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node-ray
This package can be installed in any NodeJS, ES6+, or TypeScript application to send messages to the Ray app.
Install with npm:
npm install node-ray
or yarn:
yarn add node-ray
node-ray
offers several variants to allow you to use it in either NodeJS or Browser environments.
When using in a NodeJS environment (the default), import the package as you would normally:
// es module import:
import { ray } from 'node-ray';
// commonjs import:
const ray = require('node-ray').ray;
If you're bundling your scripts for use in a Browser environment (i.e. using webpack), import the /web
variant:
// es module import:
import { ray } from 'node-ray/web';
// commonjs import:
const { ray } = require('node-ray/web');
If you'd like to use node-ray
directly in a webpage, you may inject it via a CDN package. The standalone version is bundled with everything except the axios library.
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/axios@latest"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/node-ray@latest/dist/standalone.js"></script>
<script>
window.ray = Ray.ray;
window.Ray = Ray.Ray;
</script>
You may access the helper ray()
method normally.
To use node-ray
with Laravel Mix, include the following in resources/js/bootstrap.js
:
const { ray } = require('node-ray/web');
window.ray = ray;
You may then compile as usual (npm run dev
). After including js/app.js
in your view, you may access ray()
normally within your scripts.
The majority of the API from the original PHP package is supported. See the api reference for more information.
// es module import:
import { ray } from 'node-ray';
// commonjs import:
const { ray } = require('node-ray');
If you need to modify the host or port:
// make sure you import the Ray class (capital "R")
const { Ray, ray } = require('node-ray');
Ray.useDefaultSettings({ host: '127.0.0.1', port: 3000 });
// or just modify the port:
Ray.useDefaultSettings({ port: 3000 });
// ...and use ray() as normal
ray('a string');
ray(['several', 'arguments'], 'can', {be: provided});
ray().table(['one two', {a: 100, b: 200, c: 300}, [9, 8, 7]]).blue();
ray().html('<em>large text</em>').large().green();
ray().image('https://placekitten.com/200/300');
ray().clearAll();
ray().disable(); // disable sending data to Ray at runtime
ray().xml('<one>11</one>'); // disabled, data not sent to Ray
Note: This section only applies if you are using node-ray
in the NodeJS environment, NOT a browser environment.
node-ray
will search for ray.config.js
. You should place this file in your project's root directory, similiar to the way ray.php
is placed in the root directory when using spatie/ray
.
This is optional and the package will use the default settings if no configuration file is found.
Example:
// ray.config.js
module.exports = {
enable: true,
host: 'localhost',
port: 23517,
// calls to console.log() are redirected to Ray
intercept_console_log: true,
}
When running node-ray
within a NodeJS environment, you may set the environment variable NODE_ENV
to "production" or "staging" to disable sending data to Ray from calls to ray()
.
This section only applies if you are using node-ray
in a browser environment (webpack, etc.).
You can configure node-ray
by importing the Ray
class and calling the useDefaultSettings()
method.
const { Ray, ray } = require('node-ray');
// set several settings at once:
Ray.useDefaultSettings({
host: '192.168.1.20',
port: 23517
});
// or set individual settings only:
Ray.useDefaultSettings({ port: 23517 });
// use ray() normally:
ray().html('<strong>hello world</strong>');
These settings persist across calls to ray()
, so they only need to be defined once.
This package attempts to replicate the entire PHP API for Ray to provide a robust solution for debugging NodeJS projects.
js-ray
?This is a more complete implementation written in typescript, and its primary use case is for NodeJS projects, although it can be used in Browser environments as well.
The codebase was translated to Typescript directly from the original PHP source code of spatie/ray
.
As a result, node-ray
supports the majority of features that exist in the original package; js-ray
does not.
We did draw some inspiration for portions of the code from js-ray
, however.
See using the package.
Call | Description |
---|---|
ray(variable) | Display a string, array or object |
ray(var1, var2, …) | Ray accepts multiple arguments |
ray(…).blue() | Output in color. Use green , orange , red , blue ,purple or gray |
ray().caller() | Show the calling class and method |
ray().clearScreen() | Clear current screen |
ray().clearAll() | Clear current and all previous screens |
ray().className(obj) | Display the classname for an object |
ray().count(name) | Count how many times a piece of code is called, with optional name |
ray().date(date, format) | Display a formatted date, the timezone, and its timestamp |
ray().die() | Halt code execution - NodeJS only |
ray().disable() | Disable sending stuff to Ray |
ray().disabled() | Check if Ray is disabled |
ray().enable() | Enable sending stuff to Ray |
ray().enabled() | Check if Ray is enabled |
ray().error(err) | Display information about an Error/Exception |
ray().event(name, data) | Display information about an event with optional data |
ray().file(filename) | Display contents of a file - NodeJS only |
ray(…).hide() | Display something in Ray and make it collapse immediately |
ray().hideApp() | Programmatically hide the Ray app window |
ray().html(string) | Send HTML to Ray |
ray().image(url) | Display an image in Ray |
ray().interceptor() | Access ConsoleInterceptor; call .enable() to show console.log() calls in Ray |
ray().json([…]) | Send JSON to Ray |
ray().measure(callable) | Measure the performance of a callback function |
ray().measure() | Begin measuring the overall time and elapsed time since previous measure() call |
ray().newScreen() | Start a new screen |
ray().newScreen('title') | Start a new named screen |
ray(…).notify(message) | Display a notification |
ray(…).pass(variable) | Display something in Ray and return the value instead of a Ray instance |
ray().pause() | Pause code execution within your code; must be called using await |
ray().showApp() | Programmatically show the Ray app window |
ray(…).showIf(true) | Conditionally show things based on a truthy value or callable |
ray(…).showWhen(true) | Conditionally show things based on a truthy value or callable |
ray(…).small() | Output text smaller or bigger. Use large or small |
ray().stopTime(name) | Removes a named stopwatch if specified, otherwise removes all stopwatches |
ray().table(…) | Display an array or an object formatted as a table; Objects and arrays are pretty-printed |
ray().trace() | Display a stack trace |
ray().xml(string) | Send XML to Ray |
Can node-ray
be used with React? yes, just be sure to import node-ray/web
Can node-ray
be used if I'm using webpack? yes, just be sure to import node-ray/web
npm install
npm run build:all
npm run test
node build/test.js
node-ray
uses Jest for unit tests. To run the test suite:
npm run test
To update the test snapshots:
npm run test -- -u
Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.
Please review our security policy on how to report security vulnerabilities.
The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.
FAQs
Understand and fix Javascript & TypeScript bugs faster
The npm package node-ray receives a total of 4,420 weekly downloads. As such, node-ray popularity was classified as popular.
We found that node-ray demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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