Use
JSON.stringify
with a custom replacer. For example:// Demo: Circular reference
var o = {};
o.o = o;
// Note: cache should not be re-used by repeated calls to JSON.stringify.
var cache = [];
JSON.stringify(o, function(key, value) {
if (typeof value === 'object' && value !== null) {
if (cache.indexOf(value) !== -1) {
// Circular reference found, discard key
return;
}
// Store value in our collection
cache.push(value);
}
return value;
});
cache = null; // Enable garbage collection
The replacer in this example is not 100% correct (depending on your
definition of "duplicate"). In the following case, a value is discarded:var a = {b:1}
var o = {};
o.one = a;
o.two = a;
// one and two point to the same object, but two is discarded:
JSON.stringify(o, ...);
But the concept stands: Use a custom replacer, and keep track of the parsed object values.
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