jf is a jo alternative, A small utility to safely format and print JSON objects in the commandline.
However, unlike jo, where you build the JSON object by nesting jo outputs,
jf works similar to printf, i.e. it expects the template in YAML format as the first argument, and then the values for the placeholders as subsequent arguments.
For example:
jf "{one: %s, two: %q, three: [%(four)s, %(five=5)q]}" 1 2 four=4
# {"one":1,"two":"2","three":[4,"5"]}brew install gromgit/tools/jfAs a CLI tool
cargo install jfOr as a library:
cargo add jfnix-env -f https://github.com/NixOS/nixpkgs/tarball/nixos-unstable -iA jfjf [OPTION]... [--] TEMPLATE [VALUE]... [NAME=VALUE]... [NAME@FILE]...| option | help |
|---|---|
| - | alias for -f -, i.e. read template from stdin |
| -- | stop parsing CLI options |
| -r, --raw | print the raw rendered value without formatting |
| -p, --pretty | pretty print the JSON formatted output |
| -y, --yaml | print the output as YAML instead of JSON |
| -h, --help | print this help message |
| -v, --version | print the version number |
| -f, --file | treat the template argument as a file to read from |
Template should render into valid YAML. It can contain the following placeholders:
%%a literal%character%s%qread positional argument%-s%-qread stdin%(NAME)s%(NAME)qread named value from argument%(NAME=DEFAULT)s%(NAME=DEFAULT)qplaceholder with default value%(NAME@FILE)s%(NAME@FILE)qread default value from file path%(NAME@-)s%(NAME@-)qread default value from stdin%(NAME?)s%(NAME?)qnullable placeholder that defaults to null%(NAME)?s%(NAME)?qoptional placeholder that defaults to blank%*s%*qexpand positional args as array items%*-s%*-qexpand stdin as array items%**s%**qexpand positional args as key value pairs%**-s%**-qexpand stdin as key value pairs%(NAME)*s%(NAME)*qexpand named args as array items%(NAME)**s%(NAME)**qexpand named args as key value pairs
Use placeholders with suffix q for safely quoted JSON string and s for JSON values
other than string.
- Pass values for positional placeholders in the same order as in the template.
- Pass values for named placeholders using
NAME=VALUEsyntax. - Pass values for named array items using
NAME=ITEM_Nsyntax. - Pass values for named key value pairs using
NAME=KEY_N NAME=VALUE_Nsyntax. - Pass values to stdin following the order and separate them with null byte (
\0). - Use
NAME@FILEsyntax to read from file where FILE can be-for stdin. - Do not pass positional values after named values.
- To allow merging arrays and objects via expansion, trailing comma after
sandq, if any, will be auto removed if no value is passed for the expandable placeholder.
jf %s 1
# 1
jf %q 1
# "1"
jf '{%**q}' one 1 two 2 three 3
# {"one":"1","two":"2","three":"3"}
seq 1 3 | xargs printf '%s\0' | jf '[%*-s]'
# [1,2,3]
jf "{%q: %(value=default)q, %(bar)**q}" foo value=bar bar=biz bar=baz
# {"foo":"bar","biz":"baz"}
jf "{str or bool: %(str)?q %(bool)?s, nullable: %(nullable?)q}" str=true
# {"str or bool":"true","nullable":null}
jf '{1: %s, two: %q, 3: %(3)s, four: %(four=4)q, "%%": %(pct?)q}' 1 2 3=3
# {"1":1,"two":"2","3":3,"four":"4","%":null}You can set the following aliases in your shell:
alias str='jf %q'
alias arr='jf "[%*s]"'
alias obj='jf "{%**s}"'Then you can use them like this:
str 1
# "1"
arr 1 2 3
# [1,2,3]
obj one 1 two 2 three 3
# {"one":1,"two":2,"three":3}
obj 1 2 3 $(arr 4 $(str 5))
# {"1":2,"3":[4,"5"]}let json = match jf::format(["%q", "JSON Formatted"].map(Into::into)) {
Ok(value) => value,
Err(jf::Error::Jf(e)) => bail!("mytool: {e}"),
Err(jf::Error::Json(e)) => bail!("mytool: json: {e}"),
Err(jf::Error::Yaml(e)) => bail!("mytool: yaml: {e}"),
};