@mojule/string-tree v1.0.0
string-tree
Work with trees of strings
Install
npm install @mojule/string-tree
Example
const Tree = require( '@mojule/string-tree' )
const root = Tree( 'Root' )
const child = Tree( 'Child' )
root.appendChild( 'child' )API
Has all the API functions from tree, and the following plugins:
toString
Creates a string representation of the tree. EOL characters within string nodes are normalized to \n and escaped.
The example data used, as raw nodes
const data = require( './test/fixtures/biology.json' )
const tree = Tree.deserialize( data )
console.log( tree.toString() )Animalia
Chordate
Mammal
Primate
Hominidae
Homo
Sapiens
Human
Pongidae
Pan
Troglodytes
Chimpanzee
Carnivora
Felidae
Felis
Domestica
House Cat
Leo
Lion
Arthropoda
Insect
Diptera
Muscidae
Musca
Domestica
Houseflyparse
The default behaviour is to take a tree as a string in the format outlined above and returns a root node with child nodes nested as appropriate.
- root must have no indent.
- will throw if there is more than one root or nesting doesn't make sense.
- tabs are converted to two spaces.
- EOL within strings is expected to be escaped, eg
\nrather than a literal EOL. - empty lines are ignored unless the option
retainEmptyis passed, see below.
If the deserializeMultiple : true option is set there may be multiple roots in the passed string.
Returns an array of root nodes with child nodes nested as appropriate.
const data = `
Root
Child 1
Grandchild 1
Child 2
Grandchild 2
`
const root = Tree.parse( data )
// 'Root'
console.log( root.value )
const child = root.firstChild
// 'Child'
console.log( child.value )
// etc.options
You can pass an optional options parameter. By default it is:
{
"retainEmpty": false
}Even with retainEmpty set to true, any leading empty lines are removed, as
they cannot have a parent to be added to.
Empty lines between non-empty lines are added at the same level as the next non-empty line.
Empty lines at the end of the data are added at the same level as the previous non-empty line.
The value property of an empty node will be an empty string.
const data = `
Root
Child 1
Grandchild 1
Child 2
Grandchild 2
`
const root = Tree.parse( data, { retainEmpty: true } )
console.log( root.toString().replace( / /g, '.' ) )Root
..
..Child.1
....
....Grandchild.1
..Child.2
....Grandchild.2
....
....