object = {
normal: 'string',
timestamp: new Date(),
test: /superjson/,
};
const { json, meta } = serialize(object);
Returns json
and meta
, both JSON-compatible values.
Deserializes the output of Superjson back into your original value.
const { json, meta } = serialize(object);
deserialize({ json, meta });
Returns your original value
.
Serializes and then stringifies your JavaScript value.
const object = {
normal: 'string',
timestamp: new Date(),
test: /superjson/,
};
const jsonString = stringify(object);
Returns string
.
Parses and then deserializes the JSON string returned by stringify
.
const jsonString = stringify(object);
parse(jsonString);
Returns your original value
.
Superjson supports many extra types which JSON does not. You can serialize all these:
type | supported by standard JSON? | supported by Superjson? |
---|---|---|
string |
β | β |
number |
β | β |
boolean |
β | β |
null |
β | β |
Array |
β | β |
Object |
β | β |
undefined |
β | β |
bigint |
β | β |
Date |
β | β |
RegExp |
β | β |
Set |
β | β |
Map |
β | β |
Error |
β | β |
URL |
β | β |
SuperJSON by default only supports built-in data types to keep bundle-size as low as possible. Here are some recipes you can use to extend to non-default data types.
Place them in some central utility file and make sure they're executed before any other SuperJSON
calls.
In a Next.js project, _app.ts
would be a good spot for that.
import { Decimal } from 'decimal.js';
SuperJSON.registerCustom<Decimal, string>(
{
isApplicable: (v): v is Decimal => Decimal.isDecimal(v),
serialize: v => v.toJSON(),
deserialize: v => new Decimal(v),
},
'decimal.js'
);
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!
Other libraries that aim to solve a similar problem:
- Serialize JavaScript by Eric Ferraiuolo
- devalue by Rich Harris
- next-json by Daniele Ricci