19 KiB
Catharsis
A JavaScript parser for Google Closure Compiler and JSDoc type expressions.
Catharsis is designed to be:
- Accurate. Catharsis is based on a PEG.js grammar that's designed to handle any valid type expression. It uses a Mocha test suite to verify the parser's accuracy.
- Fast. Parse results are cached, so the parser is invoked only when necessary.
- Flexible. Catharsis can convert a parse result back into a type expression, or into a description of the type expression. In addition, Catharsis can parse JSDoc-style type expressions.
Example
var catharsis = require('catharsis');
// Closure Compiler parsing
var type = '!Object';
var parsedType;
try {
parsedType = catharsis.parse(type); // {"type":"NameExpression,"name":"Object","nullable":false}
} catch(e) {
console.error('unable to parse %s: %s', type, e);
}
// JSDoc-style type expressions enabled
var jsdocType = 'string[]'; // Closure Compiler expects Array.<string>
var parsedJsdocType;
try {
parsedJsdocType = catharsis.parse(jsdocType, {jsdoc: true});
} catch (e) {
console.error('unable to parse %s: %s', jsdocType, e);
}
// Converting parse results back to type expressions
catharsis.stringify(parsedType); // !Object
catharsis.stringify(parsedJsdocType); // string[]
catharsis.stringify(parsedJsdocType, {restringify: true}); // Array.<string>
// Converting parse results to descriptions of the type expression
catharsis.describe(parsedType).simple; // non-null Object
catharsis.describe(parsedJsdocType).simple; // Array of string
See the
test/specs
directory
for more examples of Catharsis' parse results.
Methods
parse(typeExpression, options)
Parse a type expression, and return the parse results. Throws an error if the type expression cannot be parsed.
When called without options, Catharsis attempts to parse type expressions in the
same way as Closure Compiler. When the jsdoc
option is enabled, Catharsis can
also parse several kinds of type expressions that are permitted in
JSDoc:
- The string
function
is treated as a function type with no parameters. - You can omit the period from type applications. For example,
Array.<string>
andArray<string>
are parsed in the same way. - If can append
[]
to a name expression (for example,string[]
), it is interpreted as a type application with the expressionArray
(for example,Array.<string>
). - Name expressions can contain the characters
#
,~
,:
, and/
. - Name expressions can contain a suffix that is similar to a function signature
(for example,
MyClass(foo, bar)
). - Name expressions can contain a reserved word.
- Record types can use types other than name expressions for keys.
Parameters
type
: A string containing a Closure Compiler type expression.options
: Options for parsing the type expression.options.jsdoc
: Specifies whether to enable parsing of JSDoc-style type expressions. Defaults tofalse
.options.useCache
: Specifies whether to use the cache of parsed types. Defaults totrue
.
Returns
An object containing the parse results. See the
test/specs
directory for examples of the parse results for
different type expressions.
The object also includes two non-enumerable properties:
jsdoc
: A boolean that indicates whether the type expression was parsed with JSDoc support enabled.typeExpression
: A string that contains the type expression that was parsed.
stringify(parsedType, options)
Stringify parsedType
, and return the type expression. If validation is
enabled, throws an error if the stringified type expression cannot be parsed.
Parameters
parsedType
: An object containing a parsed Closure Compiler type expression.options
: Options for stringifying the parse results.options.cssClass
: Synonym foroptions.linkClass
. Deprecated in version 0.8.0; will be removed in a future version.options.htmlSafe
: Specifies whether to return an HTML-safe string that replaces left angle brackets (<
) with the corresponding entity (<
). Note: Characters in name expressions are not escaped.options.linkClass
: A CSS class to add to HTML links. Used only ifoptions.links
is provided. By default, no CSS class is added.options.links
: An object whose keys are name expressions and whose values are URIs. If a name expression matches a key inoptions.links
, the name expression is wrapped in an HTML<a>
tag that links to the URI. Ifoptions.linkClass
is specified, the<a>
tag includes aclass
attribute. Note: When using this option, parsed types are always restringified, and the resulting string is not cached.options.restringify
: Forces Catharsis to restringify the parsed type. If this option is not specified, and the parsed type object includes atypeExpression
property, Catharsis returns thetypeExpression
property without modification when possible. Defaults tofalse
.options.useCache
: Specifies whether to use the cache of stringified type expressions. Defaults totrue
.options.validate
: Specifies whether to validate the stringified parse results by attempting to parse them as a type expression. If the stringified results are not parsable with the default options, you must also provide the appropriate options to pass to theparse()
method. Defaults tofalse
.
Returns
A string containing the type expression.
describe(parsedType, options)
Convert a parsed type to a description of the type expression. This method is especially useful if your users are not familiar with the syntax for type expressions.
The describe()
method returns the description in two formats:
- Simple format. A string that provides a complete description of the type expression.
- Extended format. An object that separates out some of the details about the outermost type expression, such as whether the type is optional, nullable, or repeatable.
For example, when you call describe('?function(new:MyObject, string)=')
, the
method returns the following data:
{
simple: 'optional nullable function(constructs MyObject, string)',
extended: {
description: 'function(string)',
modifiers: {
functionNew: 'Returns MyObject when called with new.',
functionThis: '',
optional: 'Optional.',
nullable: 'May be null.',
repeatable: ''
},
returns: ''
}
}
Parameters
parsedType
: An object containing a parsed Closure Compiler type expression.options
: Options for creating the description.options.codeClass
: A CSS class to add to the tag that is wrapped around type names. Used only if you specifyoptions.codeTag
. By default, no CSS class is added.options.codeTag
: The name of an HTML tag (for example,code
) to wrap around type names. For example, if this option is set tocode
, the type expressionArray.<string>
would have the simple description<code>Array</code> of <code>string</code>
.options.language
: A string identifying the language in which to generate the description. The identifier should be an ISO 639-1 language code (for example,en
). It can optionally be followed by a hyphen and an ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 country code (for example,en-US
). If you use values other thanen
, you must provide translation resources inoptions.resources
. Defaults toen
.options.linkClass
: A CSS class to add to HTML links. Used only ifoptions.links
is provided. By default, no CSS class is added.options.links
: An object whose keys are name expressions and whose values are URIs. If a name expression matches a key inoptions.links
, the name expression will be wrapped in an HTML<a>
tag that links to the URI. If you also specifyoptions.linkClass
, the<a>
tag includes aclass
attribute. Note: When you use this option, the description is not cached.options.resources
: An object that specifies how to describe type expressions for a given language. The object's property names should use the same format asoptions.language
. Each property should contain an object in the same format as the translation resources inres/en.json
. If you specify a value foroptions.resources.en
, that value overrides the defaults inres/en.json
.options.useCache
: Specifies whether to use the cache of descriptions. Defaults totrue
.
Returns
An object with the following properties:
simple
: A string that provides a complete description of the type expression.extended
: An object containing details about the outermost type expression.extended.description
: A string that provides a basic description of the type expression, excluding the information contained in other properties.extended.modifiers
: Information about modifiers that apply to the type expression.extended.modifiers.functionNew
: A string that describes what a function returns when called withnew
. Returned only for function types.extended.modifiers.functionThis
: A string that describes what the keywordthis
refers to within a function. Returned only for function types.extended.modifiers.nullable
: A string that indicates whether the type is nullable or non-nullable.extended.modifiers.optional
: A string that indicates whether the type is optional.extended.modifiers.repeatable
: A string that indicates whether the type can be repeated.
extended.returns
: A string that describes the function's return value. Returned only for function types.
Changelog
- 0.8.11 (July 2019): Updated dependencies.
- 0.8.10 (May 2019): Updated dependencies.
- 0.8.9 (July 2017): Type expressions that include an
@
sign (for example,module:@prefix/mymodule~myCallback
) are now supported. - 0.8.8 (April 2016): Corrected the description of type applications other than
arrays that contain a single type (for example,
Promise.<string>
). - 0.8.7 (June 2015):
- Record types that use numeric literals as property names (for example,
{0: string}
) are now parsed correctly. - Record types with a property that contains a function, with no space after
the preceding colon (for example,
{foo:function()}
), are now parsed correctly. - Repeatable function parameters are no longer required to be enclosed in brackets, regardless of whether JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled. In addition, the brackets are omitted when stringifying a parsed type expression.
- Record types that use numeric literals as property names (for example,
- 0.8.6 (December 2014): Improved the description of the unknown type.
- 0.8.5 (December 2014): Added support for postfix nullable/non-nullable
operators combined with the optional operator (for example,
foo?=
). - 0.8.4 (December 2014): JSDoc-style nested arrays (for example,
number[][]
) are now parsed correctly when JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled. - 0.8.3 (October 2014):
- Type applications are no longer required to include a period (
.
) as a separator, regardless of whether JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled. - Type unions that are not enclosed in parentheses can now include the
repeatable (
...
) modifier when JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled. - Name expressions may now be enclosed in single or double quotation marks when JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled.
- Type applications are no longer required to include a period (
- 0.8.2 (June 2014): Fixed a compatibility issue with the JSDoc fork of Mozilla Rhino.
- 0.8.1 (June 2014): Added support for type unions that are not enclosed in
parentheses, and that contain nullable or non-nullable modifiers (for example,
!string|!number
). - 0.8.0 (May 2014):
- Added a
describe()
method, which converts a parsed type to a description of the type. - Added a
linkClass
option to thestringify()
method, and deprecated the existingcssClass
option. ThecssClass
option will be removed in a future release. - Clarified and corrected several sections in the
README
.
- Added a
- 0.7.1 (April 2014): In record types, property names that begin with a keyword
(for example,
undefinedHTML
) are now parsed correctly when JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled. - 0.7.0 (October 2013):
- Repeatable type expressions other than name expressions (for example,
...function()
) are now parsed and stringified correctly. - Type expressions that are both repeatable and either nullable or
non-nullable (for example,
...!number
) are now parsed and stringified correctly. - Name expressions are now parsed correctly when they match a property name
in an object instance (for example,
constructor
).
- Repeatable type expressions other than name expressions (for example,
- 0.6.0 (September 2013): Added support for the type expression
function[]
when JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled. - 0.5.6 (April 2013):
- For consistency with Closure Compiler, parentheses are no longer required around type unions, regardless of whether JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled.
- For consistency with Closure Compiler, you can now use postfix notation
for the
?
(nullable) and!
(non-nullable) modifiers. For example,?string
andstring?
are now treated as equivalent. - String literals and numeric literals are now allowed as property names
within name expressions. For example, the name expression
Foo."bar"
is now parsed correctly.
- 0.5.5 (April 2013): Corrected a parsing issue with name expressions that end with a value enclosed in parentheses.
- 0.5.4 (April 2013):
- Repeatable literals (for example,
...*
) are now parsed correctly. - When JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled, a name expression can now
contain a value enclosed in parentheses at the end of the name expression
(for example,
MyClass(2)
).
- Repeatable literals (for example,
- 0.5.3 (March 2013): The
parse()
method now correctly parses name expressions that contain hyphens. - 0.5.2 (March 2013): The
parse()
method now correctly parses function types when JSDoc-style type expressions are enabled. - 0.5.1 (March 2013): Newlines and extra spaces are now removed from type expressions before they are parsed.
- 0.5.0 (March 2013):
- The
parse()
method'slenient
option has been renamed tojsdoc
. Note: This change is not backwards-compatible with previous versions. - The
stringify()
method now acceptscssClass
andlinks
options, which you can use to add HTML links to a type expression.
- The
- 0.4.3 (March 2013):
- The
stringify()
method no longer caches HTML-safe type expressions as if they were normal type expressions. - The
stringify()
method's options parameter may now include anoptions.restringify
property, and the behavior of theoptions.useCache
property has changed.
- The
- 0.4.2 (March 2013):
- When lenient parsing is enabled, name expressions can now contain the
characters
:
and/
. - When lenient parsing is enabled, a name expression followed by
[]
(for example,string[]
) will be interpreted as a type application with the expressionArray
(for example,Array.<string>
).
- When lenient parsing is enabled, name expressions can now contain the
characters
- 0.4.1 (March 2013):
- The
parse()
andstringify()
methods now honor all of the specified options. - When lenient parsing is enabled, name expressions can now contain a reserved word.
- The
- 0.4.0 (March 2013):
- Catharsis now supports a lenient parsing option that can parse several kinds of malformed type expressions. See the documentation for details.
- The objects containing parse results are now frozen.
- The objects containing parse results now have two non-enumerable
properties:
lenient
: A boolean indicating whether the type expression was parsed in lenient mode.typeExpression
: A string containing the original type expression.
- The
stringify()
method now honors theuseCache
option. If a parsed type includes atypeExpression
property, anduseCache
is not set tofalse
, the stringified type will be identical to the original type expression.
- 0.3.1 (March 2013): Type expressions that begin with a reserved word, such as
integer
, are now parsed correctly. - 0.3.0 (March 2013):
- The
parse()
andstringify()
methods are now synchronous, and theparseSync()
andstringifySync()
methods have been removed. Note: This change is not backwards-compatible with previous versions. - The parse results now use a significantly different format from previous versions. The new format is more expressive and is similar, but not identical, to the format used by the doctrine parser. Note: This change is not backwards-compatible with previous versions.
- Name expressions that contain a reserved word now include a
reservedWord: true
property. - Union types that are optional or nullable, or that can be repeated, are now parsed and stringified correctly.
- Optional function types and record types are now parsed and stringified correctly.
- Function types now longer include
new
orthis
properties unless the properties are defined in the type expression. In addition, thenew
andthis
properties can now use any type expression. - In record types, the key for a field type can now use any type expression.
- Standalone single-character literals, such as ALL (
*
), are now parsed and stringified correctly. null
andundefined
literals with additional properties, such asrepeatable
, are now stringified correctly.
- The
- 0.2.0 (November 2012):
- Added
stringify()
andstringifySync()
methods, which convert a parsed type to a type expression. - Simplified the parse results for function signatures. Note: This change is not backwards-compatible with previous versions.
- Corrected minor errors in README.md.
- Added
- 0.1.1 (November 2012): Added
opts
argument toparse()
andparseSync()
methods. Note: The change toparse()
is not backwards-compatible with previous versions. - 0.1.0 (November 2012): Initial release.