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# Acorn
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[](https://travis-ci.org/acornjs/acorn)
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[](https://www.npmjs.com/package/acorn)
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[](https://cdnjs.com/libraries/acorn)
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[Author funding status: ](https://marijnhaverbeke.nl/fund/)
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A tiny, fast JavaScript parser, written completely in JavaScript.
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## Community
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Acorn is open source software released under an
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[MIT license](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn/blob/master/LICENSE).
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You are welcome to
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[report bugs](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn/issues) or create pull
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requests on [github](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn). For questions
|
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and discussion, please use the
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[Tern discussion forum](https://discuss.ternjs.net).
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## Installation
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The easiest way to install acorn is with [`npm`][npm].
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[npm]: https://www.npmjs.com/
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```sh
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npm install acorn
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```
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Alternately, you can download the source and build acorn yourself:
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||||
```sh
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git clone https://github.com/acornjs/acorn.git
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cd acorn
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npm install
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npm run build
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```
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## Components
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When run in a CommonJS (node.js) or AMD environment, exported values
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appear in the interfaces exposed by the individual files, as usual.
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When loaded in the browser (Acorn works in any JS-enabled browser more
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recent than IE5) without any kind of module management, a single
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global object `acorn` will be defined, and all the exported properties
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will be added to that.
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### Main parser
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This is implemented in `dist/acorn.js`, and is what you get when you
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`require("acorn")` in node.js.
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**parse**`(input, options)` is used to parse a JavaScript program.
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The `input` parameter is a string, `options` can be undefined or an
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object setting some of the options listed below. The return value will
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be an abstract syntax tree object as specified by the
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[ESTree spec][estree].
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When encountering a syntax error, the parser will raise a
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`SyntaxError` object with a meaningful message. The error object will
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have a `pos` property that indicates the character offset at which the
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error occurred, and a `loc` object that contains a `{line, column}`
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object referring to that same position.
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[estree]: https://github.com/estree/estree
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- **ecmaVersion**: Indicates the ECMAScript version to parse. Must be
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either 3, 5, 6 (2015), 7 (2016), 8 (2017), 9 (2018) or 10 (2019, partial
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support). This influences support for strict mode, the set of
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||||
reserved words, and support for new syntax features. Default is 7.
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**NOTE**: Only 'stage 4' (finalized) ECMAScript features are being
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implemented by Acorn.
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- **sourceType**: Indicate the mode the code should be parsed in. Can be
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either `"script"` or `"module"`. This influences global strict mode
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and parsing of `import` and `export` declarations.
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- **onInsertedSemicolon**: If given a callback, that callback will be
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called whenever a missing semicolon is inserted by the parser. The
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callback will be given the character offset of the point where the
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semicolon is inserted as argument, and if `locations` is on, also a
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`{line, column}` object representing this position.
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|
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- **onTrailingComma**: Like `onInsertedSemicolon`, but for trailing
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commas.
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- **allowReserved**: If `false`, using a reserved word will generate
|
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an error. Defaults to `true` for `ecmaVersion` 3, `false` for higher
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versions. When given the value `"never"`, reserved words and
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keywords can also not be used as property names (as in Internet
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Explorer's old parser).
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|
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- **allowReturnOutsideFunction**: By default, a return statement at
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the top level raises an error. Set this to `true` to accept such
|
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code.
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|
||||
- **allowImportExportEverywhere**: By default, `import` and `export`
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declarations can only appear at a program's top level. Setting this
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option to `true` allows them anywhere where a statement is allowed.
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|
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- **allowAwaitOutsideFunction**: By default, `await` expressions can only appear inside `async` functions. Setting this option to `true` allows to have top-level `await` expressions. They are still not allowed in non-`async` functions, though.
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|
||||
- **allowHashBang**: When this is enabled (off by default), if the
|
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code starts with the characters `#!` (as in a shellscript), the
|
||||
first line will be treated as a comment.
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|
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- **locations**: When `true`, each node has a `loc` object attached
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with `start` and `end` subobjects, each of which contains the
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one-based line and zero-based column numbers in `{line, column}`
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form. Default is `false`.
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|
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- **onToken**: If a function is passed for this option, each found
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token will be passed in same format as tokens returned from
|
||||
`tokenizer().getToken()`.
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If array is passed, each found token is pushed to it.
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|
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Note that you are not allowed to call the parser from the
|
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callback—that will corrupt its internal state.
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|
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- **onComment**: If a function is passed for this option, whenever a
|
||||
comment is encountered the function will be called with the
|
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following parameters:
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|
||||
- `block`: `true` if the comment is a block comment, false if it
|
||||
is a line comment.
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- `text`: The content of the comment.
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- `start`: Character offset of the start of the comment.
|
||||
- `end`: Character offset of the end of the comment.
|
||||
|
||||
When the `locations` options is on, the `{line, column}` locations
|
||||
of the comment’s start and end are passed as two additional
|
||||
parameters.
|
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|
||||
If array is passed for this option, each found comment is pushed
|
||||
to it as object in Esprima format:
|
||||
|
||||
```javascript
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{
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"type": "Line" | "Block",
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"value": "comment text",
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"start": Number,
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"end": Number,
|
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// If `locations` option is on:
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"loc": {
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"start": {line: Number, column: Number}
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"end": {line: Number, column: Number}
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},
|
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// If `ranges` option is on:
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"range": [Number, Number]
|
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}
|
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```
|
||||
|
||||
Note that you are not allowed to call the parser from the
|
||||
callback—that will corrupt its internal state.
|
||||
|
||||
- **ranges**: Nodes have their start and end characters offsets
|
||||
recorded in `start` and `end` properties (directly on the node,
|
||||
rather than the `loc` object, which holds line/column data. To also
|
||||
add a [semi-standardized][range] `range` property holding a
|
||||
`[start, end]` array with the same numbers, set the `ranges` option
|
||||
to `true`.
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|
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- **program**: It is possible to parse multiple files into a single
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AST by passing the tree produced by parsing the first file as the
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`program` option in subsequent parses. This will add the toplevel
|
||||
forms of the parsed file to the "Program" (top) node of an existing
|
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parse tree.
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|
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- **sourceFile**: When the `locations` option is `true`, you can pass
|
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this option to add a `source` attribute in every node’s `loc`
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object. Note that the contents of this option are not examined or
|
||||
processed in any way; you are free to use whatever format you
|
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choose.
|
||||
|
||||
- **directSourceFile**: Like `sourceFile`, but a `sourceFile` property
|
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will be added (regardless of the `location` option) directly to the
|
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nodes, rather than the `loc` object.
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|
||||
- **preserveParens**: If this option is `true`, parenthesized expressions
|
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are represented by (non-standard) `ParenthesizedExpression` nodes
|
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that have a single `expression` property containing the expression
|
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inside parentheses.
|
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|
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[range]: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745678
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|
||||
**parseExpressionAt**`(input, offset, options)` will parse a single
|
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expression in a string, and return its AST. It will not complain if
|
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there is more of the string left after the expression.
|
||||
|
||||
**getLineInfo**`(input, offset)` can be used to get a `{line,
|
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column}` object for a given program string and character offset.
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||||
|
||||
**tokenizer**`(input, options)` returns an object with a `getToken`
|
||||
method that can be called repeatedly to get the next token, a `{start,
|
||||
end, type, value}` object (with added `loc` property when the
|
||||
`locations` option is enabled and `range` property when the `ranges`
|
||||
option is enabled). When the token's type is `tokTypes.eof`, you
|
||||
should stop calling the method, since it will keep returning that same
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token forever.
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||||
|
||||
In ES6 environment, returned result can be used as any other
|
||||
protocol-compliant iterable:
|
||||
|
||||
```javascript
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for (let token of acorn.tokenizer(str)) {
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// iterate over the tokens
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}
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|
||||
// transform code to array of tokens:
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var tokens = [...acorn.tokenizer(str)];
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```
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|
||||
**tokTypes** holds an object mapping names to the token type objects
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that end up in the `type` properties of tokens.
|
||||
|
||||
#### Note on using with [Escodegen][escodegen]
|
||||
|
||||
Escodegen supports generating comments from AST, attached in
|
||||
Esprima-specific format. In order to simulate same format in
|
||||
Acorn, consider following example:
|
||||
|
||||
```javascript
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var comments = [], tokens = [];
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||||
|
||||
var ast = acorn.parse('var x = 42; // answer', {
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||||
// collect ranges for each node
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||||
ranges: true,
|
||||
// collect comments in Esprima's format
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||||
onComment: comments,
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||||
// collect token ranges
|
||||
onToken: tokens
|
||||
});
|
||||
|
||||
// attach comments using collected information
|
||||
escodegen.attachComments(ast, comments, tokens);
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||||
|
||||
// generate code
|
||||
console.log(escodegen.generate(ast, {comment: true}));
|
||||
// > 'var x = 42; // answer'
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
[escodegen]: https://github.com/estools/escodegen
|
||||
|
||||
### dist/acorn_loose.js ###
|
||||
|
||||
This file implements an error-tolerant parser. It exposes a single
|
||||
function. The loose parser is accessible in node.js via `require("acorn/dist/acorn_loose")`.
|
||||
|
||||
**parse_dammit**`(input, options)` takes the same arguments and
|
||||
returns the same syntax tree as the `parse` function in `acorn.js`,
|
||||
but never raises an error, and will do its best to parse syntactically
|
||||
invalid code in as meaningful a way as it can. It'll insert identifier
|
||||
nodes with name `"✖"` as placeholders in places where it can't make
|
||||
sense of the input. Depends on `acorn.js`, because it uses the same
|
||||
tokenizer.
|
||||
|
||||
### dist/walk.js ###
|
||||
|
||||
Implements an abstract syntax tree walker. Will store its interface in
|
||||
`acorn.walk` when loaded without a module system.
|
||||
|
||||
**simple**`(node, visitors, base, state)` does a 'simple' walk over
|
||||
a tree. `node` should be the AST node to walk, and `visitors` an
|
||||
object with properties whose names correspond to node types in the
|
||||
[ESTree spec][estree]. The properties should contain functions
|
||||
that will be called with the node object and, if applicable the state
|
||||
at that point. The last two arguments are optional. `base` is a walker
|
||||
algorithm, and `state` is a start state. The default walker will
|
||||
simply visit all statements and expressions and not produce a
|
||||
meaningful state. (An example of a use of state is to track scope at
|
||||
each point in the tree.)
|
||||
|
||||
```js
|
||||
const acorn = require("acorn")
|
||||
const walk = require("acorn/dist/walk")
|
||||
|
||||
walk.simple(acorn.parse("let x = 10"), {
|
||||
Literal(node) {
|
||||
console.log(`Found a literal: ${node.value}`)
|
||||
}
|
||||
})
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
**ancestor**`(node, visitors, base, state)` does a 'simple' walk over
|
||||
a tree, building up an array of ancestor nodes (including the current node)
|
||||
and passing the array to the callbacks as a third parameter.
|
||||
|
||||
```js
|
||||
const acorn = require("acorn")
|
||||
const walk = require("acorn/dist/walk")
|
||||
|
||||
walk.ancestor(acorn.parse("foo('hi')"), {
|
||||
Literal(_, ancestors) {
|
||||
console.log("This literal's ancestors are:",
|
||||
ancestors.map(n => n.type))
|
||||
}
|
||||
})
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
**recursive**`(node, state, functions, base)` does a 'recursive'
|
||||
walk, where the walker functions are responsible for continuing the
|
||||
walk on the child nodes of their target node. `state` is the start
|
||||
state, and `functions` should contain an object that maps node types
|
||||
to walker functions. Such functions are called with `(node, state, c)`
|
||||
arguments, and can cause the walk to continue on a sub-node by calling
|
||||
the `c` argument on it with `(node, state)` arguments. The optional
|
||||
`base` argument provides the fallback walker functions for node types
|
||||
that aren't handled in the `functions` object. If not given, the
|
||||
default walkers will be used.
|
||||
|
||||
**make**`(functions, base)` builds a new walker object by using the
|
||||
walker functions in `functions` and filling in the missing ones by
|
||||
taking defaults from `base`.
|
||||
|
||||
**full**`(node, callback, base, state)` does a 'full'
|
||||
walk over a tree, calling the callback with the arguments (node, state, type)
|
||||
for each node
|
||||
|
||||
**fullAncestor**`(node, callback, base, state)` does a 'full' walk over
|
||||
a tree, building up an array of ancestor nodes (including the current node)
|
||||
and passing the array to the callbacks as a third parameter.
|
||||
|
||||
```js
|
||||
const acorn = require("acorn")
|
||||
const walk = require("acorn/dist/walk")
|
||||
|
||||
walk.full(acorn.parse("1 + 1"), node => {
|
||||
console.log(`There's a ${node.type} node at ${node.ch}`)
|
||||
})
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
**findNodeAt**`(node, start, end, test, base, state)` tries to
|
||||
locate a node in a tree at the given start and/or end offsets, which
|
||||
satisfies the predicate `test`. `start` and `end` can be either `null`
|
||||
(as wildcard) or a number. `test` may be a string (indicating a node
|
||||
type) or a function that takes `(nodeType, node)` arguments and
|
||||
returns a boolean indicating whether this node is interesting. `base`
|
||||
and `state` are optional, and can be used to specify a custom walker.
|
||||
Nodes are tested from inner to outer, so if two nodes match the
|
||||
boundaries, the inner one will be preferred.
|
||||
|
||||
**findNodeAround**`(node, pos, test, base, state)` is a lot like
|
||||
`findNodeAt`, but will match any node that exists 'around' (spanning)
|
||||
the given position.
|
||||
|
||||
**findNodeAfter**`(node, pos, test, base, state)` is similar to
|
||||
`findNodeAround`, but will match all nodes *after* the given position
|
||||
(testing outer nodes before inner nodes).
|
||||
|
||||
## Command line interface
|
||||
|
||||
The `bin/acorn` utility can be used to parse a file from the command
|
||||
line. It accepts as arguments its input file and the following
|
||||
options:
|
||||
|
||||
- `--ecma3|--ecma5|--ecma6|--ecma7|--ecma8|--ecma9|--ecma10`: Sets the ECMAScript version
|
||||
to parse. Default is version 7.
|
||||
|
||||
- `--module`: Sets the parsing mode to `"module"`. Is set to `"script"` otherwise.
|
||||
|
||||
- `--locations`: Attaches a "loc" object to each node with "start" and
|
||||
"end" subobjects, each of which contains the one-based line and
|
||||
zero-based column numbers in `{line, column}` form.
|
||||
|
||||
- `--allow-hash-bang`: If the code starts with the characters #! (as in a shellscript), the first line will be treated as a comment.
|
||||
|
||||
- `--compact`: No whitespace is used in the AST output.
|
||||
|
||||
- `--silent`: Do not output the AST, just return the exit status.
|
||||
|
||||
- `--help`: Print the usage information and quit.
|
||||
|
||||
The utility spits out the syntax tree as JSON data.
|
||||
|
||||
## Build system
|
||||
|
||||
Acorn is written in ECMAScript 6, as a set of small modules, in the
|
||||
project's `src` directory, and compiled down to bigger ECMAScript 3
|
||||
files in `dist` using [Browserify](http://browserify.org) and
|
||||
[Babel](http://babeljs.io/). If you are already using Babel, you can
|
||||
consider including the modules directly.
|
||||
|
||||
The command-line test runner (`npm test`) uses the ES6 modules. The
|
||||
browser-based test page (`test/index.html`) uses the compiled modules.
|
||||
The `bin/build-acorn.js` script builds the latter from the former.
|
||||
|
||||
If you are working on Acorn, you'll probably want to try the code out
|
||||
directly, without an intermediate build step. In your scripts, you can
|
||||
register the Babel require shim like this:
|
||||
|
||||
require("babel-core/register")
|
||||
|
||||
That will allow you to directly `require` the ES6 modules.
|
||||
|
||||
## Plugins
|
||||
|
||||
Acorn is designed support allow plugins which, within reasonable
|
||||
bounds, redefine the way the parser works. Plugins can add new token
|
||||
types and new tokenizer contexts (if necessary), and extend methods in
|
||||
the parser object. This is not a clean, elegant API—using it requires
|
||||
an understanding of Acorn's internals, and plugins are likely to break
|
||||
whenever those internals are significantly changed. But still, it is
|
||||
_possible_, in this way, to create parsers for JavaScript dialects
|
||||
without forking all of Acorn. And in principle it is even possible to
|
||||
combine such plugins, so that if you have, for example, a plugin for
|
||||
parsing types and a plugin for parsing JSX-style XML literals, you
|
||||
could load them both and parse code with both JSX tags and types.
|
||||
|
||||
A plugin should register itself by adding a property to
|
||||
`acorn.plugins`, which holds a function. Calling `acorn.parse`, a
|
||||
`plugins` option can be passed, holding an object mapping plugin names
|
||||
to configuration values (or just `true` for plugins that don't take
|
||||
options). After the parser object has been created, the initialization
|
||||
functions for the chosen plugins are called with `(parser,
|
||||
configValue)` arguments. They are expected to use the `parser.extend`
|
||||
method to extend parser methods. For example, the `readToken` method
|
||||
could be extended like this:
|
||||
|
||||
```javascript
|
||||
parser.extend("readToken", function(nextMethod) {
|
||||
return function(code) {
|
||||
console.log("Reading a token!")
|
||||
return nextMethod.call(this, code)
|
||||
}
|
||||
})
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
The `nextMethod` argument passed to `extend`'s second argument is the
|
||||
previous value of this method, and should usually be called through to
|
||||
whenever the extended method does not handle the call itself.
|
||||
|
||||
Similarly, the loose parser allows plugins to register themselves via
|
||||
`acorn.pluginsLoose`. The extension mechanism is the same as for the
|
||||
normal parser:
|
||||
|
||||
```javascript
|
||||
looseParser.extend("readToken", function(nextMethod) {
|
||||
return function() {
|
||||
console.log("Reading a token in the loose parser!")
|
||||
return nextMethod.call(this)
|
||||
}
|
||||
})
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
### Existing plugins
|
||||
|
||||
- [`acorn-jsx`](https://github.com/RReverser/acorn-jsx): Parse [Facebook JSX syntax extensions](https://github.com/facebook/jsx)
|
||||
- [`acorn-objj`](https://github.com/cappuccino/acorn-objj): [Objective-J](http://www.cappuccino-project.org/learn/objective-j.html) language parser built as Acorn plugin
|
||||
|
||||
Plugins for ECMAScript proposals:
|
||||
|
||||
- [`acorn-stage3`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-stage3): Parse most stage 3 proposals, bundling:
|
||||
- [`acorn-async-iteration`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-async-iteration): Parse [async iteration proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-async-iteration)
|
||||
- [`acorn-bigint`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-bigint): Parse [BigInt proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-bigint)
|
||||
- [`acorn-class-fields`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-class-fields): Parse [class fields proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-class-fields)
|
||||
- [`acorn-dynamic-import`](https://github.com/kesne/acorn-dynamic-import): Parse [import() proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-dynamic-import)
|
||||
- [`acorn-import-meta`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-import-meta): Parse [import.meta proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-import-meta)
|
||||
- [`acorn-numeric-separator`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-numeric-separator): Parse [numeric separator proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-numeric-separator)
|
||||
- [`acorn-optional-catch-binding`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-optional-catch-binding): Parse [optional catch binding proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-optional-catch-binding)
|
||||
- [`acorn-private-methods`](https://github.com/acornjs/acorn-private-methods): parse [private methods, getters and setters proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-private-methods)
|
||||
- [`acorn5-object-spread`](https://github.com/adrianheine/acorn5-object-spread): Parse [Object Rest/Spread Properties proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-object-rest-spread)
|
||||
- [`acorn-object-rest-spread`](https://github.com/victor-homyakov/acorn-object-rest-spread): Parse [Object Rest/Spread Properties proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-object-rest-spread)
|
||||
- [`acorn-es7`](https://github.com/angelozerr/acorn-es7): Parse [decorator syntax proposal](https://github.com/wycats/javascript-decorators)
|
||||
- [`acorn-static-class-property-initializer`](https://github.com/victor-homyakov/acorn-static-class-property-initializer): Partial support for static class properties from [ES Class Fields & Static Properties Proposal](https://github.com/tc39/proposal-class-public-fields) to support static property initializers in [React components written as ES6+ classes](https://babeljs.io/blog/2015/07/07/react-on-es6-plus)
|
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