character-parser

Parse JavaScript one character at a time to look for snippets in Templates. This is not a validator, it's just designed to allow you to have sections of JavaScript delimited by brackets robustly.

Build Status

Installation

npm install character-parser

Usage

Work out how much depth changes:

var state = parse('foo(arg1, arg2, {\n  foo: [a, b\n');
assert(state.roundDepth === 1);
assert(state.curlyDepth === 1);
assert(state.squareDepth === 1);
parse('    c, d]\n  })', state);
assert(state.squareDepth === 0);
assert(state.curlyDepth === 0);
assert(state.roundDepth === 0);

Bracketed Expressions

Find all the contents of a bracketed expression:

var section = parser.parseMax('foo="(", bar="}") bing bong');
assert(section.start === 0);
assert(section.end === 16);//exclusive end of string
assert(section.src = 'foo="(", bar="}"');


var section = parser.parseMax('{foo="(", bar="}"} bing bong', {start: 1});
assert(section.start === 1);
assert(section.end === 17);//exclusive end of string
assert(section.src = 'foo="(", bar="}"');

The bracketed expression parsing simply parses up to but excluding the first unmatched closed bracket (), }, ]). It is clever enough to ignore brackets in comments or strings.

Custom Delimited Expressions

Find code up to a custom delimiter:

var section = parser.parseUntil('foo.bar("%>").baz%> bing bong', '%>');
assert(section.start === 0);
assert(section.end === 17);//exclusive end of string
assert(section.src = 'foo.bar("%>").baz');

var section = parser.parseUntil('<%foo.bar("%>").baz%> bing bong', '%>', {start: 2});
assert(section.start === 2);
assert(section.end === 19);//exclusive end of string
assert(section.src = 'foo.bar("%>").baz');

Delimiters are ignored if they are inside strings or comments.

API

parse(str, state = defaultState(), options = {start: 0, end: src.length})

Parse a string starting at the index start, and return the state after parsing that string.

If you want to parse one string in multiple sections you should keep passing the resulting state to the next parse operation.

The resulting object has the structure:

{
  lineComment: false, //true if inside a line comment
  blockComment: false, //true if inside a block comment

  singleQuote: false, //true if inside a single quoted string
  doubleQuote: false, //true if inside a double quoted string
  escaped: false, //true if in a string and the last character was an escape character

  roundDepth: 0, //number of un-closed open `(` brackets
  curlyDepth: 0, //number of un-closed open `{` brackets
  squareDepth: 0 //number of un-closed open `[` brackets
}

parseMax(src, options = {start: 0})

Parses the source until the first unmatched close bracket (any of ), }, ]). It returns an object with the structure:

{
  start: 0,//index of first character of string
  end: 13,//index of first character after the end of string
  src: 'source string'
}

parseUntil(src, delimiter, options = {start: 0, includeLineComment: false})

Parses the source until the first occurence of delimiter which is not in a string or a comment. If includeLineComment is true, it will still count if the delimiter occurs in a line comment, but not in a block comment. It returns an object with the structure:

{
  start: 0,//index of first character of string
  end: 13,//index of first character after the end of string
  src: 'source string'
}

parseChar(character, state = defaultState())

Parses the single character and returns the state. See parse for the structure of the returned state object. N.B. character must be a single character not a multi character string.

defaultState()

Get a default starting state. See parse for the structure of the returned state object.

License

MIT