Package Exports
- astring
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (astring) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
Astring
A tiny and fast JavaScript code generator from an ESTree-formatted AST.
Key features:
- Supports ECMAScript versions 5 and 6.
- Considerably faster than Escodegen.
- Smaller than Esotope and faster for small ASTs.
- No dependencies and small footprint (12 KB minified, 3 KB gziped).
- Output code is readable and executable.
- Reduced formatting options.
Installation
The easiest way is to install it with the Node Package Manager:
npm install astring
Alternatively, checkout this repository and install the development dependencies:
git clone https://github.com/davidbonnet/astring.git
cd astring
npm install
Usage
The path to the module file is dist/astring.min.js
and works both in a browser or Node environment. When run in a browser, it creates a global variable astring
.
The astring
module consists of a function that takes two arguments: node
and options
. It returns a string representing the rendered code of the provided AST node
.
The options
are:
indent
: string to use for indentation (defaults to"\t"
)lineEnd
: string to use for line endings (defaults to"\n"
)startingIndentLevel
: indent level to start from (defaults to0
)
Example
This example uses Acorn, a blazingly fast JavaScript parser and AST producer. It is the perfect companion of Astring.
// Import modules (unecessary when run in a browser)
acorn = require( 'acorn' );
astring = require( 'astring' );
// Example code
var code = "let answer = 4 + 7 * 5 + 3;\n";
// Parse it into an AST
var ast = acorn.parse( code, { ecmaVersion: 6 } );
// Set formatting options
var options = {
indent: ' ',
lineEnd: '\n'
};
// Format it
var result = astring( ast, options );
// Check it
if ( code === result ) {
console.log( 'It works !' );
} else {
console.log( 'Something went wrong…' );
}
Command line interface
The bin/astring
utility can be used to convert a JSON-formatted ESTree compliant AST of a JavaScript code. It accepts the following arguments:
--indent
: string to use as indentation (defaults to"\t"
)--lineEnd
: string to use for line endings (defaults to"\n"
)--startingIndentLevel
: indent level to start from (defaults to0
)
The utility reads the AST from stdin
or from a provided list of files, and prints out the resulting code.
Example
As in the previous example, we use Acorn to get the JSON-formatted AST. This snippets shows how to pipe the AST output by acorn to astring in order to obtain the formatted JavaScript code:
acorn --ecma6 script.js | astring --indent " " > result.js
Here is another example that reads the AST from a file:
acorn --ecma6 script.js > ast.json
astring --indent " " ast.json > result.js
Benchmark
From the repository, you can run benchmarks that compare Astring against Escodegen and Esotope:
npm run benchmark
TODO
- Comments generation (version 0.3.x)
- More tests (patches)