web-tree-sitter v0.24.3
Web Tree-sitter
WebAssembly bindings to the Tree-sitter parsing library.
Setup
You can download the tree-sitter.js
and tree-sitter.wasm
files from the latest GitHub release and load them using a standalone script:
<script src="/the/path/to/tree-sitter.js"></script>
<script>
const Parser = window.TreeSitter;
Parser.init().then(() => { /* the library is ready */ });
</script>
You can also install the web-tree-sitter
module from NPM and load it using a system like Webpack:
const Parser = require('web-tree-sitter');
Parser.init().then(() => { /* the library is ready */ });
You can use this module with deno:
import Parser from "npm:web-tree-sitter";
await Parser.init();
// the library is ready
Basic Usage
First, create a parser:
const parser = new Parser;
Then assign a language to the parser. Tree-sitter languages are packaged as individual .wasm
files (more on this below):
const JavaScript = await Parser.Language.load('/path/to/tree-sitter-javascript.wasm');
parser.setLanguage(JavaScript);
Now you can parse source code:
const sourceCode = 'let x = 1; console.log(x);';
const tree = parser.parse(sourceCode);
and inspect the syntax tree.
console.log(tree.rootNode.toString());
// (program
// (lexical_declaration
// (variable_declarator (identifier) (number)))
// (expression_statement
// (call_expression
// (member_expression (identifier) (property_identifier))
// (arguments (identifier)))))
const callExpression = tree.rootNode.child(1).firstChild;
console.log(callExpression);
// { type: 'call_expression',
// startPosition: {row: 0, column: 16},
// endPosition: {row: 0, column: 30},
// startIndex: 0,
// endIndex: 30 }
Editing
If your source code changes, you can update the syntax tree. This will take less time than the first parse.
// Replace 'let' with 'const'
const newSourceCode = 'const x = 1; console.log(x);';
tree.edit({
startIndex: 0,
oldEndIndex: 3,
newEndIndex: 5,
startPosition: {row: 0, column: 0},
oldEndPosition: {row: 0, column: 3},
newEndPosition: {row: 0, column: 5},
});
const newTree = parser.parse(newSourceCode, tree);
Parsing Text From a Custom Data Structure
If your text is stored in a data structure other than a single string, you can parse it by supplying a callback to parse
instead of a string:
const sourceLines = [
'let x = 1;',
'console.log(x);'
];
const tree = parser.parse((index, position) => {
let line = sourceLines[position.row];
if (line) return line.slice(position.column);
});
Generate .wasm language files
The following example shows how to generate .wasm
file for tree-sitter JavaScript grammar.
IMPORTANT: emscripten, docker, or podman need to be installed.
First install tree-sitter-cli
and the tree-sitter language for which to generate .wasm
(tree-sitter-javascript
in this example):
npm install --save-dev tree-sitter-cli tree-sitter-javascript
Then just use tree-sitter cli tool to generate the .wasm
.
npx tree-sitter build --wasm node_modules/tree-sitter-javascript
If everything is fine, file tree-sitter-javascript.wasm
should be generated in current directory.
Running .wasm in Node.js
Notice that executing .wasm
files in node.js is considerably slower than running node.js bindings. However could be useful for testing purposes:
const Parser = require('web-tree-sitter');
(async () => {
await Parser.init();
const parser = new Parser();
const Lang = await Parser.Language.load('tree-sitter-javascript.wasm');
parser.setLanguage(Lang);
const tree = parser.parse('let x = 1;');
console.log(tree.rootNode.toString());
})();
Running .wasm in browser
web-tree-sitter
can run in the browser, but there are some common pitfalls.
Loading the .wasm file
web-tree-sitter
needs to load the tree-sitter.wasm
file. By default, it assumes that this file is available in the
same path as the JavaScript code. Therefore, if the code is being served from http://localhost:3000/bundle.js
, then
the wasm file should be at http://localhost:3000/tree-sitter.wasm
.
For server side frameworks like NextJS, this can be tricky as pages are often served from a path such as
http://localhost:3000/_next/static/chunks/pages/index.js
. The loader will therefore look for the wasm file at
http://localhost:3000/_next/static/chunks/pages/tree-sitter.wasm
. The solution is to pass a locateFile
function in
the moduleOptions
argument to Parser.init()
:
await Parser.init({
locateFile(scriptName: string, scriptDirectory: string) {
return scriptName;
},
});
locateFile
takes in two parameters, scriptName
, i.e. the wasm file name, and scriptDirectory
, i.e. the directory
where the loader expects the script to be. It returns the path where the loader will look for the wasm file. In the NextJS
case, we want to return just the scriptName
so that the loader will look at http://localhost:3000/tree-sitter.wasm
and not http://localhost:3000/_next/static/chunks/pages/tree-sitter.wasm
.
Can't resolve 'fs' in 'node_modules/web-tree-sitter'
Most bundlers will notice that the tree-sitter.js
file is attempting to import fs
, i.e. node's file system library.
Since this doesn't exist in the browser, the bundlers will get confused. For webpack you can fix this by adding the
following to your webpack config:
{
resolve: {
fallback: {
fs: false
}
}
}
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