jsxbin
Convert jsx ExtendScript files into jsxbin files using ExtendScript Toolkit (ESTK)
Example
const jsxbin = require( 'jsxbin' )
jsxbin( 'path/to/script.js', 'output/script.jsxbin' )
.then( outputfiles => {
console.log( 'Finished!' )
})
.catch( err => {
console.error( err )
})
(You must have ExtendScript Toolkit installed for this package to work.)
Methods
jsxbin( inputPaths, [outputPath] )
inputPaths
can be:
- String with path to jsx file.
script.jsx
- String with glob pattern that matches jsx/js files.
*.jsx
- Array of any of the above
outputPath
, optional, can be:
- String path to converted file.
path/to/script.jsxbin
- Should only be used when passing only one file as
inputPaths
- String path to converted file directory.
path/to/output
- Array of string paths of names for all converted files
- Should only be used when passing an array to
inputPaths
. Input and output arrays must be the same length.
- If not given, the files will be created in the same directory as the input file(s)
jsxbin
returns a promise with an array of file paths to the converted files
Examples
jsxbin( 'script.jsx', 'script.jsxbin' )
jsxbin( 'script.jsx' )
jsxbin([ 'script1.jsx', 'script2.jsx' ], 'output/' )
jsxbin( 'src/*.jsx', 'output' )
jsxbin( 'src/*jsx' )
gulp.task( 'jsxbin', () => {
return jsxbin( 'src/index.js', 'output/script.jsxbin' )
})
From the Command Line
This package also ships with a jsxbin
command.
jsxbin
usage: jsxbin -i file1.jsx, file2.jsx.. -o outputdir
usage: jsxbin -i file1.jsx -o outputname.jsxbin
Converts Extendscript .jsx files into jsxbin files using ExtendScript Toolkit
Options
-i, --input file(s) The file or files to convert
-o, --output file|folder The file or folder where the converted file will be placed
-v, --verbose Show more info while running
--debug Show even more info while running
-h, --help Show help
Install
with npm do:
npm install jsxbin
to get the function, or
npm install jsxbin -g
to get the command.
Contributing
Issues and pull requests are more than welcome. Please ensure you have tests for your pull requests, and that npm test
passes.