What is meriyah?
Meriyah is a fast and lightweight JavaScript parser that supports the latest ECMAScript standards. It is designed to be highly performant and can be used for various tasks such as syntax analysis, code transformation, and static code analysis.
What are meriyah's main functionalities?
Parsing JavaScript Code
This feature allows you to parse JavaScript code into an Abstract Syntax Tree (AST). The code sample demonstrates how to parse a simple JavaScript statement and log the resulting AST.
const meriyah = require('meriyah');
const ast = meriyah.parseScript('const x = 10;');
console.log(ast);
Parsing with Options
Meriyah supports various parsing options such as module parsing and JSX syntax. The code sample shows how to parse a script with these options enabled.
const meriyah = require('meriyah');
const ast = meriyah.parseScript('const x = 10;', { module: true, jsx: true });
console.log(ast);
Error Handling
Meriyah provides error handling capabilities to catch and handle syntax errors during parsing. The code sample demonstrates how to catch a parsing error and log the error message.
const meriyah = require('meriyah');
try {
const ast = meriyah.parseScript('const x = ;');
} catch (e) {
console.error('Parsing error:', e.message);
}
Other packages similar to meriyah
acorn
Acorn is a small, fast, JavaScript-based JavaScript parser. It is known for its modularity and flexibility, allowing users to extend its functionality with plugins. Compared to Meriyah, Acorn is more extensible but may be slightly slower in performance.
esprima
Esprima is a high-performance, standard-compliant ECMAScript parser. It is widely used in various JavaScript tools and frameworks. Esprima is known for its accuracy and reliability, but Meriyah is generally faster and more lightweight.
Meriyah
100% compliant, self-hosted javascript parser with high focus on both performance and stability. Stable and already used in production.
Features
- Conforms to the standard ECMAScript® 2020 (ECMA-262 10th Edition) language specification
- Support TC39 proposals via option
- Support for additional ECMAScript features for Web Browsers
- JSX support via option
- Optionally track syntactic node locations
- Emits an ESTree-compatible abstract syntax tree.
- No backtracking
- Low memory usage
- Very well tested (~99 000 unit tests with full code coverage)
- Lightweight - ~90 KB minified
ESNext features
Note: These features need to be enabled with the next
option.
Installation
npm install meriyah --save-dev
API
Meriyah generates AST
according to ESTree AST format, and can be used to perform syntactic analysis (parsing) of a JavaScript program, and with ES2015
and later a JavaScript program can be either a script or a module.
The parse
method exposed by meriyah takes an optional options
object which allows you to specify whether to parse in script
mode (the default) or in module
mode.
This is the available options:
{
module: false;
next: false;
ranges: false;
webcompat: false;
loc: false;
raw: false;
directives: false;
globalReturn: false;
impliedStrict: false;
onComment: []
onToken: []
preserveParens: false;
lexical: false;
source: false;
identifierPattern: false;
jsx: false
specDeviation: false
}
onComment and onToken
If an array is supplied, comments/tokens will be pushed to the array, the item in the array contains start/end/range
information when ranges flag is true, it will also contain loc
information when loc flag is true.
If a function callback is supplied, the signature must be
function onComment(type: string, value: string, start: number, end: number, loc: SourceLocation): void {}
function onToken(token: string, start: number, end: number, loc: SourceLocation): void {}
Note the start/end/loc
information are provided to the function callback regardless of the settings on ranges and loc flags. onComment callback has one extra argument value: string
for the body string of the comment.
Example usage
import { parseScript } from './meriyah';
parseScript('({x: [y] = 0} = 1)');
This will return when serialized in json:
{
type: "Program",
sourceType: "script",
body: [
{
type: "ExpressionStatement",
expression: {
type: "AssignmentExpression",
left: {
type: "ObjectPattern",
properties: [
{
type: "Property",
key: {
type: "Identifier",
name: "x"
},
value: {
type: "AssignmentPattern",
left: {
type: "ArrayPattern",
elements: [
{
"type": "Identifier",
"name": "y"
}
]
},
right: {
type: "Literal",
value: 0
}
},
kind: "init",
computed: false,
method: false,
shorthand: false
}
]
},
operator: "=",
right: {
type: "Literal",
value: 1
}
}
}
]
}