What is cardinal?
The cardinal npm package is a syntax highlighter for JavaScript code. It can be used to display JavaScript code with syntax highlighting in terminal applications. It uses the redeyed package to handle the actual syntax highlighting.
What are cardinal's main functionalities?
Syntax highlighting for JavaScript code
This feature allows you to pass JavaScript code as a string to the `highlight` function, which returns the code with terminal-compatible syntax highlighting.
const cardinal = require('cardinal');
const highlightedCode = cardinal.highlight('const x = 123;');
console.log(highlightedCode);
Syntax highlighting from a file
This feature allows you to read JavaScript code from a file and then use the `highlight` function to display it with syntax highlighting in the terminal.
const cardinal = require('cardinal');
const fs = require('fs');
fs.readFile('example.js', 'utf8', function(err, code) {
if (err) throw err;
const highlightedCode = cardinal.highlight(code);
console.log(highlightedCode);
});
Custom theme support
Cardinal allows you to specify a custom theme for syntax highlighting by passing a theme object as an option to the `highlight` function.
const cardinal = require('cardinal');
const customTheme = require('./myCustomTheme.json');
const highlightedCode = cardinal.highlight('const x = 123;', { theme: customTheme });
console.log(highlightedCode);
Other packages similar to cardinal
chalk
Chalk is a popular npm package for styling terminal strings. Unlike cardinal, which is focused on syntax highlighting, chalk provides a more general approach to styling strings with colors, background colors, and text styles. It does not parse code for syntax highlighting.
highlight.js
Highlight.js is a syntax highlighter for the web, but it can also be used in Node.js environments. It supports a wide range of languages and has many themes available. It is more versatile than cardinal as it is not limited to JavaScript and can be used in both browser and server contexts.
prismjs
Prism is another syntax highlighting library that works both in the browser and on the server. It is similar to highlight.js in terms of functionality and also supports a wide range of programming languages and comes with a variety of themes.
cardinal
car·di·nal (kärdn-l, kärdnl) - crested thick-billed North American finch having bright red plumage in the male.
Features
- highlights JavaScript code with ANSI colors to improve terminal output
- theming support, see custom color themes
- optionally print line numbers
- API and command line interface (
cdl
) .cardinalrc
config to customize settings- supports UNIX pipes
Table of Contents generated with DocToc
Installation
As library
npm install cardinal
As Commandline Tool
[sudo] npm install -g cardinal
Note:
When installed globally, cardinal exposes itself as the cdl
command.
Commandline
Highlight a file
cdl <file.js> [options]
options:
--nonum
: turns off line number printing (relevant if it is turned on inside ~/.cardinalrc
As part of a UNIX pipe
cat file.js | grep console | cdl
Note:
Not all code lines may be parsable JavaScript. In these cases the line is printed to the terminal without
highlighting it.
Theme
The default theme will be used for highlighting.
To use a different theme, include a .cardinalrc
file in your HOME
directory.
This is a JSON file of the following form:
{
"theme": "hide-semicolons",
"linenos": true|false
}
theme
can be the name of any of the built-in themes or the
full path to a custom theme anywhere on your computer.- linenos toggles line number printing
API
highlight(code[, opts])
- returns the highlighted version of the passed code ({String}) or throws an error if it was not able to parse it
- opts (see below)
highlightFileSync(fullPath[, opts])
- returns the highlighted version of the file whose fullPath ({String}) was passed or throws an error if it was not able
to parse it
- opts (see below)
highlightFile(fullPath[, opts], callback)
- calls back with the highlighted version of the file whose fullPath ({String}) was passed or with an error if it was not able
to parse it
- opts (see below)
callback
({Function}) has the following signature: function (err, highlighted) { .. }
opts
opts is an {Object} with the following properties:
theme
{Object} is used to optionally override the theme used to highlightlinenos
{Boolean} if true
line numbers are included in the highlighted codefirstline
{Integer} sets line number of the first line when line numbers are printedjson
{Boolean} if true
highlights JSON in addition to JavaScript (true
by default if file extension is .json
)