bcx-expression-evaluator
Safely evaluate a Javascript like expression in given context.
In Buttonwood, we heavily use meta-data (JSON format) to deliver business logic from backend to front-end. We don't want to design a meta-data format too complex to maintain, this tool allows us to define some light logic in pure string, way more flexible than rigid meta-data, much safer and more maintainable than passing js function as string (we did that) from backend to front-end.
This tool was mainly extracted, modified and extended from the expression parser of aurelia-binding.
Install
npm install --save bcx-expression-evaluator
Document
function evaluate(expression, context, helper, opts)
expression
: the expression string to be evaluatedcontext
: the input model objecthelper
: optional helper objectopts
: optional hashmap, current only support rejectAssignment
and stringInterpolationMode
rejectAssignment
rejects assignment in expressionstringInterpolationMode
treats the whole expression like if it's in backticks `expression`
function evaluateStringInterpolation
is a short-cut to call evaluate with stringInterpolationMode option.
Usage (in es6 syntax)
import {evaluate, evaluateStringInterpolation} from 'bcx-expression-evaluator';
const context = {
a: 1,
b: 2,
c: {
one: 'one',
two: 'two'
},
avg: function() { return (this.a + this.b) / 2; }
};
evaluate('avg() > a ? c.one : c.two', context); // => 'one';
use some helper
const helper = {
limit: 5,
sum: (v1, v2) => v1 + v2
};
evaluate('sum(a, b) > limit', context, helper); // => false;
access context object itself with special $this
variable
evaluate('$this', context); // => the context object
evaluate('$this.a', context); // => 1
explicitly access helper object with special $parent
variable
(carried over from aurelia-binding, might change $parent to $helper in future releases.)
evaluate('a', {a:1}, {a:2}); // => 1
evaluate('$this.a', {a:1}, {a:2}); // => 1
evaluate('$parent.a', {a:1}, {a:2}); // => 2
support es6 string interpolation
evaluate('`${a+1}`', {a:1}); // => '2'
You can evaluate a string interpolation without backtick "`"
evaluate('${a+1}', {a:1}, null, {stringInterpolationMode: true}); // => '2'
evaluateStringInterpolation('${a+1}', {a:1}); // => '2'
You don't have to escape backtick in stringInterpolationMode
evaluate('`\\`${a+1}\\``', {a:1}); // => '`2`', beware you need double escape as we are writing expression in string quotes
evaluate('`${a+1}`', {a:1}, null, {stringInterpolationMode: true}); // => '`2`'
evaluateStringInterpolation('`${a+1}`', {a:1}); // => '`2`'
safe. It is not an eval in Javascript, doesn't have access to global javascript objects
evaluate('parseInt(a, 10)', {a:"7"}) // => undefined
// only have access to context and helper
evaluate('parseInt(a, 10)', {a:"7"}, {parseInt: parseInt}) // => 7
silent most of the time
evaluate('a.b', {}) // => undefined, no error throwed
evaluate('a.b || c', {c: 'lorem'}) // => 'lorem', no error throwed
you can use assignment to mutate context object (or even helper object)
let obj = {a: 1, b: 2};
evaluate('a = 3', obj); // obj is now {a: 3, b: 2}
evaluate('b > 3 ? (a = true) : (a = false)', obj); // obj is now {a: false, b: 2}
disable assignment if you don't need it
This doesn't eliminate side effect, it would not prevent any function you called in the expression to mutate something.
evaluate('a=1', {a:0}, null, {rejectAssignment: true}); // throws error
Difference from real Javascript expression
The expression looks like Javascript expression, but there are some difference.
wrong reference results undefined instead of error
let obj = {a: 1};
obj.b.a // => error
evaluate('b.a', obj); // => undefined
default result for +/- operators
undefined + 1 // => NaN
1 + undefined // => NaN
null + 1 // => 1
1 + null // => 1
undefined + undefined // => NaN
null + null // => 0
// in our expression, + and - ignores undefined/null value,
// if both left and right parts are (evaluated to) undefined/null, result default to 0
evaluate('undefined + 1'); // => 1
evaluate('1 + undefined'); // => 1
evaluate('null + 1'); // => 1
evaluate('1 + null'); // => 1
evaluate('undefined + undefined'); // => 0
evaluate('null + null'); // => 0
no function expression
// all would not work in expression
(function(){return 1})()
(() => 1)()
arr.sort((a, b) => a > b)
// but this would work
arr.sort(aHelperFunc)
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