Parse in reverse. AST goes in, code comes out.
import { print } from 'esrap';
const { code, map } = print({
type: 'Program',
body: [
{
type: 'ExpressionStatement',
expression: {
callee: {
type: 'Identifier',
name: 'alert'
},
arguments: [
{
type: 'Literal',
value: 'hello world!'
}
]
}
}
]
});
console.log(code); // alert('hello world!');
If the nodes of the input AST have loc
properties (e.g. the AST was generated with acorn
with the locations
option set), sourcemap mappings will be created.
You can pass the following options:
const { code, map } = print(ast, {
// Populate the `sources` field of the resulting sourcemap
// (note that the AST is assumed to come from a single file)
sourceMapSource: 'input.js',
// Populate the `sourcesContent` field of the resulting sourcemap
sourceMapContent: fs.readFileSync('input.js', 'utf-8'),
// Whether to encode the `mappings` field of the resulting sourcemap
// as a VLQ string, rather than an unencoded array. Defaults to `true`
sourceMapEncodeMappings: false,
// String to use for indentation — defaults to '\t'
indent: ' ',
// Whether to wrap strings in single or double quotes — defaults to 'single'.
// This only applies to string literals with no `raw` value, which generally
// means the AST node was generated programmatically, rather than parsed
// from an original source
quotes: 'single'
});
esrap
can also print TypeScript nodes, assuming they match the ESTree-like @typescript-eslint/types
.
Because it's ginormous.
This repo uses pnpm. Once it's installed, do pnpm install
to install dependencies, and pnpm test
to run the tests.