Talk:JSON streaming

Maintenance and rating of JavaScript articles
Concerning editing and maintaining JavaScript-related articles...

Collaboration...
If you are interested in collaborating on JavaScript articles or would like to see where you could help, stop by WikiProject JavaScript and feel free to add your name to the participants list. Both editors and programmers are welcome.

Where to list JavaScript articles
We've found over 300 JavaScript-related articles so far. If you come across any others, please add them to that list.

User scripts
The WikiProject is also taking on the organization of the Wikipedia community's user script support pages. If you are interested in helping to organize information on the user scripts (or are curious about what we are up to), let us know!

If you have need for a user script that does not yet exist, or you have a cool idea for a user script or gadget, you can post it at User scripts/Requests. And if you are a JavaScript programmer, that's a great place to find tasks if you are bored.

How to report JavaScript articles in need of attention
If you come across a JavaScript article desperately in need of editor attention, and it's beyond your ability to handle, you can add it to our list of JavaScript-related articles that need attention.

Rating JavaScript articles
At the top of the talk page of most every JavaScript-related article is a WikiProject JavaScript template where you can record the quality class and importance of the article. Doing so will help the community track the stage of completion and watch the highest priority articles more closely.

Thank you. The Transhumanist 01:10, 12 April 2017 (UTC)

Alphabet soup
It's confusing for new users to see the various terms "JSON lines" (AKA JSONL), "newline delimited JSON" (AKA NDJSON), and "line delimited JSON" (AKA LDJSON), which are essentially the same thing. Also consider the difference between the latter one (LDJSON) and JSON-LD (JSON for Linked Data). I think this article should mention each of these terms and point out that these are all roughly equivalent. Of course, it's not the place of this article to declare which is the "correct" name for this concept. However, just by mentioning these terms in the article, it would alleviate a lot of confusion. --Lance E Sloan (talk) 20:05, 9 August 2017 (UTC)