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/*
* Test the property list (2nd argument) of JSON.stringify().
*/
/*===
{"foo":1,"bar":2,"baz":4}
{"baz":4,"foo":1,"bar":2}
{"foo":1,"bar":2,"baz":4}
{"baz":4,"foo":1,"bar":2}
===*/
/* If the 2nd argument to stringify() is an array, it becomes the
* PropertyList of the serialization algorithm and affects the JO()
* algorithm concretely.
*
* The specification requires that serialization of properties will:
*
* (1) allow serialization of non-enumerable properties
* (2) will follow PropertyList order, not the object's enumeration
* order (order of properties in Object.keys())
* (3) block serializing the same property name multiple times
* (E5.1 Section 15.12.3, main algorithm, step 4.b.ii.5)
*
* E5.1 Section 15.12.3, main algorithm, step 4.b.ii.ii is tricky:
* it requires that array indexed properties are enumerated in
* ascending order. This is stricter than normal enumeration
* requirements and causes some compliance issues in the current
* implementation when a sparse array is used. There are separate
* tests for this case.
*
* Note that at least V8 does not block serialization of the same
* property name. There is a separate test for this, too.
*/
function stringifyPropertyListTest1() {
var obj = {
"foo": 1,
"bar": 2,
"quux": 3
};
Object.defineProperties(obj, {
baz: { value: 4, enumerable: false, configurable: true, writable: true }
});
// baz is non-enumerable
var txt = JSON.stringify(obj, [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ]);
print(txt);
// different order
var txt = JSON.stringify(obj, [ 'baz', 'foo', 'bar' ]);
print(txt);
}
function stringifyPropertyListTest2() {
// test that inherited properties are also correctly enumerated
// when using a PropertyList
var proto = {};
function F() {
// quux and baz are inherited
this.foo = 1;
this.bar = 2;
}
F.prototype = proto;
var obj;
Object.defineProperties(proto, {
quux: { value: 3, enumerable: true, writable: true, configurable: true },
baz: { value: 4, enumerable: false, writable: true, configurable: true },
});
obj = new F();
var txt = JSON.stringify(obj, [ 'foo', 'bar', 'baz' ]);
print(txt);
var txt = JSON.stringify(obj, [ 'baz', 'foo', 'bar' ]);
print(txt);
}
try {
stringifyPropertyListTest1();
stringifyPropertyListTest2();
} catch (e) {
print(e.name);
}
/*===
{"foo":1,"baz":4}
{"foo":1,"baz":4,"bar":2}
{"foo":1,"baz":4}
{"foo":1,"1.2":"val:1.2","2.2":"val:2.2","NaN":"val:NaN"}
===*/
/* Test invalid values in the property list: anything other than a number,
* a string, a Number object, or a String object is ignored.
*/
function stringifyPropertyListTest3() {
var obj = { foo: 1, bar: 2, quux: 3, baz: 4 };
// add some properties to ensure invalid PropertyList keys are not
// coerced incorrectly and look up one of these
obj['' + true] = 'val:true';
obj['' + false] = 'val:false';
obj['null'] = 'val:null';
obj['0'] = 'val:0';
obj['1'] = 'val:1';
// these will be legitimately accessed, numbers are coerced
obj['1.2'] = 'val:1.2';
obj['2.2'] = 'val:2.2';
obj['NaN'] = 'val:NaN';
// undefined will be skipped
print(JSON.stringify(obj, [ 'foo', undefined, 'baz' ]));
// null, true, false will be skipped
print(JSON.stringify(obj, [ 'foo', null, 'baz', true, false, 'bar' ]));
// function will be skipped, Date will be skipped, array and object
// will be skipped
print(JSON.stringify(obj, [ 'foo', function () {}, new Date(0), {}, [], 'baz' ]));
// null will be skipped
// ToString(1.2) = '1.2'; ToString(new Number(2.2)) = '2.2', ToString(0/0) = 'NaN'
print(JSON.stringify(obj, [ 'foo', null, 1.2, new Number(2.2), 0/0 ]));
}
try {
stringifyPropertyListTest3();
} catch (e) {
print(e.name);
}