dot-properties
JavaScript parse()
and stringify()
for .properties
(text/x-java-properties
) files as defined in java.util.Properties.
To install:
npm install dot-properties
For usage examples, see below or take a look through the project's test suite.
API
parse(str: string | Line[] | Node[], path?: boolean | string): object
Parses an input string read from a .properties file into a JavaScript Object
If the second path
parameter is true, dots .
in keys will result in a multi-level object (use a string value to customise). If a parent level is directly assigned a value while it also has a child with an assigned value, the parent value will be assigned to its empty string ''
key. Repeated keys will take the last assigned value. Key order is not guaranteed, but is likely to match the order of the input lines.
parseLines(str: string, ast?: false): Line[]
Splits the input string into an array of logical lines; useful if you want to preserve order, comments and/or empty lines while processing. Used internally by parse()
.
Key-value pairs are [key, value]
arrays with string values. Escape sequences in keys and values are parsed. Empty lines are included as empty strings ''
, and comments as strings that start with #
or !
characters. Leading whitespace is not included.
parseLines(str: string, ast: true): Node[]
Splits the input string into an array of AST nodes; see the source for more details.
stringify(input: object, options?: StringifyOptions): string
Stringifies a hierarchical object or an array of lines or nodes to .properties
format
If input
is a hierarchical object, keys will consist of the path parts joined by .
characters. With array input, string values represent blank or comment lines and string arrays are [key, value]
pairs. Control characters and \
will be appropriately escaped. If the latin1
option is not set to false, all non-Latin-1 characters will also be \u
escaped. Non-empty string lines represent comments, and will have any existing #
or !
prefix replaced by the commentPrefix
.
Output styling is controlled by the second (optional) options
parameter; by default a spaced =
separates the key from the value, \n
is the newline separator, lines are folded at 80 characters (at most, splitting at nice places), with subsequent lines indented by four spaces, and comment lines are prefixed with a #
. ''
as a key value is considered the default, and set as the value of a key corresponding to its parent object's path:
const defaultOptions = {
commentPrefix: '# ',
defaultKey: '',
indent: ' ',
keySep: ' = ',
latin1: true,
lineWidth: 80,
newline: '\n',
pathSep: '.',
foldChars: '\f\t .'
}
Example
example.properties
# You are reading the ".properties" entry.
! The exclamation mark can also mark text as comments.
# The key characters =, and : should be written with a preceding
# backslash to ensure that they are properly loaded. However, there
# is no need to precede the value characters =, and : by a backslash.
website = https://en.wikipedia.org/
language = English
# The backslash below tells the application to continue reading
# the value onto the next line.
message = Welcome to \
Wikipedia!
# Add spaces to the key
key\ with\ spaces = This is the value that could be looked up with \
the key "key with spaces".
# Unicode
tab : \u0009
# If you want your property to include a backslash, it should be
# escaped by another backslash
path c:\\wiki\\templates
# However, some editors will handle this automatically
Source: Wikipedia
example.js
const fs = require('fs')
const { parse, parseLines, stringify } = require('dot-properties')
const src = fs.readFileSync('./example.properties', 'utf8')
const obj = parse(src)
const str = stringify(obj, { lineWidth: 60 })
console.log(str)
const lines = parseLines(src)
const str2 = stringify(lines.slice(8, 14), { lineWidth: 60 })
console.log(str2)