parse-function
Parse a function into an object using espree, acorn or babylon parsers. Extensible through Smart Plugins
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Quality Assurance :100:
If you have any how-to kind of questions, please read Code of Conduct and join the chat room or open an issue.
You may also read the Contributing Guide. There, beside "How to contribute?", we describe everything stated by the badges.
Project is semantically & automatically released on CircleCI with new-release and its New Release Github Bot.
Features
- Always up-to-date: auto-publish new version when new version of dependency is out, Renovate
- Standard: using StandardJS, Prettier, SemVer, Semantic Release and conventional commits
- Smart Plugins: for extending the core API or the end Result, see .use method and Plugins Architecture
- Extensible: using plugins for working directly on AST nodes, see the Plugins Architecture
- ES2017 Ready: by using
.parseExpression
method of the babylon v7.x
parser - Customization: allows switching the parser, through
options.parse
- Support for: arrow functions, default parameters, generators and async/await functions
- Stable: battle-tested in production and against all parsers - espree, acorn, babylon
- Tested: with 450+ tests for 200% coverage
Table of Contents
(TOC generated by verb using markdown-toc)
Install
This project requires Node.js v6 and above. Use yarn v1 / npm v5 or above to install it.
$ yarn add parse-function
Which version to use?
There's no breaking changes between the v2.x
version. The only breaking is v2.1
which also is not
working properly, so no use it.
Use v2.0.x
When you don't need support for arrow functions
and es6 default params
. This version
uses a RegExp expression to work.
Use v2.2.x
Only when you need a basic support for es6 features
like arrow functions. This version
uses a RegExp expression to work.
Use v2.3.x
When you want full* support for arrow functions
and es6 default params
. Where this "full",
means "almost full", because it has bugs. This version also uses (acorn.parse
) real parser
to do the parsing.
Use v3.x
When you want to use different parser instead of the default babylon.parse
, by passing custom
parse function to the options.parse
option. From this version we require node >= 4
.
Use v4.x
When you want full customization and most stable support for old and modern features. This version
uses babylon.parseExpression
for parsing and provides a Plugins API.
See the Features section for more info.
Use v5.x
It is basically the same as v4
, but requires Node 6 & npm 5. Another is boilerplate stuff.
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Notes
Throws in one specific case
see: issue #3 and test/index.js#L229-L235
It may throw in one specific case, otherwise it won't throw, so you should
relay on the result.isValid
for sure.
Function named "anonymous"
see: test/index.js#L319-L324 and Result section
If you pass a function which is named "anonymous" the result.name
will be 'anonymous'
,
but the result.isAnonymous
will be false
and result.isNamed
will be true
, because
in fact it's a named function.
Real anonymous function
see: test/index.js#L326-L331 and Result section
Only if you pass really an anonymous function you will get result.name
equal to null
,
result.isAnonymous
equal to true
and result.isNamed
equal to false
.
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Plugins Architecture
see: the .use method, test/index.js#L305-L317 and test/index.js#L396-L414
A more human description of the plugin mechanism. Plugins are synchronous - no support
and no need for async plugins here, but notice that you can do that manually, because
that exact architecture.
The first function that is passed to the .use method is used for extending the core API,
for example adding a new method to the app
instance. That function is immediately invoked.
const parseFunction = require('parse-function')
const app = parseFunction()
app.use((self) => {
console.log(self.use)
console.log(self.parse)
console.log(self.define)
self.define(self, 'foo', (bar) => bar + 1)
})
console.log(app.foo(2))
On the other side, if you want to access the AST of the parser, you should return a function
from that plugin, which function is passed with (node, result)
signature.
This function is lazy plugin, it is called only when the .parse method is called.
const parseFunction = require('parse-function')
const app = parseFunction()
app.use((self) => {
console.log('immediately called')
return (node, result) => {
console.log('called only when .parse is invoked')
console.log(node)
console.log(result)
}
})
Where 1) the node
argument is an object - actual and real AST Node coming from the parser
and 2) the result
is an object too - the end Result, on which
you can add more properties if you want.
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API
Review carefully the provided examples and the working tests.
Initializes with optional opts
object which is passed directly to the desired parser and returns an object with .use
and .parse
methods. The default parse which is used is babylon's .parseExpression
method from v7
.
Params
opts
{Object}: optional, merged with options passed to .parse
methodreturns
{Object} app
: object with .use
and .parse
methods
Example
const parseFunction = require('parse-function')
const app = parseFunction({
ecmaVersion: 2017
})
const fixtureFn = (a, b, c) => {
a = b + c
return a + 2
}
const result = app.parse(fixtureFn)
console.log(result)
console.log(result.name)
console.log(result.isNamed)
console.log(result.isArrow)
console.log(result.isAnonymous)
console.log(result.args)
console.log(result.params)
Parse a given code
and returns a result
object with useful properties - such as name
, body
and args
. By default it uses Babylon parser, but you can switch it by passing options.parse
- for example options.parse: acorn.parse
. In the below example will show how to use acorn
parser, instead of the default one.
Params
code
{Function|String}: any kind of function or string to be parsedoptions
{Object}: directly passed to the parser - babylon, acorn, espreeoptions.parse
{Function}: by default babylon.parseExpression
, all options
are passed as second argument to that provided functionreturns
{Object} result
: see result section for more info
Example
const acorn = require('acorn')
const parseFn = require('parse-function')
const app = parseFn()
const fn = function foo (bar, baz) { return bar * baz }
const result = app.parse(fn, {
parse: acorn.parse,
ecmaVersion: 2017
})
console.log(result.name)
console.log(result.args)
console.log(result.body)
console.log(result.isNamed)
console.log(result.isArrow)
console.log(result.isAnonymous)
console.log(result.isGenerator)
Add a plugin fn
function for extending the API or working on the AST nodes. The fn
is immediately invoked and passed with app
argument which is instance of parseFunction()
call. That fn
may return another function that accepts (node, result)
signature, where node
is an AST node and result
is an object which will be returned result from the .parse
method. This retuned function is called on each node only when .parse
method is called.
See Plugins Architecture section.
Params
fn
{Function}: plugin to be calledreturns
{Object} app
: instance for chaining
Example
app.use((app) => {
app.define(app, 'hello', (place) => `Hello ${place}!`)
})
const hi = app.hello('World')
console.log(hi)
app.use((app) => (node, result) => {
if (node.type === 'ArrowFunctionExpression') {
result.thatIsArrow = true
}
return result
})
const result = app.parse((a, b) => (a + b + 123))
console.log(result.name)
console.log(result.isArrow)
console.log(result.thatIsArrow)
const result = app.parse(function foo () { return 123 })
console.log(result.name)
console.log(result.isArrow)
console.log(result.thatIsArrow)
Define a non-enumerable property on an object. Just a convenience mirror of the define-property library, so check out its docs. Useful to be used in plugins.
Params
obj
{Object}: the object on which to define the propertyprop
{String}: the name of the property to be defined or modifiedval
{Any}: the descriptor for the property being defined or modifiedreturns
{Object} obj
: the passed object, but modified
Example
const parseFunction = require('parse-function')
const app = parseFunction()
const obj = {}
app.define(obj, 'hi', 'world')
console.log(obj)
app.use((app) => {
return (node, result) => {
app.define(result, 'foo', 123)
return result
}
})
const asyncFn = async (qux) => {
const bar = await Promise.resolve(qux)
return bar
}
const result = app.parse(asyncFn)
console.log(result.name)
console.log(result.foo)
console.log(result.args)
console.log(result.isAsync)
console.log(result.isArrow)
console.log(result.isNamed)
console.log(result.isAnonymous)
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Result
In the result object you have name
, args
, params
, body
and few hidden properties
that can be useful to determine what the function is - arrow, regular, async/await or generator.
name
{String|null}: name of the passed function or null
if anonymousargs
{Array}: arguments of the functionparams
{String}: comma-separated list representing the args
defaults
{Object}: key/value pairs, useful when use ES2015 default argumentsbody
{String}: actual body of the function, respects trailing newlines and whitespacesisValid
{Boolean}: is the given value valid or not, that's because it never throws!isAsync
{Boolean}: true
if function is ES2015 async/await functionisArrow
{Boolean}: true
if the function is arrow functionisNamed
{Boolean}: true
if function has name, or false
if is anonymousisGenerator
{Boolean}: true
if the function is ES2015 generator functionisAnonymous
{Boolean}: true
if the function don't have name
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Related
Contributing
Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue.
Please read the Contributing Guide and Code of Conduct documents for advices.
Author
License
Copyright © 2016, 2018, Charlike Mike Reagent. Released under the MIT License.
This file was generated by verb-generate-readme, v0.6.0, on March 05, 2018.
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