Jexpr is an expression syntax, parser, and evaluator for JS-like expressions.
Jexpr is designed for libraries that evaluate user-written expressions, such as HTML templating engines. Jexpr has a relatively rich syntax, supporting identifiers, operators, property access, method and function calls, and literals (including arrays and objects), function literals, assignments, and pipes.
Example:
(person.title + ' ' + person.getFullName()) | uppercase;
npm i jexpr
import {parse, EvalAstFactory} from 'jexpr';
// An EvalAstFactory produces an AST that can be evaluated
const astFactory = new EvalAstFactory();
// parse() returns the AST
const expr = parse('(a + b([1, 2, 3]) * c)', astFactory);
// evaluate() with a scope object
const result = expr.evaluate({
a: 42,
b: (o: Array<number>) => o.length,
c: 2,
});
console.log(result); // 48
Jexpr is a hand-written, recursive descent, precedence-climbing parser. It's simple, fast and small.
parse()
takes an AST factory so that different strategies can be used to
produce ASTs. The default factory creates an AST as defined in lib/ast.js
.
lib/eval.js
exports an EvalAstFactory
that produces evaluatable ASTs.
Expressions are generally null-safe. If a subexpression yields null
or
undefined
, subsequent property access will return null, rather than throwing
an exception. Property access, method invocation and operators are null-safe.
Passing null to a function that doesn't handle null will not be null safe.
Properties on the model and in the scope are looked up via simple property
names, like foo
. Property names are looked up first in the top-level
variables, next in the model, then recursively in parent scopes. Properties on
objects can be access with dot notation like foo.bar
.
The keyword this
always refers to the model if there is one, otherwise this
is null
. If you have model properties and top-level variables with the same
name, you can use this
to refer to the model property.
Jexpr supports number, boolean, string, and map literals. Strings can use either single or double quotes.
null
andundefined
- Numbers:
1
,1.0
- Booleans:
true
,false
- Strings:
'abc'
,"xyz"
- Objects:
{ 'a': 1, 'b': 2 }
- Arrays:
[1, 2, 3]
If a property is a function in the scope, a method on the model, or a method on an object, it can be invoked with standard function syntax. Functions and Methods can take arguments. Arguments can be literals or variables.
Examples:
- Top-level function:
myFunction()
- Top-level function with arguments:
myFunction(a, b, 42)
- Model method:
aMethod()
- Method on nested-property:
a.b.anotherMethod()
Jexpr supports the following binary and unary operators:
- Assignment:
=
- Arithmetic operators:
+
,-
,*
,/
,%
, unary+
and-
- Comparison operators:
==
,!=
,===
,!==
,<=
,<
,>
,>=
- Boolean operators:
&&
,||
, unary!
- Nullish coalescing:
??
- Pipeline operators:
|
(legacy) and|>
(modern)
Expressions do not support bitwise operators such as &
, |
, <<
and >>
, or
increment/decrement operators (++
and --
)
The left-hand-side expression of the assignment operator (=
) must be one of an
ID, getter or setter, otherwise an exception is thrown.
Maps are sets of key/value pairs. The key can either be a quoted string, or an identifier:
Examples:
{'a': 1, 'b': 2}
{a: 1, b: 2}
Arrays and objects can be accessed via the index operator: []
Examples:
items[2]
people['john']
Functions can be written with the arrow function syntax.
Examples:
() => 3
(a, b) => a + b
A filter is a function that transforms a value into another, used via the pipe
syntax: value | filter
Any function that takes exactly one argument can be
used as a filter.
Example:
If person.name
is "John"
, and a top-level function named uppercase
has
been registered, then person.name | uppercase
will have the value "JOHN"
.
The pipe syntax is used rather than a regular function call so that we can support two-way bindings through transformers. A transformer is a filter that has an inverse function. Two-way transformers are not supported yet.
Jexpr is forked from polymer-expressions
which is no longer officially
maintained by the Polymer team. The JavaScript version of that library was
ported from the
Dart library of the same
name, originally used in Polymer.dart.