ast-monkey-traverse
Utility library to traverse parsed HTML (AST's) or anything nested (plain objects within arrays within plain objects)
- Check out the parent library which does even more: ast-monkey
Table of Contents
Install
npm i ast-monkey-traverse
Then, consume either in CommonJS format (require
) or as an ES Module (import
):
const traverse = require("ast-monkey-traverse");
import traverse from "ast-monkey-traverse";
Here's what you'll get:
Type | Key in package.json | Path | Size |
---|
Main export - CommonJS version, transpiled to ES5, contains require and module.exports | main | dist/ast-monkey-traverse.cjs.js | 2 KB |
ES module build that Webpack/Rollup understands. Untranspiled ES6 code with import /export . | module | dist/ast-monkey-traverse.esm.js | 2 KB |
UMD build for browsers, transpiled, minified, containing iife 's and has all dependencies baked-in | browser | dist/ast-monkey-traverse.umd.js | 10 KB |
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Idea
Walk through every single element of an array or key of an object or every string in the given input, use familiar callback function interface (just like Array.forEach
or Array.map
).
API
traverse()
is an inner method meant to be used by other functions. It does the actual traversal of the AST tree (or whatever input you gave, from simplest string to most complex spaghetti of nested arrays and plain objects). This method function is used via a callback function, similarly to Array.forEach()
.
const traverse = require("ast-monkey-traverse");
var ast = [{ a: "a", b: "b" }];
ast = traverse(ast, function(key, val, innerObj) {
let current = val !== undefined ? val : key;
return current;
});
It's very important to return the value of the callback function (point marked #1
above) because otherwise whatever you return will be written over the current AST piece being iterated.
If you want to delete, return NaN
.
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innerObj in the callback
When you call traverse()
like this:
input = traverse(input, function (key, val, innerObj) {
...
})
you get three variables:
If traverse()
is currently traversing a plain object, going each key/value pair, key
will be the object's current key and val
will be the value.
If traverse()
is currently traversing an array, going through all elements, a key
will be the current element and val
will be null
.
innerObj object's key | Type | Description |
---|
{ | | |
depth | Integer number | Zero is root, topmost level. Every level deeper increments depth by 1 . |
path | String | The path to the current value. The path uses exactly the same notation as the popular object-path package. For example, a.1.b would be: input object's key a > value is array, take 1 st index (second element in a row, since indexes start from zero) > value is object, take it's key b . |
topmostKey | String | When you are very deep, this is the topmost parent's key. |
parent | Type of the parent of current element being traversed | A whole parent (array or a plain object) which contains the current element. Its purpose is to allow you to query the siblings of the current element. |
} | | |
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Contributing
-
If you want a new feature in this package or you would like us to change some of its functionality, raise an issue on this repo.
-
If you tried to use this library but it misbehaves, or you need advice setting it up, and its readme doesn't make sense, just document it and raise an issue on this repo.
-
If you would like to add or change some features, just fork it, hack away, and file a pull request. We'll do our best to merge it quickly. Prettier is enabled, so you don't need to worry about the code style.
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Licence
MIT License (MIT)
Copyright © 2018 Codsen Ltd, Roy Revelt