Is there a cleaner way to get the JSON representation of a Javascript object than with the following kludge?
System.out.println(((ScriptableObject) scope).callMethod(
cx, (Scriptable) scope.get("JSON", scope),
"stringify", new Object[]{jsObject}));
Where jsObject is the ScriptableObject I want to stringify.
Note that Hannes has now addressed this in Rhino. So the usage simplifies to this:
import org.mozilla.javascript.NativeJSON;
// ...
Object json = NativeJSON.stringify(cx, scope, jsObject, null, null);
The org.mozilla.javascript.NativeJSON class should be public in the Rhino 1.7R4 release.
I was able to get this working within an Apache Ant target using the NativeJSON class.
importPackage(org.mozilla.javascript);
var context = Context.enter();
var json = '{}';
// The call to parse required a reviver function that should return the
// state of a key/value pair.
var reviver = function(key, value) { return value; };
var scope = context.initStandardObjects();
var object = NativeJSON.parse(context, scope, json, reviver);
// The call to stringify does not require the replacer or space parameters.
// The replacer is a function that takes a key/value pair and returns the
// new value or an array of keys from the input JSON to stringify. The space
// parameter is the indentation characters or length.
json = NativeJSON.stringify(context, scope, config, null, 4);
http://mozilla.github.io/rhino/javadoc/org/mozilla/javascript/NativeJSON.html
https://github.com/mozilla/rhino/blob/master/src/org/mozilla/javascript/NativeJSON.java