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The 'brace' npm package is a browser-based code editor that is a fork of the Ace editor. It provides a rich set of features for code editing, including syntax highlighting, code folding, and autocompletion. It is highly customizable and can be integrated into web applications to provide a powerful code editing experience.
Syntax Highlighting
This feature allows the editor to highlight syntax for various programming languages. In this example, the editor is set to use JavaScript mode and the Monokai theme.
const ace = require('brace');
require('brace/mode/javascript');
require('brace/theme/monokai');
const editor = ace.edit('editor');
editor.getSession().setMode('ace/mode/javascript');
editor.setTheme('ace/theme/monokai');
Code Folding
Code folding allows users to collapse and expand sections of code, making it easier to navigate large files. This example shows how to enable code folding in the editor.
const ace = require('brace');
require('brace/mode/javascript');
require('brace/theme/monokai');
const editor = ace.edit('editor');
editor.getSession().setMode('ace/mode/javascript');
editor.setTheme('ace/theme/monokai');
editor.getSession().setUseWrapMode(true);
Autocompletion
Autocompletion helps users write code faster by providing suggestions as they type. This example demonstrates how to enable basic autocompletion, snippets, and live autocompletion in the editor.
const ace = require('brace');
require('brace/ext/language_tools');
const editor = ace.edit('editor');
editor.setOptions({
enableBasicAutocompletion: true,
enableSnippets: true,
enableLiveAutocompletion: true
});
The 'monaco-editor' is the code editor that powers Visual Studio Code. It offers a similar set of features to 'brace', including syntax highlighting, code folding, and autocompletion. It is known for its performance and extensive language support.
The 'codemirror' package is another popular code editor for the web. It provides a wide range of features such as syntax highlighting, autocompletion, and a rich set of plugins. It is highly customizable and has a large community of users and contributors.
The 'ace-builds' package is the official distribution of the Ace editor. It offers the same core functionalities as 'brace' since 'brace' is a fork of Ace. It includes syntax highlighting, code folding, and autocompletion, and is widely used in various web applications.
browserify compatible version of the ace editor.
This badge shows which browsers support annotations, however the editor itself works in pretty much every browser.
npm install brace
var ace = require('brace');
require('brace/mode/javascript');
require('brace/theme/monokai');
var editor = ace.edit('javascript-editor');
editor.getSession().setMode('ace/mode/javascript');
editor.setTheme('ace/theme/monokai');
Include the above as an entry in your browserify build, add a <div id="javascript-editor"></div>
to your html page and
a JavaScript editor will appear.
This editor will show error/warning annotations if your browser supports WebWorkers created via a blob URL (see testling support badge on top).
Please consult the detailed example for more information.
The ace editor creates the WebWorker via a worker script url. This requires the worker scripts to reside on your server and forces you to host the ace editor on your server as well.
While that is ok in most cases, it prevents you from providing a fully working ace editor package.
With brace, you have two options:
If brace is unable to inline the web worker, it just falls back to provide the ace editor without annotation support. This means the editor is fully functional, but doesn't display errors/warnings on the left side.
As far as I understand, the original ace editor behaves in exactly the same way.
brace has an update script which automatically pulls down the ace builds and refactors them to provide the following:
setMode
and setTheme
use (just replace 'ace' with
'brace') as seen in the above exampleAll workers included with ace are supported, except php
and xquery
, mainly because I wasn't able to properly
stringify their code (any help with that is appreciated).
Yes, brace includes modular type definitions so you can do normal import statements and type safety checking with TypeScript. The example above becomes:
import * as ace from 'brace';
import 'brace/mode/javascript';
import 'brace/theme/monokai';
const editor = ace.edit('javascript-editor');
editor.getSession().setMode('ace/mode/javascript');
editor.setTheme('ace/theme/monokai');
brace exposes these type definitions in package.json
, so they are available when you do npm install brace
.
You do not need an additional install step or another tool to install these definitions.
These type definitions are kept up to date in the same way as the rest of brace. There is an update script which automatically pulls down the DefinitelyTyped definition and refactors it to be modular rather than global.
npm explore brace
npm test
FAQs
browserify compatible version of the ace editor.
The npm package brace receives a total of 180,447 weekly downloads. As such, brace popularity was classified as popular.
We found that brace demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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