ast-util v0.6.0
ast-util
Utilities for AST transformers.
Install
$ npm install [--save] ast-utilAPI
# callArraySlice(scope, node, begin, end)
Returns a call to Array.prototype.slice with node as the context and
begin and end as the arguments to slice.
# callFunctionBind(scope, fn, context, args)
Returns a call to Function.prototype.bind using either call or apply
depending on what the value of args is. If args is an expression then
apply is used. If args is an array of expressions, then call.
# callGet(scope, object, property, receiver)
The [Get] internal method on objects would look something like helpers/get.js.
# callGetOwnPropertyDescriptor(scope, object, property)
Returns a call to Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor with the given object and
property.
# callGetPrototypeOf(scope, object)
Returns a call to Object.getPrototypeOf with the given object.
# callHasOwnProperty(scope, node, property)
Returns a call to hasOwnProperty with node as the context and property as
the property to check.
# callSharedMethod(scope, callee, args)
Returns a call to the given callee with args as the arguments. If callee
is a string then it is treated as a globally-accessible function such as
Object.defineProperty which will be stored in a unique temporary variable.
Subsequent calls to this function will re-use the same temporary variable.
# callSharedMethodWithContext(scope, callee, context, args)
Returns a call to the given callee with context as the method context and
args as the arguments. If callee is a string then it is treated as a
globally-accessible function such as Array.prototype.slice which will be
stored in a unique temporary variable. Subsequent calls to this function will
re-use the same temporary variable.
# getGlobals(ast)
Gets a list of identifiers referencing global variables anywhere within the
given ast. Assuming the ast is for this code:
var a;
function b(){ return c; }
b(d);Then getGlobals will return two identifiers, c and d.
# identifierForString(string)
Generate a safe JavaScript identifier for the given string.
# injectShared(scope, name, expression)
Injects a shared variable with a unique identifier. Only the first call with
the same scope and name will result in a variable declaration being
created. The expression passed in can either be an AST node or a function to
generate one. This function is generally used to inject repeatedly-used values
and prevent repeated execution.
# injectVariable(scope, identifier, init)
Injects a variable with the given identifier into the given scope as a
var declaration with an optional initial value.
# isReference(path)
Determines whether the given path is a value reference. For example, a and
b are references, but c is not:
a(b.c);Only identifiers count as references.
# isUsed(scope, name)
Determines whether the given name should be considered "used" in the given
scope. For a name to be used, it should either:
- Be declared in this scope or a parent scope.
- Be referenced in this scope, a parent scope, or any child scopes.
For example, a, b, and d are used in the global scope of this example
while c is not:
var a;
function b() {}
try {
a = b(d);
} catch (c) {
}# sharedFor(scope, name)
Injects a shared variable by getting the named value from a dotted path. For example, this will return an identifier that can be used in place of the named expression:
sharedFor(scope, 'Object.defineProperty')Subsequent calls to sharedFor in the same scope will return the same
identifier.
# uniqueIdentifier(scope, name)
Generates an identifier guaranteed not to collide with any others in the given
scope. This function will also never generate the same identifier twice for
any scope whose global scope already got that identifier.
Called in a scope with no global references and no variables, the first time
this function is called it will return an identifier named $__0.
When called with a name that name will be used with a prefix, "$__", if possible. If that name is already used then it will append incrementing numbers until it finds a name that isn't used.
Usage
These methods are useful to source transforms, such as transpilers or macros.
Such transforms often have to insert variables into scopes and replace
expressions. Using injectVariable and injectShared are specifically for
that purpose. In conjunction with ast-types, here's how you'd write a simple
version of a swap macro:
// var tmp;
var tmp = util.injectVariable(
this.scope,
util.uniqueIdentifier(this.scope)
);
this.replace(
b.sequenceExpression([
// tmp = left
b.assignmentExpression(
'=',
tmp,
left
),
// left = right
b.assignmentExpression(
'=',
left,
right
),
// right = tmp
b.assignmentExpression(
'=',
right,
tmp
)
])
);See examples/swap-macro.js for a more complete example.
Contributing
Setup
First, install the development dependencies:
$ npm installThen, try running the tests:
$ make testIf you're adding or editing code that injects helpers into a scope, you'll need to edit and run the Makefile to have it generate the files in lib/helpers from the files in helpers.
Pull Requests
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature') - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature) - Create new Pull Request
Acknowledgements
Huge thanks to Ben Newman for ast-types, on which much of this library depends.
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