質問

I have JavaScript Object say:

var a = {b: Infinity, c: 10};

When I do

var b = JSON.stringify(a);

it returns the following

b = "{"b":null, "c":10}";

How is the JSON.stringify converts the object to strings?

I tried MDN Solution.

function censor(key, value) {
  if (value == Infinity) {
    return "Infinity";
  }
  return value;
}
var b = JSON.stringify(a, censor);

But in this case I have to return the string "Infinity" not Infinity. If I return Infinity it again converts Infinity to null.

How do I solve this problem.

役に立ちましたか?

解決

Like the other answers stated, Infintity is not part of the values JSON can store as value.

You can reverse the censor method on parsing the JSON:

var c = JSON.parse(
          b,
          function (key, value) {
            return value === "Infinity"  ? Infinity : value;
          }
        );

他のヒント

JSON doesn't have Infinity or NaN, see this question:

JSON left out Infinity and NaN; JSON status in ECMAScript?

Hence { b: Infinity, c: 10 } isn't valid JSON. If you need to encode infinity in JSON, you probably have to resort to objects:

{
    "b": { "is_infinity": true, "value": null },
    "c": { "is_infinity": false, "value": 10 }
}

This structure is generated by, given your above example does what you say it does,

function censor(key, value) {
  if (value == Infinity) {
    return JSON.stringify ( { is_infinity: true, value: null } );
  } else {
    return JSON.stringify ( { is_infinity: false, value: value } );
  }
}
var b = JSON.stringify(a, censor);
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