Package Exports
- get-source
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 (get-source) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
get-source
Platform-agnostic source code inspection, with sourcemaps support.
npm install get-source
Features
- Allows to read source code files in Node and browsers
- Full sourcemap support (path resolving, external/embedded/inline linking, and long chains)
- Synchronous API — which is good when you implement a debugging tool (e.g. logging)
- Built-in cache
What for
- Call stacks enhanced with source code information (see the StackTracey library)
- Advanced logging / assertion printing
Usage
getSource = require ('get-source')
file = getSource ('./scripts/index.min.js')
Will read the file synchronously (either via XHR or by filesystem API, depending on the environment) and return it's cached representation. Result will contain the following fields:
file.path // normalized file path
file.text // text contents
file.lines // array of lines
And the resolve
method:
file.resolve ({ line: 1, column: 8 }) // indexes here start from 1 (by widely accepted convention). Zero indexes are invalid.
It will look through the sourcemap chain, returning following:
{
line: <original line number>,
column: <original column number>,
sourceFile: <original source file object>,
sourceLine: <original source line text>
}
In that returned object, sourceFile
is the same kind of object that getSource
returns. So you can access its text
, lines
and path
fields to obtain the full information. And the sourceLine
is returned just for the convenience, as a shortcut.
Error handling
nonsense = getSource ('/some/nonexistent/file')
nonsense.text // should be '' (so it's safe to access without checking)
nonsense.error // should be an Error object, representing an actual error thrown during reading/parsing
resolved = nonsense.resolve ({ line: 5, column: 0 })
resolved.sourceLine // empty string (so it's safe to access without checking)
resolved.error // should be an Error object, representing an actual error thrown during reading/parsing