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A Collection of What's Next for Awesome JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) for Structured (Meta) Data in Text - JSON5, HJSON, HanSON, TJSON, SON, CSON, USON, JSONX/JSON11 & Many More

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JSON5 • HJSON • HanSON • SON • TJSON • CSON • USON • JSONX • JSON11 • JSON XI • JSONII • JSON Lines • NDJSON • HOCON • HCL • UCL

Awesome JSON - What's Next?

A Collection of What's Next for Awesome JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) for structured (meta) data in text.

Contributions welcome. Anything missing? Send in a pull request. Thanks.

What's Missing in JSON?

  1. Comments, Comments, Comments
  2. Unquoted Keys
  3. Multi-Line Strings
    • a) Folded -- Folds Newlines
    • b) Unfolded
  4. Trailing Commas in Arrays and Objects

More:

  • Date/DateTime/Timestamp Type
  • Optional Commas
  • Optional Unquoted String Values
  • "Raw" String (e.g. '' instead of "")
    • No need to escape \ or " etc. To escape ' use ''' e.g. ''''Henry's Themes'''
  • More Data Types (set, map, symbol, etc.)
  • And much more

Discussion

Fixing JSON - Comments, Please!

We can easily agree on what’s wrong with JSON, and I can't help wondering if it'd be worth fixing it.

-- Tim Bray (Fixing JSON)

XML already does everything JSON does! And there's no way to differentiate between nodes and attributes! And there are no namespaces! And no schemas! What's the point of JSON?

-- Anonymous

We need to fix engineers that try to 'fix JSON', absolutely nothing is broken with JSON.

-- Anonymous

  • Fixing JSON by Tim Bray, Aug 2016
    • Major Irritant: Commas • Irritant: Timestamps • Major irritant: Schemas
  • The Fixing-JSON Conversation by Tim Bray, Aug 2016
    • Just use X • Comments, please please comments! • You shouldn't want to hand-edit JSON • You'll lose JavaScript compatibility! • Unquoted field names, please! • Is it too late?
  • Fixing JSON Comments @ Hacker News, Aug 2016

What's Next?

JSON5HJSONHanSONSONJSONXCSONUSON

JSON5

Modern JSON - JSON for the ES5 Era

web: json5.org, github: json5

JSON for "Humans" (not Machines). Adds:

  • Comments- Allow both inline (single-line) and block (multi-line) comments are allowed (like ES5)
  • Keys can be unquoted if they're valid identifiers e.g. a-z0-9 (like ES5)
  • Single and double quoted strings (like ES5)
  • Allows multi-line string with backslash (like ES5)
  • Allow trailing commas for arrays and objects.
  • And some more.
// This file is written in JSON5 syntax, naturally, but npm needs a regular
// JSON file, so compile via `npm run build`. Be sure to keep both in sync!

{
    name: 'json5',
    version: '0.5.0',
    description: 'JSON for the ES5 era.',
    keywords: ['json', 'es5'],
    author: 'Aseem Kishore <aseem.kishore@gmail.com>',
    contributors: [
        // TODO: Should we remove this section in favor of GitHub's list?
        // https://github.com/json5/json5/contributors
        'Max Nanasy <max.nanasy@gmail.com>',
        'Andrew Eisenberg <andrew@eisenberg.as>',
        'Jordan Tucker <jordanbtucker@gmail.com>',
    ],
    main: 'lib/json5.js',
    bin: 'lib/cli.js',
    files: ["lib/"],
    dependencies: {},
    devDependencies: {
        gulp: "^3.9.1",
        'gulp-jshint': "^2.0.0",
        jshint: "^2.9.1",
        'jshint-stylish': "^2.1.0",
        mocha: "^2.4.5"
    },
    scripts: {
        build: 'node ./lib/cli.js -c package.json5',
        test: 'mocha --ui exports --reporter spec',
            // TODO: Would it be better to define these in a mocha.opts file?
    },
    homepage: 'http://json5.org/',
    license: 'MIT',
    repository: {
        type: 'git',
        url: 'https://github.com/json5/json5',
    },
}

HJSON

A "Human" User Interface for JSON

web: hjson.org, github: hjson

  • Commas Optional
  • Add comments, hash-style (#), line-style (//) and block-style (/* */)
  • Allow Keys without quotes
  • Allow Strings without quotes
  • Allow Multi-line strings Python-style e.g. ''' text '''
{
  // use #, // or /**/ comments,
  // omit quotes for keys
  key: 1
  // omit quotes for strings
  contains: everything on this line
  // omit commas at the end of a line
  cool: {
    foo: 1
    bar: 2
  }
  // allow trailing commas
  list: [
    1,
    2,
  ]
  // and use multiline strings
  realist:
    '''
    My half empty glass,
    I will fill your empty half.
    Now you are half full.
    '''
}

HanSON

JSON for Humans

github: timjansen/hanson

Adds:

  • HanSON is JSON with comments, multi-line strings and unquoted property names.
  • Comments use JavaScript syntax (//, /**/).
  • Supports backticks as quotes (``) for multi-line strings.
  • You can use either double-quotes ("") or single-quotes ('') for single-line strings.
  • Property names do not require quotes if they are valid JavaScript identifiers.
  • Commas after the last list element or property will be ignored.
  • Every JSON string is valid HanSON.
  • HanSON can easily be converted to real JSON.
{
  listName: "Sesame Street Monsters", // note that listName needs no quotes
  content: [
    {
      name: "Cookie Monster",
      /* Note the template quotes and unescaped regular quotes in the next string */
      background: `Cookie Monster used to be a
monster that ate everything, especially cookies.
These days he is forced to eat "healthy" food.`
    }, {
      // You can single-quote strings too:
      name: 'Herry Monster',
      background: `Herry Monster is a furry blue monster with a purple nose.
He's mostly retired today.`
    },    // don't worry, the trailing comma will be ignored
   ]
}

SON

Simple Object Notation

github: aleksandergurin/simple-object-notation

Adds:

  • comments starts with # sign and ends with newline (\n)
  • comma after a key-value pair is optional
  • comma after an array element is optional
{
  # Personal information
    
  "name": "Alexander Grothendieck"
  "fields": "mathematics"
  "main_topics": [
    "Etale cohomology"
    "Motives"
    "Topos theory"
    "Schemes"
  ]
}

JSONX

JSON with Extensions (JSONX) or JSON v1.1 (a.k.a. JSON11 or JSON XI or JSON II) - JSON Evolved for Humans - Easy-to-Write, Easy-to-Read

github: json-next

JSON v1.1 includes all JSON extensions from HanSON (JSON for Humans):

  • quotes for strings are optional if they follow JavaScript identifier rules.
  • you can alternatively use backticks, as in ES6's template string literal, as quotes for strings. A backtick-quoted string may span several lines and you are not required to escape regular quote characters, only backticks. Backslashes still need to be escaped, and all other backslash-escape sequences work like in regular JSON.
  • for single-line strings, single quotes ('') are supported in addition to double quotes ("")
  • you can use JavaScript comments, both single line (//) and multi-line comments (/* */), in all places where JSON allows whitespace.
  • Commas after the last list element or object property will be ignored.

Plus all JSON extensions from SON (Simple Object Notation):

  • comments starts with # sign and ends with newline (\n)
  • comma after an object key-value pair is optional
  • comma after an array item is optional

Example:

{
  #  use shell-like comments

  listName: "Sesame Street Monsters"   # note: comments after key-value pairs are optional  
  content: [
    {
      name: "Cookie Monster"
      // note: the template quotes and unescaped regular quotes in the next string
      background: `Cookie Monster used to be a
monster that ate everything, especially cookies.
These days he is forced to eat "healthy" food.`
    }, {
      // You can single-quote strings too:
      name: 'Herry Monster',
      background: `Herry Monster is a furry blue monster with a purple nose.
He's mostly retired today.`
    },    /* don't worry, the trailing comma will be ignored  */
   ]
}

CSON (I)

Cursive Script Object Notation (CSON). A strict superset of JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) that can be written by hand (hence the name) and translated to a canonical JSON

github: lifthrasiir/cson - designed by Kang Seonghoon

CSON:

# CSON data example
hello =
  |world
  |  ...and goodbye
the = ['answer', 'is'
       42]

same as:

{
  "hello": "world\n  ...and goodbye",
  "the": ["answer", "is",  
          42]
}

CSON (II)

CoffeeScript-Object-Notation. Same as JSON but for CoffeeScript objects

github: bevry/cson

CSON:

# Comments!!!

# An Array with no commas!
greatDocumentaries: [
	'earthlings.com'
	'forksoverknives.com'
	'cowspiracy.com'
]

# An Object without braces!
importantFacts:
	# Multi-Line Strings! Without Quote Escaping!
	emissions: '''
		Livestock and their byproducts account for at least 32,000 million tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) per year, or 51% of all worldwide greenhouse gas emissions.
		Goodland, R Anhang, J. “Livestock and Climate Change: What if the key actors in climate change were pigs, chickens and cows?”
		WorldWatch, November/December 2009. Worldwatch Institute, Washington, DC, USA. Pp. 10–19.
		http://www.worldwatch.org/node/6294
		'''

	landuse: '''
		Livestock covers 45% of the earth’s total land.
		Thornton, Phillip, Mario Herrero, and Polly Ericksen. “Livestock and Climate Change.” Livestock Exchange, no. 3 (2011).
		https://cgspace.cgiar.org/bitstream/handle/10568/10601/IssueBrief3.pdf
		'''

	burger: '''
		One hamburger requires 660 gallons of water to produce – the equivalent of 2 months’ worth of showers.
		Catanese, Christina. “Virtual Water, Real Impacts.” Greenversations: Official Blog of the U.S. EPA. 2012.
		http://blog.epa.gov/healthywaters/2012/03/virtual-water-real-impacts-world-water-day-2012/
		“50 Ways to Save Your River.” Friends of the River.
		http://www.friendsoftheriver.org/site/PageServer?pagename=50ways
		'''

	milk: '''
		1,000 gallons of water are required to produce 1 gallon of milk.
		“Water trivia facts.” United States Environmental Protection Agency.
		http://water.epa.gov/learn/kids/drinkingwater/water_trivia_facts.cfm#_edn11
		'''

	more: 'http://cowspiracy.com/facts'

same as:

{
  "greatDocumentaries": [
    "earthlings.com",
    "forksoverknives.com",
    "cowspiracy.com"
  ],
  "importantFacts": {
    "emissions": "Livestock and their byproducts account for at least 32,000 million tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) per year, or 51% of all worldwide greenhouse gas emissions.\nGoodland, R Anhang, J. “Livestock and Climate Change: What if the key actors in climate change were pigs, chickens and cows?”\nWorldWatch, November/December 2009. Worldwatch Institute, Washington, DC, USA. Pp. 10–19.\nhttp://www.worldwatch.org/node/6294",
    "landuse": "Livestock covers 45% of the earth’s total land.\nThornton, Phillip, Mario Herrero, and Polly Ericksen. “Livestock and Climate Change.” Livestock Exchange, no. 3 (2011).\nhttps://cgspace.cgiar.org/bitstream/handle/10568/10601/IssueBrief3.pdf",
    "burger": "One hamburger requires 660 gallons of water to produce – the equivalent of 2 months’ worth of showers.\nCatanese, Christina. “Virtual Water, Real Impacts.” Greenversations: Official Blog of the U.S. EPA. 2012.\nhttp://blog.epa.gov/healthywaters/2012/03/virtual-water-real-impacts-world-water-day-2012/\n“50 Ways to Save Your River.” Friends of the River.\nhttp://www.friendsoftheriver.org/site/PageServer?pagename=50ways",
    "milk": "1,000 gallons of water are required to produce 1 gallon of milk.\n“Water trivia facts.” United States Environmental Protection Agency.\nhttp://water.epa.gov/learn/kids/drinkingwater/water_trivia_facts.cfm#_edn11",
    "more": "http://cowspiracy.com/facts"
  }
}

USON

μson - A compact human-readable data serialization format specially designed for shell

github: burningtree/uson

Principles:

  • Superset of JSON (every JSON is valid μson).
  • Whitespace is not significant.
  • String quoting " is optional.
  • In Array or Object, comma , can be replaced by whitespace .
  • Assignation with colon : can be repeated to create nested objects.
  • You can use own types, casting is done by ! character.

USON:

number:12.05 text:Banana quotedText:"John Devilseed" empty:null good:true

same as:

{
  "number": 12.05,
  "text": "Banana",
  "quotedText": "John Devilseed",
  "empty": null,
  "good": true
}

USON:

simple:[1 2 3] texts:[Malta Budapest "New York"] objects:[{id:1}]

same as:

{
  "simple": [
    1,
    2,
    3
  ],
  "texts": [
    "Malta",
    "Budapest",
    "New York"
  ],
  "objects": [
    {
      "id": 1
    }
  ]
}

JSON with (Rich) Types

TJSON

Tagged JSON with Rich Type Annotations

web: tjson.org, github: tjson

A tagging scheme/microformat for enriching the types stored in self-describing, schema-free JSON documents.

Why? Enables "content-aware hashing" where different encodings of the same data (including both TJSON and binary formats like Protocol Buffers, MessagePack, BSON, etc) share the same content hash and therefore the same cryptographic signature.

TJSON supports the following data types:

  • Objects (O): Name/value dictionaries. The names of objects in TJSON carry a postfix "tag" which acts as a type annotation for the associated value.
  • Arrays (A): Lists of values: identical to JSON, but typed by their containing objects. Unlike JSON, arrays cannot be used as a top-level expression: only objects are allowed.
  • Sets (S): Lists of unique values: similar to an array, but repeated elements are disallowed.
  • Strings (s): TJSON strings are Unicode and always serialized as UTF-8. When used as the name of a member of an object, they carry a mandatory "tag" which functions as a self-describing type annotation which provides a type signature for the associated value.
  • Binary Data (d, d16, d32, d64): First-class support for 8-bit clean binary data, encoded in a variety of formats including hexadecimal (a.k.a. base16), base32, and base64url.
  • Numbers:
    • Integers (i,u): TJSON supports the full ranges of both signed and unsigned 64-bit integers by serializing them as strings.
    • Floating points (f): Floating point numbers in TJSON are identical to JSON, but can always be disambiguated from integers.
  • Timestamps (t): TJSON has a first-class type for representing date/time timestamp values, serialized as a subset of RFC 3339 (an ISO 8601-alike).
  • Boolean Values (b): TJSON supports the true and false values from JSON (null is expressly disallowed).

Examples:

{
  "array-example:A<O>": [
    {
      "string-example:s": "Hello, world!",
      "binary-data-example:d": "QklOQVJZ",
      "float-example:f": 0.42,
      "int-example:i": "42",
      "timestamp-example:t": "2020-11-06T22:27:34Z",
      "boolean-example:b": true
    }
  ],
  "set-example:S<i>": [1, 2, 3]
}

JSON is the New CSV - JSON Formats for Line-Oriented Tables / Records

One Line, One Data Record

JSON LinesNDJSON

JSON Lines

web: jsonlines.org

One Line, One Record - Newline (nl or \n) Separated

["Name", "Session", "Score", "Completed"]
["Gilbert", "2013", 24, true]
["Alexa", "2013", 29, true]
["May", "2012B", 14, false]
["Deloise", "2012A", 19, true] 

Pros:

  • Supports JSON Datatypes (Numbers, Bool, Null, etc.)

or nested data records e.g.

{"name": "Gilbert", "wins": [["straight", "7♣"], ["one pair", "10♥"]]}
{"name": "Alexa", "wins": [["two pair", "4♠"], ["two pair", "9♠"]]}
{"name": "May", "wins": []}
{"name": "Deloise", "wins": [["three of a kind", "5♣"]]}

NDJSON

Newline Delmited JSON

web: ndjson.org, github: ndjson

  1. Line Separator is '\n'
  2. Each Line is a valid JSON Value
{"some":"thing"}
{"foo":17,"bar":false,"quux":true}
{"may":{"include":"nested","objects":["and","arrays"]}}

(Source: specs.okfnlabs.org/ndjson)

More Formats

: = {} []

HOCON

Human-Optimized Config Object Notation

github: typesafehub/config/HOCON

HCL

HashiCorp Configuration Language

github: hashicorp/hcl

UCL

Universal Configuration Language

github: vstakhov/libucl

AXON

AXON is eXtended Object Notation

web: intellimath.bitbucket.io/axon

Objective Markup Notation - {mark}

Objective Markup Notation, abbreviated as Mark or {mark} - a unified notation for both object and markup data

web: mark.js.org, github: henry-luo/mark

And More

See Format Extensions, Supersets and Related Formats in Awesome JSON (@burningtree)

Articles

Meta

License

The awesome list is dedicated to the public domain. Use it as you please with no restrictions whatsoever.

Questions? Comments?

Post them to the wwwmake forum. Thanks!

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