Vite + TypeScript PWA that mirrors the Android app's core features: - Pre-processed shelter data (build-time UTM33N→WGS84 conversion) - Leaflet map with shelter markers, user location, and offline tiles - Canvas compass arrow (ported from DirectionArrowView.kt) - IndexedDB shelter cache with 7-day staleness check - Service worker with CacheFirst tiles and precached app shell - i18n for en, nb, nn (ported from Android strings.xml) - iOS/Android compass handling with low-pass filter - Respects user map interaction (no auto-snap on pan/zoom) - Build revision cache-breaker for reliable SW updates Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com> |
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| .. | ||
| .github | ||
| benchmark | ||
| example | ||
| test | ||
| .eslintrc.yml | ||
| .travis.yml | ||
| index.d.ts | ||
| index.js | ||
| LICENSE | ||
| package.json | ||
| README.md | ||
fast-json-stable-stringify
Deterministic JSON.stringify() - a faster version of @substack's json-stable-strigify without jsonify.
You can also pass in a custom comparison function.
example
var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify');
var obj = { c: 8, b: [{z:6,y:5,x:4},7], a: 3 };
console.log(stringify(obj));
output:
{"a":3,"b":[{"x":4,"y":5,"z":6},7],"c":8}
methods
var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify')
var str = stringify(obj, opts)
Return a deterministic stringified string str from the object obj.
options
cmp
If opts is given, you can supply an opts.cmp to have a custom comparison
function for object keys. Your function opts.cmp is called with these
parameters:
opts.cmp({ key: akey, value: avalue }, { key: bkey, value: bvalue })
For example, to sort on the object key names in reverse order you could write:
var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify');
var obj = { c: 8, b: [{z:6,y:5,x:4},7], a: 3 };
var s = stringify(obj, function (a, b) {
return a.key < b.key ? 1 : -1;
});
console.log(s);
which results in the output string:
{"c":8,"b":[{"z":6,"y":5,"x":4},7],"a":3}
Or if you wanted to sort on the object values in reverse order, you could write:
var stringify = require('fast-json-stable-stringify');
var obj = { d: 6, c: 5, b: [{z:3,y:2,x:1},9], a: 10 };
var s = stringify(obj, function (a, b) {
return a.value < b.value ? 1 : -1;
});
console.log(s);
which outputs:
{"d":6,"c":5,"b":[{"z":3,"y":2,"x":1},9],"a":10}
cycles
Pass true in opts.cycles to stringify circular property as __cycle__ - the result will not be a valid JSON string in this case.
TypeError will be thrown in case of circular object without this option.
install
With npm do:
npm install fast-json-stable-stringify
benchmark
To run benchmark (requires Node.js 6+):
node benchmark
Results:
fast-json-stable-stringify x 17,189 ops/sec ±1.43% (83 runs sampled)
json-stable-stringify x 13,634 ops/sec ±1.39% (85 runs sampled)
fast-stable-stringify x 20,212 ops/sec ±1.20% (84 runs sampled)
faster-stable-stringify x 15,549 ops/sec ±1.12% (84 runs sampled)
The fastest is fast-stable-stringify
Enterprise support
fast-json-stable-stringify package is a part of Tidelift enterprise subscription - it provides a centralised commercial support to open-source software users, in addition to the support provided by software maintainers.
Security contact
To report a security vulnerability, please use the Tidelift security contact. Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure. Please do NOT report security vulnerability via GitHub issues.