
Research
Security News
Lazarus Strikes npm Again with New Wave of Malicious Packages
The Socket Research Team has discovered six new malicious npm packages linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, designed to steal credentials and deploy backdoors.
format-message-interpret
Advanced tools
Convert format-message-parse ast to a function
Turns a compact format-message ast:
[ "You have ", [ "numBananas", "plural", 0, {
"=0": [ "no bananas" ],
"one": [ "a banana" ],
"other": [ [ '#' ], " bananas" ]
} ], " for sale." ]
into a function:
format({ numBananas:0 })
//-> "You have no bananas for sale."
npm install format-message-interpret --save
import parse from 'format-message-parse'
import interpret from 'format-message-interpret'
interpret('en', parse('Hello, {name}!'))({ name: 'Jane' })
interpret(locales: string | string[], ast: AST, types?: Types)
Generate a function from an ast
, using the formatting rules of the locales
that accepts an arguments object, and returns a string. You can optionally pass custom types
. Any non-standard type found in ast
without a corresponding formatter in types
will be treated as a simple string type.
type Types = {
[type: string]: (placeholder: string[], locales: string | string[]) =>
(value: any, args: Object) => string
}
types
is an object with each key being the name of the type as it appears in the message pattern. Each value is a function that takes the locales
, and the node
from the ast (like [ 'a', 'mytype', 'style' ]
), and it returns a function that will be called with the specific value
, and the complete arguments object. If the custom type was defined with sub-messages, those will already be converted to functions meant to be called with args
.
interpret.toParts(locales: string | string[], ast: AST, types?: Types)
Like, interpret
, interpretToParts
will generate a function accepting the message arguments. However, it will return an array of message parts, instead of a string. This is intended to help generate rich messages.
interpret.toParts('en', parse('a {b} c'))({ b: 1 }) // [ 'a ', 1, ' c' ]
interpret.toParts('en', parse('Click {a, element, children {here}}'), {
element: (locales, [ id, type, props ]) =>
(fn, args) => fn(props.children(args))
})({ a: children => <a>{children}</a> })
// [ 'Click ', <a>here</a> ]
This software is free to use under the MIT license. See the LICENSE-MIT file for license text and copyright information.
FAQs
Convert format-message-parse ast to a function
The npm package format-message-interpret receives a total of 20,102 weekly downloads. As such, format-message-interpret popularity was classified as popular.
We found that format-message-interpret demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Research
Security News
The Socket Research Team has discovered six new malicious npm packages linked to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, designed to steal credentials and deploy backdoors.
Security News
Socket CEO Feross Aboukhadijeh discusses the open web, open source security, and how Socket tackles software supply chain attacks on The Pair Program podcast.
Security News
Opengrep continues building momentum with the alpha release of its Playground tool, demonstrating the project's rapid evolution just two months after its initial launch.