babel-handbook
super-expressive
babel-handbook | super-expressive | |
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7 | 6 | |
12,011 | 4,615 | |
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0.0 | 2.9 | |
3 months ago | 2 months ago | |
JavaScript | ||
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 | MIT License |
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babel-handbook
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Abstract Syntax Trees and Practical Applications in JavaScript
For more information about building Babel plugins, check the Kent's Babel Handbook or this awesome Babel handbook by Jamie.
- babel-handbook: A guided handbook on how to use Babel and how to create plugins for Babel.
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Getting Started With Babel - Transpiling Javascript
Babel does this by compiling down JavaScript code written with the latest standards into a version that will work everywhere today. This process is known as source-to-source compiling, also known as transpiring. Source: Jamie Kyle
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11 JavaScript Examples to Source Code That Reveal Design Patterns In Use
I'll be honest, my approach to getting used to working with ASTs is a bit weird, but it worked for me. For some reason the thought of working with the TypeScript AST sounds really attractive to me. I'm sure most people recommend to start deep diving into babel first before getting used to working with an AST with the TypeScript compiler, but I started it the other way around. There is a great library called ts-morph that focuses on making it easier for developers to work with the TypeScript compiler. Learning hands on with ts-morph while getting used to their compiler api made babel much easier to understand without ever touching babel.
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A tale of knowledge building
Those videos gave me a base for the task but I needed more sources to achieve it, so I read a lot of source code for other libraries built with babel-plugin-macros, read the plugin's authoring documentation and Jamie Kyle's Babel Handbook.
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How to create your own language that compile to JavaScript
If you want to learn more about parsing, reading the code of an actual recursive parser might be a better idea. Esprima is a decent place to start if you're interested in JS grammar. Then you can look at the babel handbook to learn more about AST transformations. From there, the literature gets quite a bit more heavy. If you get this far and are willing to push further, you'll probably want to grab yourself a copy of the dragon book at a minimum.
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Revealing the magic of AST by writing babel plugins
Babel handbook
super-expressive
- i'd like you to meet regex-
- Melody - A language that compiles to regular expressions and aims to be more easily readable and maintainable
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💡 expressive-glob: Write glob patterns in a super expressive and an easy way!
This project is inspired by super-expressive!
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A tale of knowledge building
super-expressive is a library to create Regular Expressions (RegExp) in almost natural language. It's useful, simple and well-documented. One downside it's that it's a runtime library, something else to add to our bundle.
- Super-expressive – Write regex in natural language
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All cashiers need to see is your birth year starting with 1 and they know you're old enough.
Here's an attempt at making regex readable in javascript, https://github.com/francisrstokes/super-expressive
What are some alternatives?
esprima - ECMAScript parsing infrastructure for multipurpose analysis
babel-plugin-macros - 🎣 Allows you to build simple compile-time libraries
picoc - A very small C interpreter
regex-benchmark - It's just a simple regex benchmark of different programming languages.
fluent-regex - A nice fluent and typed way to construct regular expressions
estree - The ESTree Spec
JSVerbalExpressions - JavaScript Regular expressions made easy
super-expressive.macro - 🎣 A macro to generate Regular Expressions (RegExp) at build-time with super-expressive.
ocaml-re - Pure OCaml regular expressions, with support for Perl and POSIX-style strings
spotify-web-api-node - A Node.js wrapper for Spotify's Web API.
melody - Melody is a language that compiles to regular expressions and aims to be more readable and maintainable