snapdragon
Fast, pluggable and easy-to-use parser-renderer factory.
Install
Install with npm:
$ npm install --save snapdragon
Created by jonschlinkert and doowb.
Features
- Bootstrap your own parser, get sourcemap support for free
- All parsing and compiling is handled by simple, reusable middleware functions
- Inspired by the parsers in pug and css.
History
v0.5.0
Breaking changes
Substantial breaking changes were made in v0.5.0! Most of these changes are part of a larger refactor that will be finished in 0.6.0, including the introduction of a Lexer
class.
- Renderer was renamed to
Compiler
- the
.render
method was renamed to.compile
- Many other smaller changes. A more detailed overview will be provided in 0.6.0. If you don't have to time review code, I recommend you wait for the 0.6.0 release.
Usage examples
var Snapdragon = require('snapdragon');
var snapdragon = new Snapdragon();
Parse
var ast = snapdragon.parser('some string', options)
// parser middleware that can be called by other middleware
.set('foo', function () {})
// parser middleware, runs immediately in the order defined
.use(bar())
.use(baz())
Render
// pass the `ast` from the parse method
var res = snapdragon.compiler(ast)
// compiler middleware, called when the name of the middleware
// matches the `node.type` (defined in a parser middleware)
.set('bar', function () {})
.set('baz', function () {})
.compile()
See the examples.
Getting started
Parsers
Parsers are middleware functions used for parsing a string into an ast node.
var ast = snapdragon.parser(str, options)
.use(function() {
var pos = this.position();
var m = this.match(/^\./);
if (!m) return;
return pos({
// `type` specifies the compiler to use
type: 'dot',
val: m[0]
});
})
AST node
When the parser finds a match, pos()
is called, pushing a token for that node onto the ast that looks something like:
{ type: 'dot',
val: '.',
position:
{ start: { lineno: 1, column: 1 },
end: { lineno: 1, column: 2 } }}
Renderers
Renderers are named middleware functions that visit over an array of ast nodes to compile a string.
var res = snapdragon.compiler(ast)
.set('dot', function (node) {
console.log(node.val)
//=> '.'
return this.emit(node.val);
})
Source maps
If you want source map support, make sure to emit the position as well.
var res = snapdragon.compiler(ast)
.set('dot', function (node) {
return this.emit(node.val, node.position);
})
Docs
Parser middleware
A parser middleware is a function that returns an abject called a token
. This token is pushed onto the AST as a node.
Example token
{ type: 'dot',
val: '.',
position:
{ start: { lineno: 1, column: 1 },
end: { lineno: 1, column: 2 } }}
Example parser middleware
Match a single .
in a string:
- Get the starting position by calling
this.position()
- pass a regex for matching a single dot to the
.match
method - if no match is found, return
undefined
- if a match is found,
pos()
is called, which returns a token with:-
type
: the name of the [compiler] to use -
val
: The actual value captured by the regex. In this case, a.
. Note that you can capture and return whatever will be needed by the corresponding [compiler]. - The ending position: automatically calculated by adding the length of the first capture group to the starting position.
-
Renderer middleware
Renderers are run when the name of the compiler middleware matches the type
defined on an ast node
(which is defined in a parser).
Example
Exercise: Parse a dot, then compile it as an escaped dot.
var ast = snapdragon.parser('.')
.use(function () {
var pos = this.position();
var m = this.match(/^\./);
if (!m) return;
return pos({
// define the `type` of compiler to use
type: 'dot',
val: m[0]
})
})
var result = snapdragon.compiler(ast)
.set('dot', function (node) {
return this.emit('\\' + node.val);
})
.compile()
console.log(result.output);
//=> '\.'
API
Parser
Create a new Parser
with the given input
and options
.
Params
-
input
{String} -
options
{Object}
.define
Define a non-enumberable property on the Parser
instance.
Example
parser.define('foo', 'bar');
Params
-
key
{String}: propery name -
val
{any}: property value -
returns
{Object}: Returns the Parser instance for chaining.
Set parser name
with the given fn
Params
-
name
{String} -
fn
{Function}
Get parser name
Params
-
name
{String}
Push a token
onto the type
stack.
Params
-
type
{String} -
returns
{Object}token
Pop a token off of the type
stack
Params
-
type
{String} -
returns
{Object}: Returns a token
Return true if inside a stack
node. Types are braces
, parens
or brackets
.
Params
-
type
{String} -
returns
{Boolean}
Example
parser.isType(node, 'brace');
Params
-
node
{Object} -
type
{String} -
returns
{Boolean}
.define
Define a non-enumberable property on the Compiler
instance.
Example
compiler.define('foo', 'bar');
Params
-
key
{String}: propery name -
val
{any}: property value -
returns
{Object}: Returns the Compiler instance for chaining.
About
Related projects
- braces: Fastest brace expansion for node.js, with the most complete support for the Bash 4.3 braces… more | homepage
- expand-brackets: Expand POSIX bracket expressions (character classes) in glob patterns. | homepage
- extglob: Convert extended globs to regex-compatible strings. Add (almost) the expressive power of regular expressions to… more | homepage
- micromatch: Glob matching for javascript/node.js. A drop-in replacement and faster alternative to minimatch and multimatch. | homepage
Contributing
Pull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue.
Contributors
Commits |
Contributor |
---|---|
106 | jonschlinkert |
2 | doowb |
Building docs
(This document was generated by verb-generate-readme (a verb generator), please don't edit the readme directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in .verb.md.)
To generate the readme and API documentation with verb:
$ npm install -g verb verb-generate-readme && verb
Running tests
Install dev dependencies:
$ npm install -d && npm test
Author
Jon Schlinkert
License
Copyright © 2016, Jon Schlinkert. Released under the MIT license.
This file was generated by verb-generate-readme, v0.1.31, on October 10, 2016.