How to serialize DOM node to JSON even if there are circular references?

JavascriptJsonDomSerializationCircular Reference

Javascript Problem Overview


I want to serialize DOM node or even whole window to JSON.

For example:

 >> serialize(document)
    -> {
      "URL": "http://stackoverflow.com/posts/2303713",
      "body": {
        "aLink": "",
        "attributes": [
          "getNamedItem": "function getNamedItem() { [native code] }",
          ...
        ],
        ...
        "ownerDocument": "#" // recursive link here
      },
      ...
    }
 

JSON.stringify()

JSON.stringify(window) // TypeError: Converting circular structure to JSON

The problem is JSON does not support circular references by default.

var obj = {}
obj.me = obj
JSON.stringify(obj) // TypeError: Converting circular structure to JSON

window and DOM nodes have many of them. window === window.window as will as document.body.ownerDocument === document.

Also, JSON.stringify does not serialize functions, so this is not what I'm looking for.

dojox.json.ref

 `dojox.json.ref.toJson()` can easily serialize object with circular references:

    var obj = {}
    obj.me = obj
    dojox.json.ref.toJson(obj); // {"me":{"$ref":"#"}}

Good, isn't it?

 dojox.json.ref.toJson(window) // Error: Can't serialize DOM nodes

Well not good enough for me.

Why?

I'm trying to make DOM compatibility table for different browsers. For instance, Webkit supports placeholder attribute and Opera doesn't, IE 8 supports localStorage and IE 7 doesn't, and so on.

I don't want to make thousands of test-cases. I want to make generic way for test them all.

Update, June 2013

I made a prototype NV/dom-dom-dom.com.

Javascript Solutions


Solution 1 - Javascript

http://jsonml.org/ takes a shot at a grammar for converting XHTML DOM elements into JSON. An an example:

<ul>
    <li style="color:red">First Item</li>
    <li title="Some hover text." style="color:green">Second Item</li>
    <li><span class="code-example-third">Third</span> Item</li>
</ul>

becomes

["ul",    ["li", {"style": "color:red"}, "First Item"],
    ["li", {"title": "Some hover text.", "style": "color:green"}, "Second Item"],
    ["li", ["span", {"class": "code-example-third"}, "Third"], " Item" ]
]

Haven't used it yet, but thinking about using it for a project where I want to take any web page and re-template it using mustache.js.

Solution 2 - Javascript

You could potentially traverse the DOM and generate a pure JS object representation of it and then feed it to the DojoX serializer. But, you have to first decide how you're planning to map DOM elements, their attributes and the text nodes, without ambiguity, to JS objects. For example, how would you represent the following?

<parent attr1="val1">
  Some text
  <child attr2="val2"><grandchild/></child>
</parent>

Like this?

{
    tag: "parent",
    attributes: [
        {
            name: "attr1",
            value: "val1"
        }
    ],
    children: [
        "Some text",
        {
            tag: "child",
            attributes: [
                {
                    name: "attr2",
                    value: "val2"
                }
            ],
            children: [
                { tag: "grandchild" }
            ]
         }
     ]
 }

I think the a reason DojoX doesn't immediately support DOM serialization could exactly be this: The need to first pick a scheme for mapping DOM to JS objects. Is there a standard scheme that could be employed? Would your JS object simply mimic a DOM tree without any functions? I think you have to first define what your expectation is from "serializing DOM to JSON".

Solution 3 - Javascript

I found this and it worked great for me when I was trying to convert an XML string into JSON.

XMLObjectifier.xmlToJSON(XMLObjectifier.textToXML(xmlString));

Maybe it will help.

Solution 4 - Javascript

It looks like you have to write it on your own. JSON serialized data may also not be the perfect choice for your task (DOM compatibility table). You probably have to iterate the objects on your own, check types of the attributes and so on..

var functions = [];
var strings = [];
for( var key in window ) {
    if( typeof window[key] == 'string' ) {
        strings[strings.length] = key;
    } else if( typeof window[key] == 'function' ) {
        functions[functions.length] = key;
    } else if( ... ) { ... }
}
...

Attributions

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionNVIView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - JavascriptJosh DzielakView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - JavascriptAtes GoralView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - JavascriptMatthew TaylorView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - JavascriptFrunsiView Answer on Stackoverflow