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r789 | # magic-string | |||
<p align="center"> | ||||
<a href="https://travis-ci.org/Rich-Harris/magic-string"> | ||||
<img src="http://img.shields.io/travis/Rich-Harris/magic-string.svg" | ||||
alt="build status"> | ||||
</a> | ||||
<a href="https://npmjs.org/package/magic-string"> | ||||
<img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/v/magic-string.svg" | ||||
alt="npm version"> | ||||
</a> | ||||
<a href="https://github.com/Rich-Harris/magic-string/blob/master/LICENSE.md"> | ||||
<img src="https://img.shields.io/npm/l/magic-string.svg" | ||||
alt="license"> | ||||
</a> | ||||
<a href="https://david-dm.org/Rich-Harris/magic-string"> | ||||
<img src="https://david-dm.org/Rich-Harris/magic-string.svg" | ||||
alt="dependency status"> | ||||
</a> | ||||
<a href="http://codecov.io/github/Rich-Harris/magic-string?branch=master"> | ||||
<img src="http://codecov.io/github/Rich-Harris/magic-string/coverage.svg?branch=master" alt="Coverage via Codecov" /> | ||||
</a> | ||||
</p> | ||||
Suppose you have some source code. You want to make some light modifications to it - replacing a few characters here and there, wrapping it with a header and footer, etc - and ideally you'd like to generate a source map at the end of it. You've thought about using something like [recast](https://github.com/benjamn/recast) (which allows you to generate an AST from some JavaScript, manipulate it, and reprint it with a sourcemap without losing your comments and formatting), but it seems like overkill for your needs (or maybe the source code isn't JavaScript). | ||||
Your requirements are, frankly, rather niche. But they're requirements that I also have, and for which I made magic-string. It's a small, fast utility for manipulating strings and generating sourcemaps. | ||||
## Installation | ||||
magic-string works in both node.js and browser environments. For node, install with npm: | ||||
```bash | ||||
npm i magic-string | ||||
``` | ||||
To use in browser, grab the [magic-string.umd.js](https://unpkg.com/magic-string/dist/magic-string.umd.js) file and add it to your page: | ||||
```html | ||||
<script src='magic-string.umd.js'></script> | ||||
``` | ||||
(It also works with various module systems, if you prefer that sort of thing - it has a dependency on [vlq](https://github.com/Rich-Harris/vlq).) | ||||
## Usage | ||||
These examples assume you're in node.js, or something similar: | ||||
```js | ||||
var MagicString = require( 'magic-string' ); | ||||
var s = new MagicString( 'problems = 99' ); | ||||
s.overwrite( 0, 8, 'answer' ); | ||||
s.toString(); // 'answer = 99' | ||||
s.overwrite( 11, 13, '42' ); // character indices always refer to the original string | ||||
s.toString(); // 'answer = 42' | ||||
s.prepend( 'var ' ).append( ';' ); // most methods are chainable | ||||
s.toString(); // 'var answer = 42;' | ||||
var map = s.generateMap({ | ||||
source: 'source.js', | ||||
file: 'converted.js.map', | ||||
includeContent: true | ||||
}); // generates a v3 sourcemap | ||||
require( 'fs' ).writeFile( 'converted.js', s.toString() ); | ||||
require( 'fs' ).writeFile( 'converted.js.map', map.toString() ); | ||||
``` | ||||
You can pass an options argument: | ||||
```js | ||||
var s = new MagicString( someCode, { | ||||
// both these options will be used if you later | ||||
// call `bundle.addSource( s )` - see below | ||||
filename: 'foo.js', | ||||
indentExclusionRanges: [/*...*/] | ||||
}); | ||||
``` | ||||
## Methods | ||||
### s.addSourcemapLocation( index ) | ||||
Adds the specified character index (with respect to the original string) to sourcemap mappings, if `hires` is `false` (see below). | ||||
### s.append( content ) | ||||
Appends the specified content to the end of the string. Returns `this`. | ||||
### s.appendLeft( index, content ) | ||||
Appends the specified `content` at the `index` in the original string. If a range *ending* with `index` is subsequently moved, the insert will be moved with it. Returns `this`. See also `s.prependLeft(...)`. | ||||
### s.appendRight( index, content ) | ||||
Appends the specified `content` at the `index` in the original string. If a range *starting* with `index` is subsequently moved, the insert will be moved with it. Returns `this`. See also `s.prependRight(...)`. | ||||
### s.clone() | ||||
Does what you'd expect. | ||||
### s.generateMap( options ) | ||||
Generates a [version 3 sourcemap](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1U1RGAehQwRypUTovF1KRlpiOFze0b-_2gc6fAH0KY0k/edit). All options are, well, optional: | ||||
* `file` - the filename where you plan to write the sourcemap | ||||
* `source` - the filename of the file containing the original source | ||||
* `includeContent` - whether to include the original content in the map's `sourcesContent` array | ||||
* `hires` - whether the mapping should be high-resolution. Hi-res mappings map every single character, meaning (for example) your devtools will always be able to pinpoint the exact location of function calls and so on. With lo-res mappings, devtools may only be able to identify the correct line - but they're quicker to generate and less bulky. If sourcemap locations have been specified with `s.addSourceMapLocation()`, they will be used here. | ||||
The returned sourcemap has two (non-enumerable) methods attached for convenience: | ||||
* `toString` - returns the equivalent of `JSON.stringify(map)` | ||||
* `toUrl` - returns a DataURI containing the sourcemap. Useful for doing this sort of thing: | ||||
```js | ||||
code += '\n//# sourceMappingURL=' + map.toUrl(); | ||||
``` | ||||
### s.indent( prefix[, options] ) | ||||
Prefixes each line of the string with `prefix`. If `prefix` is not supplied, the indentation will be guessed from the original content, falling back to a single tab character. Returns `this`. | ||||
The `options` argument can have an `exclude` property, which is an array of `[start, end]` character ranges. These ranges will be excluded from the indentation - useful for (e.g.) multiline strings. | ||||
### s.insertLeft( index, content ) | ||||
**DEPRECATED** since 0.17 – use `s.appendLeft(...)` instead | ||||
### s.insertRight( index, content ) | ||||
**DEPRECATED** since 0.17 – use `s.prependRight(...)` instead | ||||
### s.locate( index ) | ||||
**DEPRECATED** since 0.10 – see [#30](https://github.com/Rich-Harris/magic-string/pull/30) | ||||
### s.locateOrigin( index ) | ||||
**DEPRECATED** since 0.10 – see [#30](https://github.com/Rich-Harris/magic-string/pull/30) | ||||
### s.move( start, end, newIndex ) | ||||
Moves the characters from `start` and `end` to `index`. Returns `this`. | ||||
### s.overwrite( start, end, content[, options] ) | ||||
Replaces the characters from `start` to `end` with `content`. The same restrictions as `s.remove()` apply. Returns `this`. | ||||
The fourth argument is optional. It can have a `storeName` property — if `true`, the original name will be stored for later inclusion in a sourcemap's `names` array — and a `contentOnly` property which determines whether only the content is overwritten, or anything that was appended/prepended to the range as well. | ||||
### s.prepend( content ) | ||||
Prepends the string with the specified content. Returns `this`. | ||||
### s.prependLeft ( index, content ) | ||||
Same as `s.appendLeft(...)`, except that the inserted content will go *before* any previous appends or prepends at `index` | ||||
### s.prependRight ( index, content ) | ||||
Same as `s.appendRight(...)`, except that the inserted content will go *before* any previous appends or prepends at `index` | ||||
### s.remove( start, end ) | ||||
Removes the characters from `start` to `end` (of the original string, **not** the generated string). Removing the same content twice, or making removals that partially overlap, will cause an error. Returns `this`. | ||||
### s.slice( start, end ) | ||||
Returns the content of the generated string that corresponds to the slice between `start` and `end` of the original string. Throws error if the indices are for characters that were already removed. | ||||
### s.snip( start, end ) | ||||
Returns a clone of `s`, with all content before the `start` and `end` characters of the original string removed. | ||||
### s.toString() | ||||
Returns the generated string. | ||||
### s.trim([ charType ]) | ||||
Trims content matching `charType` (defaults to `\s`, i.e. whitespace) from the start and end. Returns `this`. | ||||
### s.trimStart([ charType ]) | ||||
Trims content matching `charType` (defaults to `\s`, i.e. whitespace) from the start. Returns `this`. | ||||
### s.trimEnd([ charType ]) | ||||
Trims content matching `charType` (defaults to `\s`, i.e. whitespace) from the end. Returns `this`. | ||||
### s.trimLines() | ||||
Removes empty lines from the start and end. Returns `this`. | ||||
## Bundling | ||||
To concatenate several sources, use `MagicString.Bundle`: | ||||
```js | ||||
var bundle = new MagicString.Bundle(); | ||||
bundle.addSource({ | ||||
filename: 'foo.js', | ||||
content: new MagicString( 'var answer = 42;' ) | ||||
}); | ||||
bundle.addSource({ | ||||
filename: 'bar.js', | ||||
content: new MagicString( 'console.log( answer )' ) | ||||
}); | ||||
// Advanced: a source can include an `indentExclusionRanges` property | ||||
// alongside `filename` and `content`. This will be passed to `s.indent()` | ||||
// - see documentation above | ||||
bundle.indent() // optionally, pass an indent string, otherwise it will be guessed | ||||
.prepend( '(function () {\n' ) | ||||
.append( '}());' ); | ||||
bundle.toString(); | ||||
// (function () { | ||||
// var answer = 42; | ||||
// console.log( answer ); | ||||
// }()); | ||||
// options are as per `s.generateMap()` above | ||||
var map = bundle.generateMap({ | ||||
file: 'bundle.js', | ||||
includeContent: true, | ||||
hires: true | ||||
}); | ||||
``` | ||||
As an alternative syntax, if you a) don't have `filename` or `indentExclusionRanges` options, or b) passed those in when you used `new MagicString(...)`, you can simply pass the `MagicString` instance itself: | ||||
```js | ||||
var bundle = new MagicString.Bundle(); | ||||
var source = new MagicString( someCode, { | ||||
filename: 'foo.js' | ||||
}); | ||||
bundle.addSource( source ); | ||||
``` | ||||
## License | ||||
MIT | ||||