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unist-util-visit
Advanced tools
The unist-util-visit package is a utility for visiting nodes in a unist syntax tree. It allows for traversal of the tree and application of functions to nodes that match specified conditions. This can be useful for manipulating or inspecting the tree in various ways, such as filtering nodes, applying transformations, or extracting information.
Visiting nodes
This feature allows you to visit all nodes in a unist syntax tree that match a specified type. The provided function is called for each matching node. This can be useful for performing operations on specific types of nodes.
visit(tree, 'type', node => { console.log(node) })
Visiting nodes with a test function
This feature allows you to visit all nodes that pass a test implemented by a function. The test function is called with each node, and if it returns true, the node is considered a match. This allows for more complex matching conditions beyond just type.
visit(tree, node => node.value === 'specific value', node => { console.log(node) })
Exiting early
This feature allows you to exit the traversal early by returning `visit.EXIT` from the visitor function. This can be useful for optimizing performance by avoiding unnecessary traversal once a certain condition is met.
visit(tree, 'type', (node, index, parent) => { if (node.value === 'stop') return visit.EXIT })
This package provides a way to select nodes in a unist syntax tree using CSS-like selectors. It's similar to unist-util-visit in that it allows for node selection, but it uses a different approach based on selectors rather than explicit traversal and testing.
unist-util-filter offers functionality to create a new tree by filtering nodes in a unist syntax tree based on a given condition. It's similar to unist-util-visit in its ability to apply conditions to nodes, but instead of visiting nodes, it filters them to produce a new tree.
This package allows for the creation of a new unist syntax tree by applying a function to every node in an input tree. It's related to unist-util-visit in that it involves applying functions to nodes, but unist-util-map applies the function to all nodes and constructs a new tree based on the results.
unist utility to visit nodes.
npm:
npm install unist-util-visit
var u = require('unist-builder')
var visit = require('unist-util-visit')
var tree = u('tree', [
u('leaf', '1'),
u('node', [u('leaf', '2')]),
u('void'),
u('leaf', '3')
])
visit(tree, 'leaf', function(node) {
console.log(node)
})
Yields:
{ type: 'leaf', value: '1' }
{ type: 'leaf', value: '2' }
{ type: 'leaf', value: '3' }
visit(tree[, test], visitor[, reverse])
This function works exactly the same as unist-util-visit-parents
,
but visitor
has a different signature.
next? = visitor(node, index, parent)
Instead of being passed an array of ancestors, visitor
is invoked with the
node’s index
and its parent
.
Otherwise the same as unist-util-visit-parents
.
unist-util-visit-parents
— Like visit
, but with a stack of parentsunist-util-filter
— Create a new tree with all nodes that pass a testunist-util-map
— Create a new tree with all nodes mapped by a given functionunist-util-remove
— Remove nodes from a tree that pass a testunist-util-select
— Select nodes with CSS-like selectorsSee contributing.md
in syntax-tree/.github
for ways to get
started.
See support.md
for ways to get help.
This project has a Code of Conduct. By interacting with this repository, organisation, or community you agree to abide by its terms.
FAQs
unist utility to visit nodes
The npm package unist-util-visit receives a total of 12,301,553 weekly downloads. As such, unist-util-visit popularity was classified as popular.
We found that unist-util-visit demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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