### What does this PR do?
This PR adds `Bun.YAML.stringify`. The stringifier will double quote
strings only when necessary (looks for keywords, numbers, or containing
non-printable or escaped characters). Anchors and aliases are detected
by object equality, and anchor name is chosen from property name, array
item, or the root collection.
```js
import { YAML } from "bun"
YAML.stringify(null) // null
YAML.stringify("hello YAML"); // "hello YAML"
YAML.stringify("123.456"); // "\"123.456\""
// anchors and aliases
const userInfo = { name: "bun" };
const obj = { user1: { userInfo }, user2: { userInfo } };
YAML.stringify(obj, null, 2);
// # output
// user1:
// userInfo:
// &userInfo
// name: bun
// user2:
// userInfo:
// *userInfo
// will handle cycles
const obj = {};
obj.cycle = obj;
YAML.stringify(obj, null, 2);
// # output
// &root
// cycle:
// *root
// default no space
const obj = { one: { two: "three" } };
YAML.stringify(obj);
// # output
// {one: {two: three}}
```
### How did you verify your code works?
Added tests for basic use and edgecases
<!-- This is an auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai
-->
## Summary by CodeRabbit
- New Features
- Added YAML.stringify to the YAML API, producing YAML from JavaScript
values with quoting, anchors, and indentation support.
- Improvements
- YAML.parse now accepts a wider range of inputs, including Buffer,
ArrayBuffer, TypedArrays, DataView, Blob/File, and SharedArrayBuffer,
with better error propagation and stack protection.
- Tests
- Extensive new tests for YAML.parse and YAML.stringify across data
types, edge cases, anchors/aliases, deep nesting, and round-trip
scenarios.
- Chores
- Added a YAML stringify benchmark script covering multiple libraries
and data shapes.
<!-- end of auto-generated comment: release notes by coderabbit.ai -->
---------
Co-authored-by: Claude Bot <claude-bot@bun.sh>
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
Co-authored-by: autofix-ci[bot] <114827586+autofix-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
### What does this PR do?
<!-- **Please explain what your changes do**, example: -->
<!--
This adds a new flag --bail to bun test. When set, it will stop running
tests after the first failure. This is useful for CI environments where
you want to fail fast.
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### How did you verify your code works?
ran fuzzy-wuzzy.test.ts
<!-- **For code changes, please include automated tests**. Feel free to
uncomment the line below -->
<!-- I wrote automated tests -->
<!-- If JavaScript/TypeScript modules or builtins changed:
- [ ] I included a test for the new code, or existing tests cover it
- [ ] I ran my tests locally and they pass (`bun-debug test
test-file-name.test`)
-->
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- [ ] I included a test for the new code, or an existing test covers it
- [ ] JSValue used outside of the stack is either wrapped in a
JSC.Strong or is JSValueProtect'ed
- [ ] I wrote TypeScript/JavaScript tests and they pass locally
(`bun-debug test test-file-name.test`)
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exposed class:
- [ ] I added TypeScript types for the new methods, getters, or setters
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- [ ] I made sure that specific versions of dependencies are used
instead of ranged or tagged versions
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- [ ] I added a test that require() the module
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