skills/tools/diagram/json-data-visualizer/SKILL.md
Guide to JSON Crack for visualizing complex JSON data structures
npx skillsauth add wentorai/research-plugins json-data-visualizerInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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JSON Crack (formerly JSON Visio) is an open-source data visualization tool with over 43K stars on GitHub that transforms JSON, YAML, XML, TOML, and CSV data into interactive graph diagrams. Instead of reading raw nested data structures, researchers can instantly see the hierarchical relationships, nested objects, and array structures as a navigable node-link diagram rendered on an infinite canvas.
For academic researchers, JSON Crack is particularly valuable when working with complex API responses, configuration files, experimental metadata schemas, and nested data exports. Bioinformatics researchers dealing with deeply nested gene ontology JSON files, social scientists working with survey platform API responses, and computational researchers inspecting machine learning model configuration files all benefit from being able to see their data structures visually rather than scrolling through thousands of lines of text.
The tool is available as a hosted web application at jsoncrack.com, as a self-hosted Docker deployment for institutional use, and as an embeddable React component that can be integrated into custom research tools. It also provides an API for programmatic access, making it suitable for integration into data processing pipelines.
The fastest way to use JSON Crack is through the web interface. Paste or upload JSON data and the visualization renders immediately.
# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/AykutSarac/jsoncrack.com.git
cd jsoncrack.com
# Install dependencies
npm install
# Start development server
npm run dev
# Or build and serve for production
npm run build
npm start
# Run with Docker
docker run -d -p 8888:8080 \
--name json-crack \
--restart unless-stopped \
jsoncrack/jsoncrack
# Access at http://localhost:8888
version: "3.8"
services:
json-crack:
image: jsoncrack/jsoncrack
container_name: json-crack
ports:
- "8888:8080"
restart: unless-stopped
Researchers frequently work with complex nested JSON structures for experimental metadata. JSON Crack makes these immediately readable.
{
"experiment": {
"id": "EXP-2026-0142",
"title": "Effect of Temperature on Protein Folding Kinetics",
"principal_investigator": {
"name": "Dr. Jane Smith",
"orcid": "0000-0002-1234-5678",
"affiliation": "Department of Biochemistry"
},
"protocol": {
"version": "3.2",
"steps": [
{
"order": 1,
"name": "Sample Preparation",
"duration_minutes": 120,
"equipment": ["centrifuge", "spectrophotometer"],
"parameters": {
"temperature_celsius": 25,
"buffer_ph": 7.4,
"concentration_mm": 0.5
}
},
{
"order": 2,
"name": "Thermal Denaturation",
"duration_minutes": 180,
"temperature_range": {
"start": 25,
"end": 95,
"step": 1,
"unit": "celsius"
}
},
{
"order": 3,
"name": "Data Acquisition",
"instrument": "circular_dichroism_spectrometer",
"wavelength_range_nm": [190, 260]
}
]
},
"samples": [
{
"id": "S001",
"condition": "wild_type",
"replicates": 3,
"measurements": {
"tm_celsius": 68.2,
"delta_h_kcal": -45.3,
"r_squared": 0.997
}
}
]
}
}
When loaded into JSON Crack, this structure displays as an interactive tree diagram where each nested object becomes a card node, arrays show their elements as connected child nodes, and researchers can click to expand or collapse sections for focused exploration.
When working with research APIs (PubMed, CrossRef, OpenAlex, etc.), responses are often deeply nested. JSON Crack helps researchers understand the response schema before writing parsing code.
import requests
import json
# Fetch metadata from CrossRef API
response = requests.get(
"https://api.crossref.org/works/10.1038/nature12373"
)
data = response.json()
# Save for visualization in JSON Crack
with open("crossref_response.json", "w") as f:
json.dump(data, f, indent=2)
# Open crossref_response.json in JSON Crack to explore the schema
# This reveals the nested structure of author arrays, funding info,
# reference lists, and license metadata
JSON Crack provides a React component that can be embedded in custom research tools.
import { JsonCrackEmbed } from "jsoncrack-react";
import { useState } from "react";
function DataSchemaViewer({ experimentData }) {
const [jsonContent, setJsonContent] = useState(
JSON.stringify(experimentData, null, 2)
);
return (
<div style={{ width: "100%", height: "600px" }}>
<h3>Experiment Data Schema</h3>
<JsonCrackEmbed
json={jsonContent}
style={{ width: "100%", height: "100%" }}
/>
</div>
);
}
<iframe
src="https://jsoncrack.internal.lab/widget"
width="100%"
height="600"
style="border: 1px solid #e5e7eb; border-radius: 8px;"
></iframe>
JSON Crack handles multiple data serialization formats commonly used in research.
The primary format. Supports nested objects, arrays, primitives, and null values. JSON Schema validation is available to verify data conforms to expected structures.
Common in configuration files for research software, CI/CD pipelines, and computational workflow definitions (e.g., Snakemake, Nextflow configs).
pipeline:
name: rnaseq-analysis
steps:
- name: quality-control
tool: fastqc
input: raw_reads/*.fastq.gz
- name: trimming
tool: trimmomatic
parameters:
min_length: 36
quality_threshold: 20
- name: alignment
tool: star
genome_index: /ref/hg38
Tabular data from experiments and surveys can be visualized to understand column relationships and data types.
Used in Python project configuration (pyproject.toml), Rust cargo files, and various research tool configurations.
Use JSON Crack to generate visual documentation of your lab's data schemas. Export the visualization as an image for inclusion in lab manuals, onboarding documents, or data management plans.
When building research APIs with FastAPI or Flask, use JSON Crack to visualize and verify your API response structures during development.
Before processing large datasets, visualize a sample record in JSON Crack to verify the structure matches expectations. This is faster than writing validation code for initial inspection.
When data schemas evolve between experiment versions, visualize both versions side-by-side to identify structural differences and plan migration logic.
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