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vscode-textmate
Advanced tools
The vscode-textmate package is a library that allows you to tokenize text using TextMate grammars. It is the same tokenizer that Visual Studio Code uses for syntax highlighting. The package can be used to implement syntax highlighting and other text analysis features based on TextMate grammars outside of Visual Studio Code.
Tokenization
Tokenize a line of text using a TextMate grammar. This is useful for syntax highlighting or other forms of text analysis.
{"const registry = new tm.Registry();
const grammar = await registry.loadGrammar('source.js');
const text = 'var x = 5;';
const ruleStack = tm.INITIAL;
const lineTokens = grammar.tokenizeLine(text, ruleStack);
console.log(lineTokens.tokens);"}
Loading Grammars
Load a TextMate grammar from a file. This allows you to use custom or third-party grammars for tokenization.
{"const registry = new tm.Registry();
const grammar = await registry.loadGrammarFromPathSync('./syntaxes/javascript.tmLanguage.json');
console.log(grammar.scopeName);"}
Grammar Scopes
Associate a TextMate grammar with a specific scope name. This is useful for managing multiple grammars and switching between them based on the file type or language.
{"const registry = new tm.Registry();
registry.addGrammar(scopeName, './syntaxes/myGrammar.tmLanguage.json');
const grammar = registry.grammarForScopeName(scopeName);
console.log(grammar.scopeName);"}
A package that provides bindings to the Oniguruma regular expressions library. It is used for regex matching within textmate grammars but does not provide the full tokenization capabilities that vscode-textmate offers.
A syntax highlighter powered by vscode-textmate. It uses the same TextMate grammars and themes as Visual Studio Code for consistent highlighting. Shiki is higher-level than vscode-textmate and provides out-of-the-box rendering of syntax-highlighted code.
A syntax highlighter written in JavaScript. It is self-contained and supports many languages and themes out of the box. Unlike vscode-textmate, it does not use TextMate grammars and instead relies on its own language definitions and parsing logic.
An interpreter for grammar files as defined by TextMate. TextMate grammars use the oniguruma dialect (https://github.com/kkos/oniguruma). Supports loading grammar files from JSON or PLIST format. This library is used in VS Code. Cross - grammar injections are currently not supported.
npm install vscode-textmate
const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');
const vsctm = require('vscode-textmate');
const oniguruma = require('vscode-oniguruma');
/**
* Utility to read a file as a promise
*/
function readFile(path) {
return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
fs.readFile(path, (error, data) => error ? reject(error) : resolve(data));
})
}
const wasmBin = fs.readFileSync(path.join(__dirname, './node_modules/vscode-oniguruma/release/onig.wasm')).buffer;
const vscodeOnigurumaLib = oniguruma.loadWASM(wasmBin).then(() => {
return {
createOnigScanner(patterns) { return new oniguruma.OnigScanner(patterns); },
createOnigString(s) { return new oniguruma.OnigString(s); }
};
});
// Create a registry that can create a grammar from a scope name.
const registry = new vsctm.Registry({
onigLib: vscodeOnigurumaLib,
loadGrammar: (scopeName) => {
if (scopeName === 'source.js') {
// https://github.com/textmate/javascript.tmbundle/blob/master/Syntaxes/JavaScript.plist
return readFile('./JavaScript.plist').then(data => vsctm.parseRawGrammar(data.toString()))
}
console.log(`Unknown scope name: ${scopeName}`);
return null;
}
});
// Load the JavaScript grammar and any other grammars included by it async.
registry.loadGrammar('source.js').then(grammar => {
const text = [
`function sayHello(name) {`,
`\treturn "Hello, " + name;`,
`}`
];
let ruleStack = vsctm.INITIAL;
for (let i = 0; i < text.length; i++) {
const line = text[i];
const lineTokens = grammar.tokenizeLine(line, ruleStack);
console.log(`\nTokenizing line: ${line}`);
for (let j = 0; j < lineTokens.tokens.length; j++) {
const token = lineTokens.tokens[j];
console.log(` - token from ${token.startIndex} to ${token.endIndex} ` +
`(${line.substring(token.startIndex, token.endIndex)}) ` +
`with scopes ${token.scopes.join(', ')}`
);
}
ruleStack = lineTokens.ruleStack;
}
});
/* OUTPUT:
Unknown scope name: source.js.regexp
Tokenizing line: function sayHello(name) {
- token from 0 to 8 (function) with scopes source.js, meta.function.js, storage.type.function.js
- token from 8 to 9 ( ) with scopes source.js, meta.function.js
- token from 9 to 17 (sayHello) with scopes source.js, meta.function.js, entity.name.function.js
- token from 17 to 18 (() with scopes source.js, meta.function.js, punctuation.definition.parameters.begin.js
- token from 18 to 22 (name) with scopes source.js, meta.function.js, variable.parameter.function.js
- token from 22 to 23 ()) with scopes source.js, meta.function.js, punctuation.definition.parameters.end.js
- token from 23 to 24 ( ) with scopes source.js
- token from 24 to 25 ({) with scopes source.js, punctuation.section.scope.begin.js
Tokenizing line: return "Hello, " + name;
- token from 0 to 1 ( ) with scopes source.js
- token from 1 to 7 (return) with scopes source.js, keyword.control.js
- token from 7 to 8 ( ) with scopes source.js
- token from 8 to 9 (") with scopes source.js, string.quoted.double.js, punctuation.definition.string.begin.js
- token from 9 to 16 (Hello, ) with scopes source.js, string.quoted.double.js
- token from 16 to 17 (") with scopes source.js, string.quoted.double.js, punctuation.definition.string.end.js
- token from 17 to 18 ( ) with scopes source.js
- token from 18 to 19 (+) with scopes source.js, keyword.operator.arithmetic.js
- token from 19 to 20 ( ) with scopes source.js
- token from 20 to 24 (name) with scopes source.js, support.constant.dom.js
- token from 24 to 25 (;) with scopes source.js, punctuation.terminator.statement.js
Tokenizing line: }
- token from 0 to 1 (}) with scopes source.js, punctuation.section.scope.end.js
*/
See vscode-tmgrammar-test that can help you write unit tests against your grammar.
See the main.ts file
npm install
npm run watch
npm test
npm run benchmark
npm run inspect -- PATH_TO_GRAMMAR PATH_TO_FILE
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
FAQs
VSCode TextMate grammar helpers
The npm package vscode-textmate receives a total of 401,454 weekly downloads. As such, vscode-textmate popularity was classified as popular.
We found that vscode-textmate demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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