Hello @kartik,
It's particularly useful if you're concerned for blocking the thread (likely).
const fs = require('fs');
const fileName = './file.json';
const file = require(fileName);
file.key = "new value";
fs.writeFile(fileName, JSON.stringify(file), function writeJSON(err) {
if (err) return console.log(err);
console.log(JSON.stringify(file));
console.log('writing to ' + fileName);
});
The caveat is that json is written to the file on one line and not prettified. ex:
{
"key": "value"
}
will be...
{"key": "value"}
To avoid this, simply add these two extra arguments to JSON.stringify
JSON.stringify(file, null, 2)
null - represents the replacer function. (in this case we don't want to alter the process)
2 - represents the spaces to indent.
Hope it helps!!
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