Is there a Chrome plugin that renders JSON files in Chrome? Currently Chrome just tries to download them, and that's kind of boring.
6 Answers
- In-browser viewer
- Expand and contract JSON items
- Format validation
- Doesn't require .json ending
Enable:
Chrome wrench button >> Tools >> Extensions >> "Allow access to file URLs"
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This is still the right answer as of Nov. 2015. Quick and painless. Nov 11, 2015 at 19:03
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October 2016 removed jsonview from chrome =( .. Where to install jsonview with chrome? exist only mozilla jsonview.com Nov 16, 2016 at 11:58
I got impatient waiting for a new Chrome API and ported JSONView just using simple regex matching.
http://github.com/jamiew/jsonview-chrome
This is a rough draft, but it works! You can install it using "Load unpacked extension" from the chrome://extensions -- working out some kinks but will package it as a real extension soon.
For further prettification checkout the "XML Tree" extension (SuperUser won't let me post 2 links yet)
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2Now this is a real Chrome extension and works great: chrome.google.com/extensions/detail/… Aug 17, 2010 at 9:42
Apparently, some time ago someone asked how to build such an extension on the Chromium-extensions Google group, and the answer was that it's not yet possible.
More recently, someone else asked the same question again - so, it looks like it won't take long for such an extension to appear, as soon as API support is implemented.
Meanwhile, if you're really bothered by this and you can install a local proxy (Fiddler2, for example), you could try to make it change the Content-Type header for all responses where it is "application/json" to "text/plain" - and do it only for Chrome page requests. This will trick Chrome into showing you a plain text view of the JSON data, instead of trying to download it. Be careful, though: this could break some web applications which expect the "application/json" content-type.
To implement this with Fiddler, just choose "Customize Rules" from Fiddler's "Rules" menu, and when the CustomRules.js file opens, add this variable to the beginning of the Handlers class:
class Handlers
{
// You have to add these two lines
public static RulesOption("Show JSON data as plain text in Chrome")
var m_JSON2Text: boolean = false;
And then add, at the end of the OnBeforeResponse method, just before the closing bracket:
if(m_JSON2Text) {
var isJson = oSession.oResponse["Content-Type"].indexOf("application/json") != -1;
var isChrome = oSession.oRequest["User-Agent"].indexOf("Chrome") != -1;
if(isJson && isChrome) {
oSession.oResponse["Content-Type"] = "text/plain; ";
}
}
// Next is the closing bracket. Add all lines preceding this comment
}
This will add an item named "Show JSON data as plain text in Chrome" to Fiddler's "Rules" menu, which you'll be able to turn on/off, triggering/disabling the required behaviour.
The overhead is having to keep Fiddler2 running while browsing. If that will or will not be noticeable depends, of course, on your hardware/software configuration.
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7
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Well, since configuring Fiddler is arguably a bit overkill for this single purpose, then yes, right now the only solution would be to change your browser. Note that the default behaviour will, in most browsers, remain the same - it's just that you'd be able to tweak them somehow to manage JSON files. Firefox does it with a number of different extensions (for example, JSONView and JSONovich). Opera makes it even simpler: just open "Preferences -> Advanced -> Downloads" and add a new "application/json" MIME type, choosing to open it "with Opera". Dec 14, 2009 at 22:08
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2Please have a look at the other answers: In the meantime, “JSONView” and “Pretty JSON” are available. I like JSONView better, but have a look at both.– scyAug 22, 2011 at 17:10
FYI there's now also a more polished extension, Pretty JSON: https://chrome.google.com/extensions/detail/ddngkjbldiejbheifcmnfmmfiniimbbg
To display JSON URLs that are served with a custom (vendor) MIME type, you may use JSONView 0.0.32 together with application/...+json|+xml as inline 0.0.2.
IE and Firefox are JSON capable but not Chrome.
I'm developping in Javascript and PHP and I MUST use JSON to read a PHP array from Javascript. There is no other way to get this working.
So, I'm waiting for Chrome being compatable.
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1Just because Chrome can't show JSON files, doesn't mean that it's not capable of working with them.– BobbyNov 11, 2010 at 11:07